The St. Augustine’s Cycling Team.ย Photo by Joshua Steadman

This story was first published online at UNC Media Hub. Listen to a broadcast of the story by Trevor Stevenson here.

Every day, Brandon Valentine-Parris takes a 20 mile-ride on his midnight black Canyon Inflite bicycle, accompanied by the percussion of soca beats. When heโ€™s on the verge of exhaustion, he just turns the music up and remembers his purpose.

โ€œI just want to be fast,โ€ he said. โ€œI want to be the best in my country, and I want to go to certain places that a lot of people donโ€™t get to go. That was literally the only driving point.โ€

Speed is what Valentine-Parris does.ย 

Valentine-Parris represented St. Vincent and the Grenadines in the 400-meter sprint in the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. That speed earned him a track scholarship at Claflin University in South Carolina. But Valentine-Parris transferred to St. Augustineโ€™s University in Raleigh in 2018 and found a new outlet for his speed: cycling.

He also found a new legacy: He and Aaliyah โ€œLeleโ€ Williams are co-captains of the first cycling team at a historically Black college and university.ย 

Though road cycling is a prominent sport in the Caribbean, Valentine-Parris, 25, had not ridden a bike since he was 12. He gave up everything โ€“ music, soccer and martial arts โ€” for the running track. As a result, he has earned 15 NCAA Division II All-American honors.ย 

But in 2019, Dr. Mark Janas, a sports management professor in the business school at St. Augustine, planted an idea in his head.

โ€œI was in my senior seminar class with Professor Janas and he mentioned his skill set in cycling,โ€ Valentine-Parris said. โ€œI was like, โ€˜Excuse me, we donโ€™t have a cycling team on campus,โ€™ and he was shocked. He mentioned that itโ€™s something we could look into and next thing I knew, last summer, I got a phone call from him saying, โ€˜Itโ€™s a go.โ€™โ€

Led by Janas and Associate Head Coach Umar Muhammad, the St. Augustineโ€™s cycling team is registered in the USA Cycling canon and managed through the universityโ€™s School of Business, Management & Technology. Though it launched in April 2020, Janas had been thinking about it since the fall 2019.

โ€œAt first,โ€ Janas said, โ€œour goal was simply to get students on bikes to learn more about the sport of competitive cycling and decide if it was right for them. It wasnโ€™t until later that we learned there were no other HBCU teams registered with USA Cycling. We then realized just how important our effort was.โ€

Even before a riding trail had been created, the team practiced by riding through campus. That helped to inspire a few men to join the team. Then, one woman stepped up to the challenge.ย 

โ€œAt the time, I was really the only girl that said, โ€˜yes,โ€™โ€ Lele Williams, 24, said. โ€Thatโ€™s why I am honored to be the captain of the womenโ€™s team because I know I am here for a purpose. I think what my purpose is to show them that they donโ€™t have to be stuck into basketball, softball or the regular sports that theyโ€™re used to seeing.โ€

Rather than cycling merely being seen as a means of transportation, Williams wants to transform its perception into a competitive industry. Williams, a sports management major from Tallahassee, is St. Augustineโ€™s student government association president, a member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, and a player on the womenโ€™s basketball team.

โ€œI actually lost my senior season of basketball to COVID,โ€ Williams said. โ€œI would say that (cycling) has filled a void for sure. Iโ€™m an athlete, and I have to have something to do. It helps with discipline; it helps with keeping myself in shape and my body healthy.โ€

Williams, who focuses primarily on BMX riding, realized that the sport isnโ€™t just for the โ€œolder white generation.โ€ย 

โ€œYou would think basketball wouldโ€™ve prepared me for another sport when really, cycling prepared me more for basketball,โ€ Williams said. โ€œI donโ€™t know if youโ€™ve ever seen a cyclistโ€™s legs, but they are pretty toned.โ€

Lele Williams on her bike. Photo by Joshua Steadman.ย 

Prior to the pandemic, the nine-member team trained behind St. Augustineโ€™s campus on a one-mile loop of gravel, asphalt, grass and dirt. Now, though, team members are confined to training on their stationary bikes in their dorm rooms, fulfilling their 22 miles, three times a week requirement.ย 

They practice virtually, with one live in-person practice focused on cornering, handling and other technical skills each week. Cycling, Valentine-Parris said is a โ€œfull contact sport,โ€ even more so than track.

โ€œThe biggest difference is the impact on your body and the intensity,โ€ Valentine-Parris said, โ€œYou go hard every practice. You exert a lot of force and pressure on the body. My biggest issue in the transition was being relaxed on the bike and being fluid. In track, your position is calculated, like one straight line.โ€

After one month of training, in October 2020, Valentine-Parris competed in a three-day virtual series competition called the U.S. Cycling Collegiate Cup. Along with teammates Samuel Cudjoe and Finote Weldemariam, they cycled in a 5.1-mile timed race, a closed circuit 13.1-mile criterium event, and a 25-mile road race.

Valentine-Parris won the criterium event, bringing home his and St. Augustineโ€™s Universityโ€™s first cycling win.

โ€œI took my win and ran with it!โ€ Valentine-Parris said. โ€œI was overjoyed. We started cycling a month ago and to compete with other guys who have been doing this almost all their life, I was super stoked. I think that was my turning point that I should take it seriously.โ€

Of the nine team members, three are women, six are men, and most are dual-athletes and involved in countless extracurricular activities. As program coordinator for the sport management academic program, Associate Head Coach Muhammad ensures students are meeting the requirements within the School of Business.

Students are expected to maintain a 2.7 GPA, but Muhammad said that most team members have maintained a 3.0. Though the students are NCAA athletes, St. Augustineโ€™s cycling team is not recognized by the NCAA, which gives the team the freedom to be funded by bicycling sponsors, such as Major Taylorโ€™s Association and Saris.ย 

โ€œCycling is expensive,โ€ Muhammad said. โ€œIt is as expensive as other sports that typically African Americans have not been in. Shoes are $200 or $300, competitive bikes are $3-4,000, then you have pedals and more. We donโ€™t really have cycling in high schools, as a sport; there may be small clubs. To be honest, cycling is not a media-frenzied sport in the United States.โ€

Muhammad believes that while cost is a barrier, the perceived lack of monetary benefits and the lack of commercial attention given to cycling deters more Black youth from getting involved. For Valentine-Parris and his teammates, it was never about glamour, but rather impact.ย 

โ€œFor me, itโ€™s an honor just to be a part of the team,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s something special. Iโ€™m not an American, but Iโ€™m making American history. Itโ€™s a gift, and itโ€™s a blessing just to be a part of it. We started the program to show that no matter where youโ€™re from, who you are, you can be a part of something great as well.โ€

Though heโ€™s anxious to begin the Spring 2021 seasons, Janas says that team has two simple goals: to inspire others and to win national championships.ย 

โ€œThe first we can hopefully do now,โ€ Janas said. โ€œWeโ€™re planting the seeds now to accomplish the second.โ€