The creation of the International Cycling Association in 1892 made internationally recognised championships possible.
"After a modest start in the early 1890s," said the British cycling official George Herbert Stancer, "the ICA achieved considerable success, eventually gaining the support of all the important sport-controlling bodies in the cycling world.
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The King of Los Angeles was a pro series of seven races held at ABA tracks in the Southern California/Los Angeles area hastily put together on the same weekend to counter the debut and emergence of a new and as it turned out short live sanctioning body called the International Cycling Association (ICA) (which was founded in part by Pro racer Greg Hill) which was holding its first event, the Cowboy National in Dallas, Texas during that same weekend.