The world of professional cycling has seen its share of tragedies and scandals. Until recently, they didn't seem to involve gravel racing. Perhaps the sport hasn't been around long enough (though, I think, people were gravel riding and gravel racing long before the sport got its name or bikes were built specially for it) to attract bad actors. Or it may just have to do with the fact that most gravel racers are young and aren't steeped in the "this is how it's done" or "everybody does it" mentality that seems to affect people, not only in the more established areas of bike racing, but in any other long-standing institution.
But now gravel racing seems to have been thrown into its first scandal--and tragedy. And it involves someone named Armstrong who lives in Austin, Texas.
No, I'm not talking about Lance. Nor am I referring to anything that involves illicit substances. Rather, I am about to relate a story that involves something we don't often hear about in professional cycling: a love triangle. And the Armstrong in question is named Kaitlin and, to my knowledge, not related to Lance.
She lived with alleycat rider-turned-gravel racer Colin Strickland. Both are in their mid-30s. Their relationship took a "hiatus" for a couple of months last fall. During that time, according to reports, he dated Anna Moriah "Mo" Wilson, ten years his junior and considered one of the up-and-coming stars of the gravel racing circuit. After Armstrong and Strickland reconciled, he continued to stay in touch with Wilson, which did not make Armstrong happy, to say the least.
Wilson was scheduled to race in the capital city of the Lone Star State on the 11th of this month. She arriveed the day before and stayed with a friend. Someone called police after hearing shots in the apartment, where Wilson was found, fatally shot. The only item missing from the apartment was her bicycle. And, according to an anonymous source, Armstrong talked about killing Wilson .
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Anna Moriah "Mo" Wilson, from Dartmouth College Athletics |
The day after Wilson's body was found, Armstrong was brought into the police station for questioning, where a detective said things "don't look good" for her. Not long afterward, Armstrong deleted her social media accounts and simply vanished. Now local police and the U.S. Marshals are following leads in the hope of finding her.
Say what you will about Strickland seeing Wilson. I will, however, criticize him for this: Last December and January, he bought two guns, a Springfield Armory and a Sig Sauer, and gave the Sig Sauer to Armstrong. Now, I'm not keen on firearms, but I understand that Texas has a different culture and set of laws about them than what we have in New York. Still, I have to wonder what he was thinking. Why a gun for each of them?
Those guns were recovered when police searched their apartment. On the 17th, police tested the Sig Sauer and compared the shell casings to ones found near Wilson's body.
The detective is right in more ways than one: things don't "look good" for Kristin Armstrong. And the world of gravel racing is without one of its brightest lights in Anna Moriah Wilson.