Miami Herald (Sunday)

This North Miami group is creating a new generation of cyclists — and they want podiums

- BY C. ISAIAH SMALLS II csmalls@miamiheral­d.com C. Isaiah Smalls II: @stclaudeii

Kadafie Riche is tired. The 16-year-old just biked more than five miles and he’s dripping with sweat.

Nicknamed “Black Cheetah,” the 16-year-old is one of the poster boys of the Break the Cycle program, which aims to cultivate a new generation of cyclists and call attention to issues plaguing Black and brown communitie­s.

But to Riche, BTC is much more than that: the program has given him a hobby, a healthier body and, according to BTC founder and executive director Maurice Hanks, a real chance at going to the Tour de France.

“I feel confident,” Riche said. “I set a goal for myself every time: try to get podium.”

Founded in 2021, BTC offers an alternativ­e outlet for Black kids to develop physically and emotionall­y. Through rides, accountabi­lity lessons and building genuine relationsh­ips, the kids have transforme­d to real cycling aficionado­s.

As Break the Cycle founder and executive director, Hanks just wants all of the kids to know that their current circumstan­ces don’t have to dictate their futures.

“All we knew was just go to school and get a job,” Hanks said. “My thing is to let them know that there’s multiple ways of making money and getting ahead in life.”

Hanks, who has been riding for nearly a decade, came up with the idea for BTC amid the pandemic. The first ride was Easter Sunday 2020 and hundreds of people showed up. From there, Hanks and his team just kept building — rides to Zoo Miami, rides to Palm Beach, rides to Orlando — and before long, he decided to do a summer program for kids of all ages.

“My goal is to make cycling like basketball and football,” Hanks said. Break the Cycle will even be hosting its first race, the Break the Cycle Cycling Classic on Nov. 13 in Doral.

BTC’s marketing director Janae Turner says Hanks has become more than a mentor.

“Maurice invests a lot of time with the kids,” Turner said.

A graduate of Edison High, Hanks was born and raised in Miami-Dade County. His grandmothe­r primarily raised him and he skipped college for a career in promotion and eventually financial advisement. His background allows him to relate to the kids, he says.

“No disrespect to the ministers and the churches but the churches aren’t in the streets with the kids,” Hanks said. He emphasized that the program mainly focuses on kids from singlepare­nt households where a male role model is needed.

Now two years in, Hanks believes he made it.

Or, more accurately, Hanks believes “we ”—asin he and his Break the Cycle proteges — made it. His evidence is rooted in how tournament­s have gotten a bit stricter ever since he and his team of Black cyclists started entering.

“When we first started riding, they knew us as Break the Cycle with the good, pretty uniforms,” Hanks recalled. “Now, they’re checking everybody’s name, making sure they’re the right age for the race and going through all informatio­n to make sure we don’t put nobody that’s not supposed to be there.”

This wasn’t always the case but to Hanks, it’s just one of the perils of success.

 ?? SYDNEY WALSH swalsh@miamiheral­d.com ?? Break the Cycle Founder Maurice Hanks, who works with kids mainly from single-parent families.
SYDNEY WALSH swalsh@miamiheral­d.com Break the Cycle Founder Maurice Hanks, who works with kids mainly from single-parent families.

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