Stories posted under Pinkbike Community blogs are not edited, vetted, or approved by the Pinkbike editorial team. These are stories from Pinkbike users. If a blog post is offensive or violates the Terms of Services, please report the blog to Community moderators.

When Tom Met Tom

May 12, 2016 at 9:54
by SCOTT Sports  
The story of Tom Ritchey and Thomas Frischknecht goes back to 1990, when the Swiss was one of the first Europeans racing mountain bikes in the USA.

Frischi recalls being able to race for the already then established Team Ritchey, a highlight in his career. At just 20 years of age, Frischi not only found a very familiar team (for training camps the team usually stayed at Tom Ritchey’s house in Skyline, which is considered the birthplace of mountain bikes), with Tom Ritchey, he also found a mentor, that taught him what mountain biking is all about.

Coming from a cyclo-cross background, young Frischi soaked up everything Ritchey, a pioneer in mountain biking had to offer. This went far beyond just riding a bike. Tom showed his riders, how to fillet braze frames in his work shop in Skyline. He even let the riders do some work on the frames which they would be racing on. The riders had to build their own bikes, instead of purely just racing on them, so that they would get familiar with the technical aspects of a bicycle.

At this stage, Tom was 34 years old, he was still super fit and took part in every training ride that his pro riders did.

As much as Tom’s riders learned from his know-how and history, Tom learned a great deal from them as well, often asking the riders for their feedback and ideas.

The sport of mountain biking was in a huge experimentation phase in the 90s and unlike road or cyclo-cross, nothing was impossible.

Both Tom and Frischi had developed many ideas together, which would later become standards in the bike industry at some point. Some of these ideas included, turning a triple chainring into a 2x drivetrain to get a better Q-factor and a low rolling resistance tire used in the 1996 Olympics, which would become to be known as semi-slicks. They also developed the Mount Cross which was a bicycle that was a mix between a mountain bike and a cyclo cross bike that had 28” wheels.

This strong collaboration between Tom Ritchey and Frischi continued when Frischi started his own Team with SCOTT (formerly Swisspower) in 2002. Nino Schurter, joining the team in 2003 at the age of 17, found a similar structure as Frischi had enjoyed in the 90s. It was a team which focused on the importance of team spirit and involvement in product development.

A NEW STAR WAS BORN

As a junior rider, Nino had to build up his own bike as a form of training, just as Frischi had to do in the old days.

When Nino asked to play around with different wheel sizes, Frischi took his advice and brought it up with SCOTT. In 2012, Nino’s bike was fitted with 27.5” wheels and this became the new standard for wheel size in the bike industry. SCOTT-Odlo, aside from racing, continues to be heavily involved in product development, utilizing its athletes’ many years of riding experience to its advantage.

Now, Nino has known Tom Ritchey for more than 13 years and both have tons of respect for each other for what they’ve achieved in life. Tom, Frischi and Nino are from three different generations, but they all share the same honor of being icons in the history and sport of mountain biking.

Author Info:
SCOTT-Sports avatar

Member since May 29, 2013
235 articles

0 Comments







Copyright © 2000 - 2024. Pinkbike.com. All rights reserved.
dv65 0.022683
Mobile Version of Website