Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Mara Abbott – “I’ve always been very determined to forge my own path”

“I'm simply proud of my career, of being the very best that I could be, even though sometimes that was better than others, year after year after year.”

-

HomeInterviewsMara Abbott - "I've always been very determined to forge my own...

Mara Abbott is twice a winner of the overall GC in the Giro Rosa – arguably the most important ladies’ stage race in the world – picking up seven stages along the way not to mention two second places, a fourth, a fifth and 10th on GC.

Abbott retired from the sport after finishing fourth in the Olympic Road Race in Rio, 2016.

She took time to speak to us not long after her retirement; here’s what she had to say.

To give you a taste of her successes on the bike:

  • ‘05: 3rd US U23 road race championship
  • ‘06: Rio Grande/Sports Garage: 3rd Mount Hood Stage Race
  • ‘07: Webcor: US Champion, 1st Tour of the Gila
  • ‘08: Team High Road: stages in Czech Ladies Tour, San Dimas and Redlands
  • ‘09: team Columbia: 7th Fleche Wallone, 2nd Giro Donne
  • ‘10: Peanut Butter & Co: 1st Giro Donne, 2nd Tour de L’Aude
  • ‘11: Diadora – Pasta ZaRa: 10th Giro Donne
  • ‘13: Exergy Twenty 16: 1st Giro Donne
  • ‘14: UnitedHealthCare: 4th Giro Donne, 1st Vuelta a El Salvador 
  • ‘15: Wiggle (Wiggle-Honda): 2nd Giro Donne, 1st Tour of the Gila
  • ‘16: Wiggle (Wiggle-High5) 4th Olympic road race, 5th Giro Donne, 1st Tour of the Gila.

By no means an exhaustive list but it gives you an idea of the lady’s versatility.

Mara Abbott
Mara Abbott is twice winner of the Giro Donne.

Why quit when you did – you were still very competitive?

“Because there are other things I want to do in life as well. 

“For me to be a cyclist required that I devote myself to being the absolute best I could be – the sacrifices were great enough that it didn’t make sense for me to do it at eighty or even ninety-five percent. 

“I also raced professionally for ten years. 

“It felt like a complete career for me. 

“I was ready.”

Who was/were your role model(s) as a young rider?

“I didn’t start riding until college, so I was never really a “young” rider. 

“Honestly, for me, I’ve never been one to model myself after, or aspire to emulate those that I don’t know personally. 

“My largest and first role models were probably the upperclassmen and women on the Whitman Cycling Team

“Beyond that, perhaps to a fault, I’ve always been very determined to forge my own path.”

Stage racing was your forte – how so?

“Part of that comes down to course selection. 

“I excelled on the hilly and mountainous courses, and there were very few one day races for women (with the notable exception of the Rio Olympics!) that had extended climbs in them, so in that way the sport chose for me. 

“I was also a rider who tended to be better the harder or longer a race was… so on multi-day races, my best stages were always the ones that came toward the end, an advantage you don’t really get with one day races!”

Mara Abbott
Mara Abbott takes some inspiration from the Maglia Rosa hanging in the bike cupboard. Photo©Shauna Farnell

What do you rate as your ‘finest hour’ on the bike?

“It seems so trite to mark a victory or great performance as the finest hour on a bike, because the underpinnings of any one of those are all of the tiny moments that you practice habits, keep going when you are afraid or doubtful or tired or hurting. 

“It’s every morning when you get up to ride. 

“Looking at a career, especially in a sport that can be so capricious like cycling, there are sparkly moments and really dark patches, but for me, the greatest accomplishment is in it’s fullness and depth. 

“Looking back on it now as a complete body of work it is so hard to pull a single thread out in isolation. 

“I’m simply proud of my career, of being the very best that I could be, even though sometimes that was better than others, year after year after year.”

When we interviewed your countrywoman Inga Thompson, she listed her prizes for winning le Tour – they weren’t scintillating – how did the Giro treat you in that regard?

“When I won the overall and two stages, I made just enough money to pay my bike fee for the flight home!”

Mara Abbott
Mara Abbott’s training philosophy centered around the value of simplicity.

We hear a lot of talk about ‘living wages’ for professional girls; how many of your seasons would you say you were receiving one?

“That depends on how you define a “living wage”. 

“I was making between $20-25k a year for almost all of my career.”

Many say that if the UCI imposed a minimum wage for girls on teams then many would fold, what’s your take?

“It would definitely be a paradigm shift and a risk. 

“I don’t think I know enough about the economics of the teams to be able to speak articulately on this topic. 

“Most people are very private about the salary that they make, and I imagine that it’s quite inequitable. 

“For that reason, it’s hard to say for me what the market would bear.”

The Olympics ’16 – fourth, so near yet so far, tell us about your feelings on that result

“I’ll probably never get over the heartbreak of that result… but at the same time, no one wins until you cross the finish line. 

“The gold medal never belonged to me, so I can’t reasonably let myself mourn for something that was never mine. 

“I also know that Rio was one of the very best races I have ever ridden in my career, and I knew then that it would be the last race of my career. 

“I will always wish I had gotten a medal, but at the end of the day, to be able to finish it all with my very best performance is something than any athlete would wish for.”

Mara Abbott
Mara Abbott rode two seasons with the Women’s Wiggle Team.

Did you have a coach throughout your career – what was your training philosophy?

Dean Golich was my coach from 2008 onward. 

“He was the perfect coach for me – and as a result, my training philosophy was simply to trust my coach implicitly. 

“Dean and I aligned very much on the value of simplicity – no fancy measurements or tools.”

Do you miss the cut and thrust of the peloton now that you’ve retired?

“Of the things I do miss, that is probably at the very bottom of my list!”

Mara Abbott
Mara Abbott has an eminently down-to-earth perspective on life. Photo©Trainright

Regrets on your cycling career?

“Of course – but I also have regrets on the celery I didn’t get enough of when it was on sale last week. 

“I’ve closed the chapter on professional cycling in my life, so as I don’t have the opportunity to take positive action to rectify a “regret”, there is certainly no sense in allowing myself bonus opportunities to dwell on them now.”

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Matt Green – From England to the USA, via Belgium

Matt Green’s is a typical story, a young Englishman who gets into cycling, trudges the well trodden path to the Flatlands of Flanders, gets a contract on low budget teams – Cyclingnews, Cinelli, Marco Polo – and then... The progression stalls; but rather than bang his head against the combines in Flanders for another year, he’s decided that there’s a New World of cycling for him – across the pond in the USA. He’s secured a private sponsor to pay his wages and all he needs now is a team – here’s his tale:

Jayden Copp – Aussie Winner of the Sint Katelijine Waver Kermis 2014

If you’re not on one of the National Federation programmes there’s only one way to catch the eye and sign that coveted first pro contract. That is, either as an individual or with your team you head for Belgium, France or Italy and fight for results. It’s the time honoured way, good enough for Tom Simpson, Robert Millar and David Millar. A name which caught our eye recently in the Belgian kermises was 23 year-old Aussie, Jayden Copp (Bianchi DCM Arbitrage) with two fourth places, a second then a win. Well worth a word we thought.

Tim Mountford, Part One – Tandem Sprinting at the ’64 Olympics

Tim Mountford was one of the pioneers of US professional cycling in the 60’s and 70’s; he recently gave freely of his time to tell VeloVeritas about his adventures in what was a golden age for European cycling.

Willi Moore – “Winning Olympic bronze was the best day of my cycling career”

The legendary GB Team Pursuit quartet which won bronze in the 1972 Munich Olympics – Ron Keeble, Mick Bennett and Ian Hallam have all appeared on our pages but the missing piece was Willi Moore. However, thanks to the good offices of the aforementioned Mr. Keeble we caught up with the man who could do it all – time trials, road and, of course, the track – British, Commonwealth, World and Olympic medallist, Mr. W. Moore.

At Random

Katie Archibald – World Champion, Again!

Scotland had an exceptional World Championship in Apeldoorn with Mark Stewart and Jack Carlin both on the podium; Stewart in the points race and Carlin in the individual and team sprint – both boding very well for the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast in ‘24 days 09 hours and 55 seconds’ at time of writing. And there was that that remarkable young lady, Katie Archibald taking team pursuit silver with the GB squad and Madison gold with Emily Nelson.

Il Giro d’Italia 2014 – Stage 2; Belfast, 218 km. Marcel Kittel a Class Apart

Cannondale, F des J, Giant, Greenedge, Sky, Trek - they all tried to take control in the finale in Belfast in Stage Two on Saturday. But none could. It's not until you see a situation like we did in Belfast that you realise just how good Mario Cipollini's Acqua Sapone and Cav's HTC trains really were. In the event, it was irrelevant; Kittel was in a different league. He was way back and would usually have been out of it but turned left, found clear road, turned on the boosters and left the others scrabbling for the placings.

Daryl Impey – the First African Maillot Jaune

Chris Froome will go down in the record books as Great Britain’s second Tour de France winner. But whilst the slim man who now lives in Monaco may have GB next to his name in the record book – he’s originally from Kenya by way of South Africa and his win is a huge shot in the arm for cycle sport in the Dark Continent. But Froome was beaten to the punch as the first African in yellow by a man whose passport still declares ‘Republic of South Africa.’

Evan Oliphant – Back with Raleigh for 2013

If we interviewed ‘Jamesie’ McCallum, we couldn’t very well neglect his friend and training partner, Britain’s most northerly professional rider – Wick’s Evan Oliphant. This will be his ninth professional season and his second with Raleigh.