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Recipes are a dime-a-dozen. Familiar pairings make for quick successes in the kitchen and sticking to what you know often leaves people feeling satiated and full. The deeper one gets into creating meals, the more exotic the ingredients become. Palates develop, creativity blooms, and a fuller understanding of what a “balanced” meal is reveals itself, often in ways one wouldn’t expect. The Santa Cruz htSQD is one of these exotic recipes. Five unlikely ingredients, each humble and unassuming on their own, all elevate when combined.  

Keegan Swenson of the htSqd

Keegan Swenson is a hunter. He’s a man with hard edges, strict schedules, strong convictions, and the grit to back it all up. When he didn’t qualify for the Olympics this year his mission shifted, looking at every large race in the continental United States through one lens: Seek & Destroy. Collecting trophies became the name of the game, ultimately hoping to collect two trophies in one week.  

Alexis Skarda

Alexis Skarda is the kind of gentle, modest personality that may go un-noticed, that is until you see her standing on top of the podium. Every. Podium. A quiet approach, you would be forgiven if you were confused with how someone could be so disruptive without anyone noticing. Alexis quite simply just gets ahead of her competition and stays there. A simple tactic with field-proven results. 

Tobin Ortenblad

Tobin Ortenblad is a bit of a court jester. The kind of guy you probably hear before you see, always eager to cut tension with a joke and a smile. On-course is different. His diverse background in cycling makes him a total threat. The pacing and attack from cyclocross, the smooth flow and deliberate precision of BMX and being a weapon on a mountain bike all combine to create a cocktail of brutality when between the tape. 

htSqd team mechanics

You won’t see Myron Billy and Jordan Nguyen’s names on the results sheet — Myron tends the stables while Jordan steers the ship. Both calm and understated but are kings of their crafts. Running a team is anything but easy, it requires dedication, heart, and an intimate knowledge of the intricacies of each component. 

The htSqd gets ready.
htsqd team gets ready
Racers line up at breck epic.
Day 1 at the Breck Epic.

Teamwork is all about understanding the role that you play as an individual within a web of other individuals to work towards a goal. Sometimes your desires take the backseat to prop up others, sometimes you get to be the one propped, but you are never dormant. Playing cheerleader to a team member is as valuable to a team as winning the race if the race is won by your team. Leadville was hard-fought, which Keegan took on solo, but the support lay with Tobin, Myron and Jordan. Breaking the tension, offering a bottle and just being a comforting face at the end of a monstrous climb is part of the recipe for the team’s success.

Alexis Skarda preps for 2021 Breck Epic
Racers at the Breck Epic start
Keegan's details. Breck Epic
Alexis Skarda passes at tree at the 2021 Breck Epic
Tobin Ortenblad at the Breck Epic

The Breck Epic would put the recipe to the test with six days’ worth of high country singletrack racing. The stages would be challenging, each taking about three hours of absolute hammering on the pedals, all above 10’000 feet of elevation. For Keegan, the addition of Leadville’s 100 miles in front of the Breck Epic meant going into the race road-worn and ragged. 

Drying race shoes at breck epic
Ready to go at Breck Epic
Racers fuel up for Breck Epic stage 5.
Alexis Skarda's dry toes hack

Day-in and day-out, the time followed its own recipe. Awaken, cook up a breakfast to suit the day, eat, listen to music, hop on the bike, cruise downhill to the start line, race, finish, pedal home, eat, stretch, eat, music, sleep. Embedding oneself in this process is crucial to finding success, and it showed. By the halfway in the race, it was clear that the htSQD were the dominant team on the ground. Both Alexis and Keegan were sweeping their categories, and Tobin bumped up in the results each day.  

Tobin Ortenblad at the Breck Epic
Keegan Swenson racing at the Breck Epic.
Alexis Skarda racing at the Breck Epic

The final day hit. Alexis and Keegan were both leading by significant margins, having both won all stages prior. Tactically, Keegan was confident in his lead and new Tobin could keep up with the top crew, so they devised a plan to get him there. After climbing out to the far end of the course and heading back towards the finish they knew they plan was working. Tobin was comfortably in the top 5, both he and Keegan felt like the success was theirs so they took celebratory PBR’s at the handoff, a tradition not all would participate in. Knowing the race was hers, Alexis indulged as well. Sometimes the champagne of victory is just a PBR, but the sense of accomplishment is the same. As serious as the racing is, the understanding that wins can be measured in ways outside of the clock is so important. 

Keegan Sweson drinks a celebratory PBR
Tobin Ortenblad drinks a PBR
Alexis Skarda drinks a PBR

A team, like any meal good or bad, is a sum of its ingredients. Different meals are appropriate for different situations, the same as a team, and some always work out better than others. The flash can be exciting and exotic, but ultimately flavors and textures just need to pair well. The htSQD have found their recipe and are stacking up the medals proving it. 

The htSQD dominated the Breck Epic aboard their SRAM XX1 Eagle AXS equipped Santa Cruz Blur's. Keeping them in control were SRAM Level Ultimate brakes, RockShox SID Ultimate, and RockShox SIDLuxe Ultimate, while RockShox Reverb AXS kept the saddle out of the way. 

Video by Mind Spark Cinema. Photos by Morgan Meredith. Words by Peter Matthews.