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Entry fees for Sunny King Criterium to cancer research
April 18, 2006
Entry fees from those participating in the amateur and pro races of the
Sunny King Criterium in Anniston, Alabama, on May 6 will be donated to Relay
for Life, a local American Cancer Society fund-raiser. "The goal is a
$10,000 donation," said Mike Poe, race director. A 15-minute time slot has
been allotted between races to allow for a special presentation by Relay for
Life officials from the race stage.
In 2005, the Sunny King Criterium donated $7,880 to Relay for Life and
honoured Ron Williams, captain of the 2004 USA Paralympic cycling team and
winner of silver and bronze medals, in Athens, Greece. Ron was presented
with a Key to the City by the Mayor of the City of Anniston, Chip Howell.
Ron, a cancer-survivor and resident of nearby Birmingham, AL, is registered
to race at Sunny King again in 2006.
The Sunny King Criterium has been selected as a "Top 10 Event" in Alabama,
is on USA Cycling's National Racing Calendar and is the final race in USA
Crits, a series of six criterium races in eight days. Series races include
the Athens Twilight (April 29) and Nalley Historic Roswell (April 30)
Criteriums in Georgia, the Heritage races in Walterboro (May 3) and
Greenwood (May 4) South Carolina, the SmithBarney Classic (May 5) in
Spartanburg, South Carolina, and Sunny King (May 6).
All criterium venues are located near one another, making for easy transfers
from one race to the next in the series. Each individual race awards a
minimum of $10,000 to the Pro Men field and the series awards an additional
$10,000 in prize money to overall winners of the series, for a total of
$75,000 in prize money. Leader's point's jerseys will be awarded at each
race.
More than 90,000 total spectators are expected at the 6 criterium races
combined, and numerous healthy activities for children are planned. "Each
race in the series is locally organized and is the centerpiece of downtown
festivals in each community," said Gene Dixon of Swagger, LLC, the promoter
of the series. "A big part of these festivals centers on children and active
lifestyles, which we think is a positive approach to combat childhood
obesity."
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