Cyclists gear up for 540-mile ride across New York to combat cancer 
 BY AIDAN GRAHAM 
 More than 180 cyclists  
 will don spandex and hit the  
 saddle for a daunting sevenday  
 cycling journey from  
 Staten  Island  to  Niagara  
 Falls on July 28, in a race to  
 fight an even more grueling  
 challenge — cancer. 
 The  540-mile  annual  
 Empire State Ride was  
 conceived  in  2014  by  Terry  
 Bourgeois to raise funds for  
 cancer research — and has  
 grown exponentially since his  
 inaugural ride, he said. 
 “Every  year,  this  ride  
 brings  its  participants  an  
 experience  that  will  stay  
 with  them  the  rest  of  their  
 lives,”  says  Bourgeois.  “We  
 keep saying it’s a ride cyclists  
 must  try  once  in  their  lives,  
 but the impact — on you  
 and on cancer — increases  
 exponentially the more you  
 do it.” 
 This year, organizers hope  
 to  raise more  than  $1 million  
 from riders and sponsors —  
 which  will  go  to  supporting  
 cutting-edge cancer research at  
 Roswell Park Comprehensive  
 Cancer Center in Buffalo,  
 according to the organization. 
 Riders  push  themselves  to  
 the physical limits during the  
 exhausting cross-state ride,  
 but find inspiration to keep  
 pedaling from those who have  
 conquered cancer, according  
 to one rider who will make his  
 second voyage this year. 
 “The  idea  of  what  they’ve  
 gone through — this ride is  
 nothing  compared  to  hours  
 of chemotherapy,” said  
 Brooklynite Phil Zodda. “I’m  
 not a cancer survivor, but  
 when  you’re  riding  side-byside  
 with someone who has  
 gone through that, you can’t  
 feel bad for yourself — those  
 mountains flatten out.” 
 After  exhaustive  days  
 of  non-stop  riding,  cyclists  
 will make six overnight  
 stops along the meticulously  
 planned  route  at  camp  
 grounds in the Hudson Valley,  
 Albany, Utica, Syracuse and  
 Rochester until they reach  
 the waterfall wonder of the  
 world on Aug. 3.  
 “It’s  really  more  of  an  
 adventure as opposed to a  
 race,”  said  Zodda.  “It’s  long  
 and difficult, but I found it to  
 be extremely rewarding.” 
 Each night features a  
 Phil Zodda (left) with other cyclists at the halfway mark of the 2018 Empire State Ride.  
 cancer-surviving  guest  
 speaker  who  inspires  their  
 fellow  riders  with  their  
 stories and speaks of the  
 importance of raising funds  
 to combat the disease —  
 which  claims  the  lives  of  
 around  600,000  Americans  
 each year, according to  
 government statistics. 
 “It’s not so much the  
 illness,  as much  as  it’s  about  
 processing the word ‘cancer.’  
 Hearing those stories helps,”  
 said second-year rider Scott  
 Cohen from Fresh Meadows.  
 “You make a wonderful bond  
 with  so  many  people  who  
 are there.” 
 Cohen  says  cycling,  
 and the Empire State Ride  
 specifically, helped him  
 Credit:Jackie Slope 
 through his personal journey  
 through bouts of health  
 troubles  —  including  skin  
 cancer, diabetes, and weaning  
 himself off opiates. 
 “The cycling was one of  
 the key ingredients that’s got  
 me healthy,” he said. “It’s like  
 an addiction, but it’s a good  
 one. It’s amazing for the body  
 and mind.” 
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