


On April 21, 2003, Phil Southerland met Joe Eldridge at a college bike race. Phil, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at seven months old, was meticulous about controlling his blood sugar. Joe, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 10, had put his diabetes in the back of his mind, as do many who have diabetes. Both Joe and Phil noticed they were each taking insulin before the start and realized they had something important in common beyond bike racing. They were racing as riders with Type 1 diabetes.
After the race, Joe and Phil's friendship grew. And so did the competition, on and off the bike. Phil was getting frustrated with Joe's lackluster approach to diabetes. So he proposed a bet where the person with the higher blood sugar paid for dinner. For three months, every time they ate out together, Joe ended up taking the bill.
But eventually, as Joe began to learn how to play the diabetes "game," he was able to manage his blood sugar and get it under control. One night at dinner, Joe won the bet and made Phil pay for the dinner. For Joe, winning the bet that night was more than not having to pay for dinner. It was a signal to him that anyone can be a competitive athlete when they manage their diabetes successfully. This insight was a life saver for Joe. And over the next 12 months, Joe lowered his A1C below 7 for the first time in years.
Impressed by Joe's transformation, Phil began to think of how he could make the most of Joe's story, and their friendship, to inspire others with diabetes to do the same. He had a vision to unite everyone with diabetes and to inspire them to take control of their diabetes. On a 300-mile bike ride from Athens, Georgia to Tallahassee, Florida, Phil called Joe with the idea. Over the next 24 hours, the pair brainstormed on their own and over the phone with Joe finally giving a name to their dream: Team Type 1.
Turning a dream into a reality takes hard work, good friends and a bit of luck; fortunately for Joe and Phil, they had all three.
In a chance Tuesday meeting on February 22, 2005, Phil met Daniel Hopkins who asked Phil what he would do with $400 to get Team Type 1 off of the ground. Phil said he would buy t-shirts and business cards to raise money and spread awareness about diabetes. Hopkins gave Phil four $100 bills and wished him well. Phil immediately went to the bank and opened an account under the name "Team Type 1." It was 3:30 pm. By 4:15 pm Phil placed an order for 1,000 business cards and 100 t-shirts at LS Design in Athens. Two weeks later, the package of shirts and cards arrived and the selling began. If you could breathe, Phil sold you a shirt.
At the same time, Joe encouraged Phil to participate in an upcoming JDRF Ride To Cure. The pair sold their t-shirts so they could afford to go. On the ride Joe and Phil shared their story and their dream with the other riders. (And also sold more t-shirts.) After the 100-mile ride, someone at the post-ride dinner suggested that Phil and Joe "do something big," like riding across America. Phil and Joe looked at each other like that was crazy. Then, like reading the other one's mind, they both said at the same time: "Let's do Race Across America! And do it with a team of riders with Type 1 diabetes!" The day was May 19, 2005, and the goal was set to race the following year.
Since Team Type 1’s first participation in the Race Across America in 2005, the team has won the race four times and currently holds the Race Across America record for the fastest trans-continental crossing in just 5 days, 9 hours and 5 minutes.

We strive to instill hope and inspiration for people around the world affected by diabetes. With appropriate diet, exercise, treatment and technology, we believe anyone with diabetes can achieve their dreams.
Team Type 1 began as a grassroots initiative to motivate people to take control of their diabetes using cycling as a platform. It grew to become a world-class athletic program for athletes with diabetes, including a professional men's cycling team, poised to compete at the 2012 Tour de France. Today, it is a global sports organization changing the lives of people with diabetes around the world through racing, groundbreaking research, international outreach and philanthropic initiatives in developing countries:
The Team Type 1 athletes compete in many high profiles events worldwide from the Race Across America to the major tours of professional cycling. In 2011 the Professional Men’s Cycling Team is getting closer to their mission of earning a coveted position in the 2012 Tour de France. The newly introduced Team Type 1 Running Team will continue the organization’s trans-continental history with a RUN Across America. The Triathlon Team, Development Team, Elite Team and Team Type 2 are also competing on the largest stages of domestic racing to raise awareness, change perceptions and inspire the worldwide diabetes community to properly manage diabetes and live a healthier life.
In 2011, the organization launched the Team Type 1 Diabetes Sports Research Institute to establish clear guidelines for diabetes and sports.
Dr. Juan P. Frias, endocrinologist and former Chief Medical Officer of Johnson and Johnson, Diabetes Care, will spearhead the clinical research platform. In partnership with major academic research institutions and a scientific advisory board comprised of leading clinicians and researchers globally, Team Type 1’s Sports Research Institute will facilitate and conduct clinical research that will evaluate diabetic athletic performance and examine disease management and its control in high-level competition. The research and information will not only aide Team Type 1 as they prepare to race the Tour de France, but should ultimately help everyone have a better understanding of diabetes and how to effectively manage and control the disease.
Team Type 1 works every day of the year to provide hope, inspiration and education around the world to those living with diabetes and to their families. To that end, Team Type 1 participated in over 700 diabetes-related events in 2010 alone, including appearances and presentations at major diabetes conferences, community events, presentations to medical professionals in the diabetes field and delivery of life-saving diabetes supplies and medication to those in need.
Last November, Team Type 1 raced in the Tour of Rwanda and presented 35,000 test strips and 400 blood glucose meters, all donated by fans and supporters of Team Type 1, to children who otherwise wouldn’t have access to these necessary supplies and medication. The team will be returning to Rwanda throughout 2011 to deliver additional supplies with the goal of delivering 900,000 test strips to the country by year-end. The ultimate quest is to develop a sustainable scalable platform to ensure all children with diabetes have access to the tools they need to manage and control their disease.
Phil Southerland is the founder and CEO of Team Type 1. A tireless global ambassador for diabetes, Southerland is committed to the education and empowerment of people with diabetes throughout the world. Diagnosed at just seven-months-old with Type 1 diabetes, doctors told his mother he would probably go blind, suffer organ failure, and likely not live past the age of 25. Now 29 and actively in control of his diabetes through diet, exercise and a disciplined insulin regimen, Southerland has turned what was once considered a death sentence into a global movement to positively affect the lives of people with diabetes through managed care and control of the disease. Today, a thought leader in diabetes and sports, the social entrepreneur is redefining boundaries for those living with diabetes.
An avid cyclist with a vision of using his bike as a tool for empowerment, Southerland merged his passion for the sport and his mission of raising awareness to establish Team Type 1 in 2005, creating the world’s first professional cycling team to include athletes with diabetes. Under his leadership, the dynamic squad rapidly grew into an enterprise of over 101 athletes from 11 countries, spanning the globe to inspire and unite people affected with diabetes. The team plans to race on the sports largest stage, the Tour de France, in 2012.
The groundbreaking organization is now a global enterprise comprised of seven competitive squads of athletes, including the 21-member professional men's team racing, which is supported by one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies, sanofi-aventis. As partners with a shared 360 degree view of diabetes, Team Type 1 and sanofi-aventis are redefining the possibilities of a better quality of life for diabetics through managed control and appropriate diet, exercise, treatment and technology.
Most recently, Southerland sought the services of two of the world’s leading endocrinologists, Dr. Juan P. Frias and Dr. Bruce Bode, to develop and launch a diabetes research platform. With their help, he has established the TT1 Diabetes Sports Research Institute to evaluate diabetic athletic performance and examine disease management and its control in high-level competition.
Southerland also spearheaded Team Type 1’s 2010 alliance with the International Diabetes Federation to bring donated supplies to children with Type 1 diabetes in Rwanda. Last November, as Team Type 1 raced in the Tour of Rwanda, he presented the Rwanda Diabetes Association with more than 35,000 test strips and 400 blood glucose meters, all donated by fans and supporters of Team Type 1. Southerland and Team Type 1 will be returning to Rwanda throughout the year to deliver additional supplies with the goal of delivering 900,000 test strips to the country by year-end.
Rwanda represents a first step in Southerland’s ultimate quest to develop a sustainable scalable platform to ensure all children with diabetes have access to tools they need to manage and control their disease. This is part of what motivates him to spend over 250 days on the road each year to spread the Team Type 1 message to thought leaders, decision makers, scientists, doctors and patients around the world.
Southerland’s latest venture, a memoir titled Not Dead Yet released in May of 2011. The book chronicles his life from an early diagnosis of diabetes and doctors’ predictions of death by the age of 25 to his life as a professional cyclist and his mission to change the face of diabetes on a global scale.
To read the first two chapters of “Not Dead Yet” please visit www.teamtype1.org/book/.
A pure athlete, Joe Eldridge has always found his passion at the starting line. Diagnosed at age 10 with diabetes, he played soccer and football until a love for cycling led him to professional competition. Diabetes became an afterthought, second to the bike, until a meeting with Phil Southerland (a fellow cyclist with diabetes) led him to a life of managed care, control of the disease and podium finishes. Today, Eldridge has become a role model for athletes with diabetes, proving daily that with self care and control there are no limits to success.
Teaming with Southerland in 2004, Eldridge merged cycling and a mission to redefine the possibilities for athletes with diabetes to create Team Type 1. The team, a first of its kind professional cycling squad, included 8 athletes with diabetes. Together they embarked on a race to history, landing a second place finish in the 2006 Race Across America – a 3000-mile grueling ride.
In 2007, with powerhouse Eldridge often pulling at the front, Team Type 1 won Race Across America in 5 days, 15 hours and 43 minutes, shattering the competition by nearly three hours. The team remains an intimidating force, capturing the win or podium finish every year since they’ve participated in the endurance race.
Now comprised of 21 members, the Team Type 1 men’s professional cycling squad is a crown jewel in an organization of 101 athletes from 11 countries, spanning cycling, running and triathlons – all dedicated to bringing hope and inspiration to people across the world touched by diabetes. The men's professional team has set for itself the formidable goal in 2012 of racing in the Tour de France.
While his position as a Team Type 1 professional rider often keeps him in the saddle, Eldridge is motivated by his quest to offer hope of a better life for those battling diabetes. In addition to training 6 hours a day and competing in over 70 races a year, he relishes his primary role as an advocate for good control by sharing his achievements and providing tips and information to fans and supporters with diabetes.
A blogger for diabetesselfmanagement.com, he also travels the world during the off season, participating in the Tour de Cure and sharing his story to offer living proof that managed care, good nutrition and exercise are the foundations of successful living with diabetes.
This year, Eldridge will also participate in groundbreaking research by Southerland’s newly created TT1 Diabetes Sports Research Institute to help establish and evaluate diabetic athletic performance and examine disease management and its control in high-level competition. He aspires to be a role model for young athletes with diabetes and offer guidance for success for all athletes with diabetes.
Eldridge and his wife currently reside in Atlanta, where Team Type 1 is headquartered.
2005
Phil Southerland, CEO and Founder
Joe Eldridge, Co-Founder and Professional Team Rider
Atlanta, Georgia
TeamType1.org | TeamType2.com
We strive to instill hope and inspiration for people around the world affected by diabetes. With appropriate diet, exercise, treatment and technology, we believe anyone with diabetes can achieve their dreams.
Men’s Professional Team: 21 Riders (Six with Type 1 Diabetes) | View Roster
Women’s Cycling Team: 19 Riders (Nine with Type 1 Diabetes) | View Roster
Development Team: 10 Riders (Eight with Type 1 Diabetes) | View Roster
Elite Team: 20 Riders (All with Type 1 Diabetes) | View Roster
Triathlon Team: 12 Athletes (All with Type 1 Diabetes) | View Roster
Running Team: 15 Athletes (All with Type 1 Diabetes) | View Roster
Team Type 2: 18 Riders (All with Type 2 Diabetes) | View Roster
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A leader in the research of diabetes in sports, Team Type 1 is an organization dedicated to improving the lives of people with diabetes worldwide. Team Type 1 was established as the first-ever professional cycling team to include elite athletes with Type 1 diabetes and has expanded to seven squads with 107 athletes from 11 countries, competing at amateur and professional levels in cycling, running and triathlon. All of the current programs are made up of ordinary people living extraordinary lives with diabetes.
Formed in 2004 to compete in the 2005 Race Across America, Team Type 1‘s 8-person team now has expanded to 68 athletes with the mission to instill hope and inspiration for people around the world affected by diabetes. The team encourages control of diabetes through diet, exercise and the use of the best treatment and technology available today.
In 2008, the team grew to include a Professional Continental Team that included four riders with Type 1 diabetes. In their inaugural pro season, Team Type 1 compiled 45 victories, including winning the team classification at the Tour de Beauce and the Vuelta Mexico and placing two riders (Glen Chadwick and Moises Aldape) in the Olympic road race in Beijing.
In 2009, Team Type 1 expanded to include a Triathlon Team, a Developmental Team, a Women's Professional Team and Team Type 2.
Program Director: Vassili Davidenko | Contact
Assistant Director: Michael Carter | Contact
In 2011, Team Type 1 has signed an international roster of riders with a deep and strong level of European experience.
The 21-man squad includes world-class veterans Laszlo Bodrogi, Rubens Bertogliati and Alexander Efimkin, sprinters Andrea Grendene and Aldo Ino Ilesic, stage specialists Javier Megias Leal and Alessandro Bazzana, climbers Will Dugan and Kiel Reijnen. Six of the riders have Type 1 diabetes: Fabio Calabria, Joe Eldridge, Alex Bowden, Martijn Verschoor, Olaf Kerkhof and Javier Megias Leal.
In addition to five Americans there are riders from France, Italy, Russia, Slovenia, Netherlands, Spain and Ukraine. The team is a UCI-registered American Professional Continental squad, and is based in Atlanta, GA and La Spezia, Italy.
In 2009, Team Type 1 won 55 races, finished fourth in the National Racing Calendar (NRC) standings and captured the King of the Mountains title at five races, including the Tour of Missouri. In two seasons, the squad has registered 100 victories and 219 podium (top three) finishes.
Four of the 17 riders have Type 1 diabetes: Fabio Calabria, Joe Eldridge, Javier Megias and Martijn Verschoor. In addition to nine Americans, there are riders from Australia, Holland, Italy, Russia, Slovenia, Spain and the Ukraine.
Program Director: Kori Seehafer | Contact
Team Type 1 will bring a new format to its women's cycling team in 2011. With the introduction of beginning female cyclists and the return of headline riders, the Women's Program will be stepping to the forefront in development of women athletes with Type 1 diabetes. The programs long term goal is to field a national level team made up entirely of women with Type 1 diabetes by 2013. This year the program will be establishing a foundation that will help them reach this goal. Kori Seehafer, Director and Coach, is a former European World Cup winner and will be bringing her wealth of knowledge to the program, guiding beginning female cyclists to the professional level.
Program Director: Jack Seehafer | Contact
The Team Type 1 Development Team is a top-performing competitive group of international athletes between the ages of 17 and 30.
Team Type 1's development program is lead by Jack Seehafer and the riders are trained by Gleb Groysman. In 2011, the development program demonstrated it's potential for future success by promoting three riders to the Team Type 1 Professional Team.
In addition to aspiring the highest level in cycling, the Developement Team riders also strive to inspire young people to manage and control their diabetes through proper diet and exercise.
Program Director: Bob Schrank | Contact
The Team Type 1 Elite Team is where it all started. The Elite Team helped Team Type 1 gain global prominence in the cycling and diabetes communities after winning the epic Race Across America four times, twice in record breaking time.
The team is comprised of some of the finest amateur cyclists in the U.S. and each member of the Elite Team lives with type 1 diabetes. Look for the Team Type 1 Elite Team at the Tour of America's Dairyland, the Star Crossed Cyclo-cross, the Tour de Tucson and many of the America Diabetes Associations Tour de Cure events.
Program Director: Tom Kingery | Contact
In the inaugural year of the running program the team is going great distances to change the way the world thinks about diabetes. The Running Team will compete in a 3,000 mile trans-continental run beginning in late October, 2011.
Program Director: Tom Kingery | Contact
The Team Type 1 Triathlon Team is comprised of some of the finest amateur triathletes in the U.S. The team competes in the most competitive triathlons in the U.S. including USAT Championships and Ironman Championship. Each member of the Triathlon Team has Type 1 diabetes.
Program Director: Dave Eldridge | Contact
Team Type 2 is living proof to all patients with diabetes that their disease can be controlled through healthy eating, regular exercise and appropriate medication. The team's focus is the epic Race Across America. Each member of the Elite Team has Type 2 diabetes.
1st - Race Across America
1st - Tour du Maroc, Stage 3
1st - Tour du Maroc, Stage 7
1st - Tour du Maroc, Stage 10
1st - Vuelta Mexico, Stage 1
1st - Tour do Rio, Stage 4
1st - Tour do Rio, Stage 5
2nd - Tour du Maroc, Stage 1
2nd - Tour du Maroc Stage 6
2nd - Overall, Tour du Maroc
2nd - Tour de Beauce, Stage 5
2nd - Tour do Rio, Stage 1
2nd - Tour do Rio, Stage 2
2nd - Overall, Tour do Rio
3rd - Tour du Maroc, Stage 8
3rd - Tour du Maroc, Stage 9b
3rd - Vuelta Mexico, Stage 4
3rd - Vuelta Mexico, Stage 8
3rd - Tour de Beauce, Stage 3
King of the Mountains classification, Tour of California
King of the Mountains classification, Redlands Bicycle Classic
1st - U.S. Air Force Cycling Classic (Shawn Milne)
1st - Race Across America (Team Type 1 Elite squad)
1st - Joe Martin Stage Race and Stage 1 and Stage 4 winner (Alison Powers)
1st - La Vuelta de Bisbee and King of the Mountains classification (Darren Lill)
1st - Mexican national road race and time trial championships (Veronica Leal)
1st - U.S. national Under 23 criterium (Samantha Schneider) and time trial (Jacquelyn Crowell)
King of the Mountains classification, Tour of Missouri (Moises Aldape)
King of the Mountains classification, Tour of Ireland (Matt Wilson)
King of the Mountains classification, Tour de Taiwan (Jesse Anthony)
King of the Mountains classification, San Dimas Stage Race (Shawn Milne)
1st - Vuelta Mexico and Tour de Beauce
2nd - Race Across America (RAAM)
2nd - Tour of Langkawi
3rd - Tour de Georgia presented by ATT
Glen Chadwick, Olympian (New Zealand) and overall winner, Vuelta Mexico and Tour of Arkansas
Moises Aldape, Olympian (Mexico) and sprint classification winner, Tour de Beauce
Matt Wilson, King of the Mountains classification, Tour of Ireland, Jayco Herald Sun Tour
Shawn Milne, second place overall, Tour de Taiwan
Team Type 1 works every day of the year to provide hope, inspiration and education around the world to those living with diabetes and to their families. To that end, Team Type 1 participated in over 700 diabetes-related events in 2010 alone, including appearances and presentations at major diabetes conferences, community events, presentations to medical professionals in the diabetes field and delivery of life-saving diabetes supplies and medication to those in need.
Last November, Team Type 1 raced in the Tour of Rwanda and presented 35,000 test strips and 400 blood glucose meters, all donated by fans and supporters of Team Type 1, to children who otherwise wouldn’t have access to these necessary supplies and medication. The team will be returning to Rwanda throughout 2011 to deliver additional supplies with the goal of delivering 900,000 test strips to the country by year-end. The ultimate quest is to develop a sustainable scalable platform to ensure all children with diabetes have access to the tools they need to manage and control their disease.
Team Type 1 is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) charitable organization. To support Team Type 1 in our diabetes outreach missions please Make A Donation of any amount. Your 100% tax-deductible donation will allow Team Type 1 to continue in their life changing and life saving work to provide inspiration, hope and medical supplies to those who desperately need help living with type 1 or type 2 diabetes.
When someone has diabetes, their body does not produce insulin. Insulin is one of the main hormones that regulates blood sugar levels and allows the body to use sugar for energy. And without insulin, there's no energy. As a competitive athlete, no energy means your chances of being competitive are minimized.
On April 21, 2003, Phil Southerland met Joe Eldridge at a college bike race. Phil, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at seven months old, was meticulous about controlling his blood sugar. Joe, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 10, had put his diabetes in the back of his mind, as do many who have diabetes. Both Joe and Phil noticed they were each taking insulin before the start and realized they had something important in common beyond bike racing. They were racing as riders with Type 1 diabetes.
After the race, Joe and Phil's friendship grew. And so did the competition, on and off the bike. Phil was getting frustrated with Joe's lackluster approach to diabetes. So he proposed a bet where the person with the higher blood sugar paid for dinner. For three months, every time they ate out together, Joe ended up taking the bill.
But eventually, as Joe began to learn how to play the diabetes "game," he was able to manage his blood sugar and get it under control. One night at dinner, Joe won the bet and made Phil pay for the dinner. For Joe, winning the bet that night was more than not having to pay for dinner. It was a signal to him that anyone can be a competitive athlete when they manage their diabetes successfully. This insight was a life saver for Joe. And over the next 12 months, Joe lowered his A1C below 7 for the first time in years.
Impressed by Joe's transformation, Phil began to think of how he could make the most of Joe's story, and their friendship, to inspire others with diabetes to do the same. He had a vision to unite everyone with diabetes and to inspire them to take control of their diabetes. On a 300-mile bike ride from Athens, Georgia to Tallahassee, Florida, Phil called Joe with the idea. Over the next 24 hours, the pair brainstormed on their own and over the phone with Joe finally giving a name to their dream: Team Type 1.
Making a dream into a reality takes hard work, good friends and a bit of luck. Fortunately for Joe and Phil, they had all three.
In a chance Tuesday meeting on February 22, 2005, Phil met Daniel Hopkins who asked Phil what he would do with $400 to get Team Type 1 off of the ground. Phil said he would buy t-shirts and business cards to raise money and spread awareness about diabetes. Hopkins gave Phil four $100 bills and wished him well. Phil immediately went to the bank and opened an account under the name "Team Type 1." It was 3:30 pm. By 4:15 pm Phil placed an order for 1,000 business cards and 100 t-shirts at LS Design in Athens. Two weeks later, the package of shirts and cards arrived and the selling began. If you could breathe, Phil sold you a shirt.
At the same time, Joe encouraged Phil to participate in an upcoming JDRF Ride To Cure. The pair sold their t-shirts so they could afford to go. On the ride Joe and Phil shared their story and their dream with the other riders. (And also sold more t-shirts.) After the 100-mile ride, someone at the post-ride dinner suggested that Phil and Joe "do something big," like riding across America. Phil and Joe looked at each other like that was crazy. Then, like reading the other one's mind, they both said at the same time: "Let's do Race Across America! And do it with a team of riders with Type 1 diabetes!" The day was May 19, 2005, and the goal was set to race the following year.
Race Across America is a single stage, 24-hour a day race from the West Coast of the United States to the East Coast of the United States. It is 30% longer than the Tour de France. There are no rest days. The race format is a time trial. There is no drafting or taking shelter from the wind. Riders battle snowy 3 am descents through the Rocky Mountains, the punishing winds across the flatlands of Kansas and the aching climbs through the Appalachian Mountains before the close of the 3,000 mile race.
Photograph ©2006 Joseph Linaschke, www.josephlinaschke.com
The Race Across America is a challenge for any seasoned athlete. For a team of riders with Type 1 diabetes, it was considered impossible.
A friend of Southerland's, Jered Gruber of PezCyclingnews.com, heard about Team Type 1's dream of competing in the Race Across America and wrote a short article that gave the basics: "Team Type 1 is currently raising money to fund the prodigious effort to field a team in the 2006 Race Across America." It was at the bottom of the page. And, of course, Team Type 1 jerseys were made and sold for $60 apiece to raise money.
Within seven days of the PezCylcingnews.com article, six additional riders with Type 1 diabetes had come forward to compete in Race Across America as Team Type 1. Within months, the financial backing from sponsors was found, the team kits had been designed and produced and training had begun.
On January 25, 2006, Holly Kulp, a friend of the team, made the financial commitment to underwrite Team Type 1 for the race. And the sponsors began to come into place: Abbott Diabetes Care, Litespeed bikes, Zipp wheels, Hammer Nutrition, Rudy Project, Oakley, and The Weather Channel. The riders were: Joe and Phil, along with Linda Demma, Jay Hewitt, Bobby Heyer, Steve Holmes, Pratt Rather and Troy Willard. The riders trained with a goal and worked hard to achieve it. Pratt Rather handled the logistics to ensure the support crew was in place—which ended up being the most important part of the team.
Many people thought Team Type 1 was a charity group just looking to finish Race Across America. They gave half-hearted nods and fake smiles when Phil and Joe said they were going for the win.
The race was lost in the first one and a half days when Team Type 1 shed two hours to the lead team. They did not know precisely where their blood sugars should be, which hindered their performance. It was not the fault of their Type 1 diabetes that hurt their time. Rather, it was needing to understand how their bodies would react under the demands of the race, and what corrective measures were needed to manage their blood sugar.
Fortunately, by the second half of Race Across America, Team Type 1 had their blood sugars under control and their performance reflected this: they made up the two hour deficit and fought tooth and nail for the win.
Five days, 16 hours and four minutes after the start of the Race Across America, the doubters were silenced as Team Type 1 rolled across the finish line in Annapolis, Maryland, in second place, losing by a mere three minutes.
The team was disappointed with the loss, but they had achieved their original goal: to do Race Across America with a team of eight riders with Type 1 diabetes. The good news was that there was always next year.
Team Type 1's winning 8-person team at the 2010 Race Across America. Pictured (L to R) Jerry Willis, Adam Driscoll, James Stout, Daniel Schneider, Justin Folger, Jeff Bannink, Lonny Knabe, Tom Kingery
The Team Type 1 Professional Team was introduced in 2008.
Type 1 diabetes doesn't slow Javier Megias Leal as he races through a crowd of spectators at the 2010 Tour of California.

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