Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Pier pedal back at Manhattan Beach

Annual stationary bike event helps raise money to cure cancer, features survivors

- By Lisa Jacobs lisa.jacobs@TBRnews.com

Hundreds of stationary bikes once again lined The Strand in Manhattan Beach on Sunday as fitness instructor­s and celebrity guests shouted encouragem­ent to riders who enjoyed a blue ocean view.

Some of the riders were cancer survivors. Some had lost loved ones to the disease. All of them pushed the pedals to exercise some control over a condition that had sapped their strength, both physically and mentally.

The ninth annual Tour de Pier, a favorite South Bay fundraiser for cancer causes, was back inperson.

The event hit its peak in 2019, hosting nearly 2,500 bike riders. This year, less than half that number participat­ed — about 1,100 — riding 240 bikes across five sessions throughout the day.

Still, after more than a year of dealing with a pandemic, the riders were glad to once again pedal the stationary bikes while overlookin­g the ocean on what co-founder and cycling enthusiast Heath Gregory calls “the best day on the calendar.”

Gregory, John Hirshberg and Lisa Manheim started the Tour de Pier in 2013. That first year, Gregory said, the fundraiser drew 800 riders and made $340,000. To date, the eight years of riding has garnered $8.7 million, divvied among The Hirshberg Foundation for Pancreatic Cancer Research, The Uncle Kory Founda

tion and Cancer Support Community.

And the return to the beach this September was especially poignant, Gregory said.

The event, which usually occurs in May each year, was cancelled in 2020 because of the pandemic and postponed again in May.

“It’s an opportunit­y for our community to share their silent battles,” said Gregory, who had three family members die from cancer in less than two years, “and really open up about a challenge in their life that is not easy to talk about with other people.”

It’s that camaraderi­e that’s gotten Jennifer Valladares through the most challengin­g thing she’s ever faced — an aggressive form of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Valladares, an avid spin cycler, had ridden in Tour de Pier for an aunt and a grandmothe­r who died from cancer.

“Before (my diagnosis), it was different riding for my aunt and for my grandma,” Valladares said in an interview before Sunday’s event.

But after her December 2018 diagnosis, the Lomita resident said, the pedaling became personal.

“It’s like you pedal away your tension and the anger you have over the cancer,” Valladares said.

The single mom of two underwent intense chemothera­py, five days a week, every three weeks for six months. She’s now cancer free. Doctors told her the reason she survived the cancer treatment was because she was in great shape.

“The energy there is just amazing,” Valladares said of previous Tour de Pier events. “Even before I was diagnosed, I just felt everyone there is affected by cancer in some way and is riding together. I felt so happy. Whatever stress I had in my life just went away.”

Valladares on Sunday was up on stage helping her longtime spin coach, Philip Kessel, better known as PK, motivate the crowd. Her 17-yearold son, Sam, took a turn riding.

But now, Valladares said, she understand­s the pedaling on a deeper level.

“I’m spinning for myself, for my survivorsh­ip,” she said, “and that the treatment worked.”

Gregory, for his part, said the pandemic has been especially hard for cancer patients, survivors and their loved ones. COVID-19, after all, is acutely dangerous for those with pre-existing conditions.

This year’s Tour de Pier has come with a lot of emotion and inspiratio­n, he said, as people begin to reset priorities and learn to be more positive.

“It’s a celebratio­n of all that we’ve been working for over the last couple of years,” Gregory said. “It gives us a lot of hope about what we’ll be able to do in the years to come and that we’re getting back to normal.”

 ?? PHOTO BY CHUCK BENNETT ?? The ninth annual Tour de Pier took place Sunday. Many rode stationary bikes on the Manhattan Beach Pier to raise money for to research cancer causes.
PHOTO BY CHUCK BENNETT The ninth annual Tour de Pier took place Sunday. Many rode stationary bikes on the Manhattan Beach Pier to raise money for to research cancer causes.
 ?? PHOTO BY CHUCK BENNETT ?? A view of the Ninth annual Tour de Pier on Sunday. The event features stationary bikes on the Manhattan Beach Pier, where attendees ride to raise money for research into cancer causes.
PHOTO BY CHUCK BENNETT A view of the Ninth annual Tour de Pier on Sunday. The event features stationary bikes on the Manhattan Beach Pier, where attendees ride to raise money for research into cancer causes.
 ??  ?? Some of the participan­ts in the Tour de Pier ride their stationary bikes.
Some of the participan­ts in the Tour de Pier ride their stationary bikes.

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