TEAM NIKE - The World’s Winningest Adventure Racing Team
Posted on 06/22/08 11:44 AM| by team-admin

TEAM NIKE: Mike Kloser, Michael Tobin, Monique Merrill and Chris Forne
Crew for PQ: Dawes Wilson, Emily Kloser, Chris Mohr and Emily Alice
For complete team information please visit our comprehensive website
at www.eliteadventureteam.com
Thanks to our many sponsors!


MIKE KLOSER - As Team Nike’s captain, Mike’s impressive adventure racing results include: Five Adventure Racing World Championship Titles, including the 2007 ARWC’s in Scotland, Three Eco-Challenge titles, five Primal Quest Championships and multiple National Championship Titles. He also excels in winter sports with titles in numerous events including 2007 National Winter Triathlon Champion.
Mike was named “Adventure Racer of the Year” by Competitor Magazine, “Male Athlete of the Year” by Adventure Sport Magazine and he has two “Adventure Racing Team of the Year” titles. Mike has earned the coveted “Everest Award” one of the greatest achievements in climate sports.
Earlier in his athletic career Mike was a top competitor in professional mogul skiing, winning numerous events. He was also the founder and director of the World Professional Mogul Tour.
Mike had an incredible mountain biking career before adventure racing. He accumulated many outstanding accomplishments throughout his 12 year run including a World Mountain Bike Championship title, World downhill silver medalist , 2 time World Cup Overall silver medalist. His peers chose Mike to sit on the International Cycling Union’s board (UCI) as the athletes’ representative. Mike has recognized as one of the top mountain bikers of the 20th Century by Velo News and was inducted into the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame. Mike resides in Vail, Colorado with his wife, Emily, and their children, Heidi and Christian. The whole family has a passion for the outdoors and a inherent quest for adventure and travel.

Above - The Kloser Family - Mike, Emily, Heidi and Christian atop Mt. Snowmass in Aspen, Colorado
Mike’s Accomplishments
4 time Adventure Racing World Champion
World Mountain Bike Champion
World Long Distance Orienteering Champion
3 time Eco Challenge Champion
5 time Primal Quest Champion
Multi National Adventure Racing Series Champion
2 Time National Winter Triathlon Champion
9 time Steamboat Pentathlon Champion
3 time Teva Games Champion
2 time Iditabike Champion
Mt. Taylor Quadrathlon Champion
Moab 24 Hour Champion
4 time Elk Mountain Traverse Champion
Ultra 100 Mountain Bike Champion
2 time America’s Uphill Champion
Dearborn Mogul Skiing Champion
Jackson Hole Open Mogul Skiing Champion
Inducted into Mountain Bike Hall of Fame
Everest Award Winner
Competitor Magazine Adventure Athlete of the Year
www.MikeKloser.com
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MICHAEL TOBIN - Michael joined Team Nike after 15 years competing professionally in running, duathlon, mountain biking, triathlon and Xterra. But, perhaps, it is getting lost, stuck and hungry while exploring mountains, deserts and canyons in his youth that best prepared him for the rigors of adventure racing. Michael credits growing up in a family of accomplished, hyper competitive athletes as excellent team dynamics training. “Every adventure race is a learning experience, we try to refine our athletic disciplines, minimize mistakes, yet, there always seems to be a surprise.” Michael lives in Boise, Idaho with his wife Jenny (also an accomlished endurance athlete), daughter Mikella and son Jack.

Above - Michael’s daughter Mikella, wife Jenny and son Jack getting a ride from dad after
Jenny finished a Half-Ironman Triathlon recently.
Michael’s Accomplishments
Adventure Racing World Champion 2004
Raid World Champion 2004, 2006
24-Hour Orienteering World Champion 2004
Primal Quest Champion 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008
Eco-Challenge New Zealand Champion 2001
Xterra World Champion 2000
Xterra Series Champion 1999 & 2000
16 Xterra Victories
Pikes Peak Ascent Winner
2 x Powerman Duathlon Series Winner
14 International Powerman Victories
2 x Triathlete’s “Duathlete of the Year”
Coors Light Duathlon Series & National Champion
www.mtobin.com
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Monique Merrill
The article below was published in the Summit Daily News on 6-21-08 - by Devon O’Neil
It takes a unique brand of human being to see what Monique Merrill sees in the phrase “100,000 feet of climbing over 500 miles.”
For starters, most of the human race has no idea what that means - these days, eating 50 hot dogs in an hour makes more sense to the average citizen when calculating a superlative level of suffering.
And even to those who might know a little about outdoor athletics, the idea of gaining so many vertical feet over such an expansive distance likely seems silly, abstract even, a goal with no realistic hope of attaining it.
In a little yellow Breckenridge building on the corner of French and Lincoln, however, Merrill pondered the phrase and what it tells her about this year’s Primal Quest Montana race course, where she and her Nike teammates will be the defending champions.
To her, that much climbing means mountains, lots of them, which means beauty, lots of it, which means, well … better to let her tell it.
“A hundred thousand vertical feet,” she said, her eyes widening as hints of intrigue leaked through an otherwise straightforward tone. “It’s kind of the only reason I’m doing the race, to be honest - because it’s mountainous. I just love summits. And I think it’s easier to suffer if the surroundings are beautiful.”
When the fifth edition of America’s most famous adventure race commences Monday morning at 8 a.m. from Big Sky Resort, the 82 coed teams of four won’t be setting out on a torture march through the sweltering Utah desert, as they did two years ago, the last time Primal Quest was held.
They will be embarking on a voyage through some of the most rugged - and, thanks to a record winter, unseasonably snow-covered - backcountry terrain in the Mountain West.
Don Mann, an ex-Navy SEAL of 21 years who is directing the race, said earlier this week there is still so much snow up high in Big Sky, there will be avalanche-control crews on course prior to the start of the race, and snowshoes have been added to the list of mandatory gear.
He said the rivers are running so fast and furious that teams will face 3-foot whitewater waves for 10 hours straight in hard-shell kayaks during one particular leg of the event.
On a related note, whereas most expedition-length competitions such as the 10-day Primal Quest do not allow GPS units, many of the trails and routes for this race are still buried under up to 10 feet of snow, which prompted Mann to add GPS units to the gear list.
It was an unpopular decision among elite teams with top-tier navigators who would otherwise deliver their squads an advantage, but Mann said he made the change in light of the safety concerns that go with teams wandering off course in remote, grizzly-populated country.
“On its surface,” said Robyn Benincasa, who will captain Merrell/Zanfel Adventure, “this is going to be a really ugly race. From what I understand we’re going to be going up and down for quite a while.”
The contenders
Given Nike’s makeup of experienced mountain dwellers, there could not be better news.
Merrill will be joined by longtime Nike captain Mike Kloser, 48, of Vail, one of the most successful adventure racers in history; Idaho veteran Michael Tobin, 44, a lanky but rawhide-tough triathlon world champion who, in the 2006 Primal Quest, ripped a toenail off his foot because he was sick of it catching his shoe; and Kiwi navigational wunderkind Chris Forne, who earned a Ph.D. in engineering last year.
The same foursome won last summer’s world championship in Scotland, on another climbing-heavy course, and Tobin and Kloser have been on the winning team in all four Primal Quests.
“As long as we stay healthy and stay on course,” Kloser said this week, “I think it’s a race that’s ours to lose.”
Benincasa’s squad could have something to say about that, along with, among a few others (the field is slightly diluted by a race this week in Ireland), including TeamPeakAdventure.com, a strapping Canadian foursome led by a husband-wife duo from the Yukon Territory. They took fourth in 2006.
Benincasa, a firefighter from San Diego and one of the original American female racers, used to compete alongside Kloser and Tobin before the team secured its Nike sponsorship six years ago.
This year she’ll be joined by 20-year expedition racing veteran John Jacoby, an Australian paddling champion who belies his burly build with sub-3-hour marathons; Travis Macy, a spunky 25-year-old Denver teacher who missed the 2006 race with a broken collarbone; and 28-year-old Aaron Prince of New Zealand, arguably the most talented navigator in the race.
A different race
The elite teams will be competing for a $25,000 grand prize, perhaps the most obvious sign that the race is being presented on different terms than its four previous editions.
In years past, the winning team took home four times that amount - $100,000 - and each of the top 10 teams earned cash prizes. This year only the top five will win money. (Updated Info on Prize Money)
The reason is salient. Two years ago, as a desert racer lay in serious danger of perishing from heat stroke, race owner Denise Watkins - who, along with her husband, lost between $2 million and $3 million per year putting on the race, Mann estimated - confessed to Mann that it was too much for her to continue funding such a dangerous, consuming mission.
With the options being to either watch the race die or take it upon himself to save it, Mann consulted his wife, Dawn, and decided on the latter.
They cut the purse and upped the entry fee. When that wasn’t enough, they took out a line of credit on their own house.
The full-time workers staffing this race, Mann said, are making about $100 per week.
“Based on our business model,” he said, “if we’d gotten 90 teams, we would’ve broken even.”
“It’s not sustainable this way,” he added.
The hope, though, is that another investor will take the reins from the Watkinses and deliver the race - and the sport - a richer, brighter future. Much of that, as it always has, hinges on television exposure.
Whereas past editions ended up on CBS or, as was the case in 2006, ABC and ESPN, this year’s race is going to be broadcast on Rush HD, an action-sports network that will show the event in four half-hour episodes, up to 50 times in the next year, Mann said.
It is a far cry from his near-miss deal with NBC, which fell apart when the writers’ strike ended, but his excitement is hardly tempered at this point. (Updated Info on TV Coverage and Prize Money)
On Monday, Mann will watch as 336 hungry human explorers begin what promises to be a defining week in their lives. For most, finishing is but a prayer - albeit one that cost $12,500.
For professionals like Merrill and Nike, however, this is business. One living hell of an occupation, at that.
“It’s like going to work for a week,” Merrill said. “Some days you feel good, some days you feel bad, some days you sleep well, some days you don’t, some days your boss yells at you, some days you get along … I’m just hoping to have a good week of work.”
Monique’s Accomplishments
2006, 2008 Primal Quest Championship, 1st Place
2006 World Championship Randonee Uphill, Italy. 9th, Individual Hill Climb
2005 North American Ski Mountaineering Championships, 2nd
2005 Adventure Racing World Champions, 2nd (Team Nike)
2005 Life -Link Randonee Ski Mountaineering Series National Champion
2005 Raid Adventure Racing World Championships, 3rd
2005 XTerra World Championship, 9th
2005 XTerra National Championship, 3rd
2005 Adventure Raid World Cup #2, 2nd (Team Nike)
2004 Mild Seven Outdoor Quest, 2nd (Team Nike/Balance Bar)
2004 Beaver Creek 100 Mile Mountain Bike Race, 2nd (Tokyo Joes)
2004 NORBA Pro MTB Race, Crested Butte. 1st (Tokyo Joes)
Three time Champion and Women’s Record Holder, Montezumas Revenge 24 Hour Bike Race, 1999, 2000, 2003
Six Time Champion, Imperial Challenge, Breckenridge
2001 U.S. National XTerra Champion
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Team Nike’s newest member Chris Forne is the current NZ Rogaine and NZ orienteering champ. He has already won two major titles with Team Nike - the Adventure Racing World Championship and Abu Dhabi Adventure Challenge. 2008 Primal Quest Champion!

Webmaster Harald Fricker - www.CyberWizard.com





June 22nd, 2008 at 6:35 pm
Go Team Go!
Webmaster Harald
June 25th, 2008 at 5:03 pm
Go Team Nike, you guys are looking great, Hammer on.
all my best
General
June 25th, 2008 at 6:23 pm
Another great effort Chris and team, keep up the awe inspiring work.
Hope you get those show shoes sorted out
June 28th, 2008 at 11:15 pm
Mike Great talking to you congratulations to you and team U R the best
YEAH TEAM NIKE U R THE BEST Have a few cold one’s on me. GENERAL Congratulations. Wish I was their. See you back in VAIL
July 13th, 2008 at 4:00 am
Too bad i didnt come across this blog before. Great stuff you got here. Thanks.
July 20th, 2008 at 8:09 am
I came across this blog the other day and you got some great info here - thanks.