The eight members of the squad, all of whom have Type 1 diabetes, bicycled the final miles of their journey
together to complete the 3,015-mile race that began last Wednesday in Oceanside, Calif., about four hours after the winners.
The Byggkjøp presented by BMC Cycling won the eight-person division in a time of five days, nine hours
and 56 minutes. That time bettered the previous record for the category (five days, 15 hours, 43 minutes), established last
year by Team Type 1. The Norwegian-based team averaged 23.2 mph, the second-fastest speed ever ridden in the race regardless
of category.
Team Type 1’s official finish time was five days, 13 hours and 40 minutes. The squad incurred one
hour’s worth of penalties while Byggkjøp/BMC Cycling received one 15-minute penalty.
"Finishing second was not something we wanted because we got into this to win it," Team Type 1 RAAM Team
Director and racer Bob Schrank said. "But how we did it was important – by helping each other, by managing our blood
sugar, by waking each other up. That’s what this team was all about it. It was a group of people with Type 1 diabetes
learning how to be successful in what they were doing."
In addition to Schrank, Team Type 1 consisted of Australian Monique Hanley, Americans Alex Bowden, Matt
Brooks, Andy Mead, Mark Suprenant and Tim Powell and New Zealander Timothy Hargrave. Schrank and Mead captained the squad’s
two foursomes.
The Byggkjøp/BMC Cycling and Team Type 1 squads waged a head-to-head battle over the course of the race,
with neither team gaining more than a four-hour advantage. At one point past the halfway mark, Team Type 1 had whittled what
had been a three-hour lead down to fewer than 90 minutes.
"We used different strategies than we have in the past," Schrank said. "Overall, it worked out really
well. We used everyone to their highest strengths."
Along the way, Team Type 1 pedaled up and over mountains, into strong winds through powerful thunderstorms
while enduring extreme temperature swings and a high-speed crash involving Alex Bowden. Even the team’s coach, Rick
Crawford, survived some hardship, undergoing a procedure to place three stents in the arteries of his heart just a day before
the event.
Throughout the course of the race, Team Type 1 racers used Apidra’s rapid-acting insulin made by
sanofi-aventis, as well as Abbott Diabetes Care’s FreeStyle Navigator and Insulet Corporation's OmniPod Insulin Management
System. They boosted their blood sugar level with Dex-4 Glucose.
Team Type 1 was created in 2004 by Type 1 diabetes racers Phil Southerland and Joe Eldridge to inspire
people living with diabetes to take a proactive approach to managing their health and overcoming the obstacles often associated
with the condition. Southerland and Eldridge are now professionals, racing on Team Type 1’s 15-member pro squad that
won the team classification Sunday at the Tour de Beauce stage race in Canada.
Southerland, who accompanied the team for part of the route, said he was proud that Team Type 1 did not
give up.
"We set out to win the race and break our own record and unfortunately things didn’t go as planned,"
he said. "About halfway through, we were having a hard time but our team didn’t give up."
"They rode a hell of a race and did a great job of getting the word out there that people with diabetes
can accomplish anything a normal person can do with the right technology and control. More team followed Team Type 1 than
ever and it was inspiring for me to personally follow them, too."