
Living a full and healthy life with type 1 diabetes (T1D) became clear to Matt Edgington when he was a teenager. He had been living with T1D since the age of 4, but his teenage years brought frustration and burnout. He didn’t check his blood sugar enough or administer the right amounts of insulin, resulting in a less-than-ideal A1C. “Coupling hormones with an attitude-filled teenager was just a recipe for disaster,” he said. “I wish I could say that was some kind of wake-up call, but it really wasn’t.”
Around that time, Matt started riding mountain bikes with his older brother and friends. That was the start of a major shift in his life. “As I started to ride more, everything just started to click: the better my blood sugar was, the better I was able to ride. The more I rode, the easier it was to control my blood sugar. It became a revolving door that had a huge impact on my life.”
Team Mattman

When Matt was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, it didn’t entirely come as a surprise. His father, Ruedy, was diagnosed with T1D in 1970 at age 12 (and told by his doctor that he wouldn’t live to be 18!). “It was obviously horrible for them, but it wasn’t like this brand new, unknown thing,” Matt said. “My dad had been managing his T1D for 30 years at that point, and my mom was familiar with the day-to-day life of it.”
The Edgingtons immediately got involved with Breakthrough T1D (then JDRF), starting a Walk team, Team Mattman, in their Reno, NV, chapter that continued for the next 14 years. “That was, hands down, my favorite day of the year, every year,” Matt said. “I used to autograph everyone on my team’s shirt!”
Grabbing fundraising by the handlebars

As Matt got older, the Edgington family started looking for new ways to support the T1D community. “We still had a desire to be involved and continue to raise money, so, as a cycling family, our efforts naturally rolled over right into doing Rides,” Matt said.
Breakthrough T1D Ride also felt like something he could stamp as his own way to raise money and awareness for type 1 diabetes after his family had led efforts for so many years. “Riding at the front with the fast riders, and now being a Ride coach, feels like the first contribution that I am making on my own to the organization,” he said.
Ride coaching was a natural evolution for Matt, who now lives in Utah. “It’s the most outdoorsy community I have ever been around, so it felt like a huge opportunity to grow the Ride program here,” he said.
To date, Matt’s parents have done more than 25 Rides. This year will mark Matt’s 15th Ride.
Confidence through cycling
Cycling has given Matt confidence he never imagined. He recently completed a 100-mile mountain bike race in Leadville, CO, and considers that his biggest T1D success. “Training and completing that ride was a huge statement that a person living with type 1 diabetes can do anything.”
But to Matt, now more than 25 years into his T1D journey, there is still no cycling event quite like the Breakthrough T1D Ride. “It’s an inspiration: the people with T1D all on their bikes fighting for the same cause.”
Ride toward cures
Breakthrough T1D Ride is more than cycling; it’s a movement to cure type 1 diabetes.
Join us at the Breakthrough T1D Coeur d’Alene Ride, September 25-28!