Culture
July 8, 2026Alexander Nikitin2 min read

170 Kilometres, Two Generations, One Finish Line

Alexander NikitinTEBIN Contributor
170 Kilometres, Two Generations, One Finish Line - Culture article from TEBIN

Some finish lines mean more than others. This summer, Alexander Nikitin and his son rode the Ring of Kerry Charity Cycle — 170 kilometres around one of Ireland's most beautiful and most demanding coastal routes. They started together, and they finished together.

170 kilometres is a serious distance for any cyclist. For a young rider, it is a genuine achievement. A distance like that is not covered on enthusiasm alone: it takes preparation, pacing, patience, and the decision to keep pedalling long after the excitement of the start has faded. Completing the full route at his age says a lot about character — and about what happens when someone believes in you and rides beside you.

That is the part worth writing down. Support rarely looks spectacular. It is not a speech; it is presence. The best mentoring works the same way: show by example, share the road, let people find their own rhythm, and make sure they know they are not riding alone. It is true in a family, and it is just as true in a design and engineering company like TEBIN.

The parallel between sport and business is not a stretched metaphor. A long ride teaches what every long project confirms: energy has to be managed, a big goal has to be broken into stages, hard sections pass, and consistency beats bursts of motivation. And sport protects your health — the quiet foundation under everything else: focus, decisions, patience with people, and the endurance to carry long projects to the end.

The medal at the finish is a nice memory. Riding the distance together is the real prize.

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