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― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Thursday, 3 June 2010 22:29 (fourteen years ago) link
The thought of a bunch sprint in amateur racing - and being in the middle thereof - fills me with horror!
― Mark C, Friday, 4 June 2010 10:01 (fourteen years ago) link
[LONG]And now something from the "Bad Ideas in Amateur Cycling" file....
Fat Mantis "Steve Shasta" decides to enter a Hill Climb Time Trial.
The course is only 10km and ascends midway up Mt . Diablo (2nd tallest mountain in the Bay Area) approx 1,750 feet of climbing, most of which occurs in the last 5 miles of the race. I'd wager to say that 2/3rds of the vertical climbing occurs in the last 5k. So it's like a steadily increasing incline with quite a few switchbacks.
In retrospect, this was really silly for me to race this event. I had done this course twice previously on pretty low-effort rides... once in 38 minutes and once in 35 minutes. Last year a sub-33 time would get you in the top 10 for my category... ehhhh?
Race day: hot. Almost 90 degrees mid-morning in the shade. Gusts of dry wind that would prove beneficial as they provided mostly tail winds on long flatter stretches.
Had an average warmup but felt a little unsettled. My 30 second man was a guy who I know is pretty fast, and I was the 30s man for my most competitive teammate. Bah... Mouth was sticky, poured water over my head at the starting platform.
Take off hard, too hard. My max HR is 190... I'm at 184 on the flats. Pushing high 20mph over rollers. Get up the first 1k feet without incident. Laboring. I can see riders up ahead on the turns of the ridge. Next thing I know, my 30s man teammate has caught me. around the 5im mark He's in a compact with a 27 and is really spinning. I'm out of gears on some of the steep pitches but can maintain with short bursts.
After I'm passed, there are riders EVERYWHERE. Passing rider who are shattered, it's really hot due to the tailwind, dudes are riding like zombies, not holding their lines. My eyes are stinging. I dump more water over my head and a little in my dry, sticky mouth. HR is still in the high 180s. The course flattens out a little before the final 6 switchbacks and as much as I want to enjoy the less steep sections, I have to dig deep to push... try to keep my mph over 15 to carry my momentum into the bends.
The switchback curves are really steep with some relief on the straights, I'm gear shifting like crazy, pick off a few more guys who are taking bad lines up the mountain. On the last hairpin 2 riders ahead of me go wide to take advantage of the easier grade and to catch more of the tailwind. Sweet strategy guys but I just want to finish. I take the crazy steep inside route and pass them easily. I've got half-mile to go and I am really hurting. 27 minutes of near-max HR has made my legs unresponsive, I can't see cuz of the stinging sweat, my heart is in my head, throat sore from gasping. I know that this is a max effort for me, I don't think I've ever submitted my body to such a test before. I am in the saddle, driving from the hips, just trying to keep the pedals going as fast as possible. I hit the 200m to go sign and I stand up but it doesn't feel as powerful as back in the saddle and driving the pistons. I cross the line with absolutely nothing left.
So considering I gave probably my hardest concentrated effort ever, I'd see it in the results right? Wrong. My teammate who I'm pretty on par with on most rides beat me by 1:45. My time was 30:50, which is about 12mph/330Wavg for 30mins. 18th place in the lowest category! Ned Overend (remember him?) beat me by like 7 minutes. 2 guys beat the course record so it was definitely a fast day.
And so comes the day when the Fat Mantis decides never to do a HC TT ever again. Leave that to the spindly mantis folks and their 25 inch waists.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Sunday, 13 June 2010 03:06 (fourteen years ago) link
legendary hardman
― amuse-douche (haitch), Sunday, 13 June 2010 03:51 (fourteen years ago) link
Judging from this photo I managed to claim third spot in the women's race on Saturday:http://londoncyclesport.com/Assets/LondonCycleSport+Digital+Assets/rapcon20103gall.jpgUnfortunately I was actually in the men's race.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 14 June 2010 19:07 (fourteen years ago) link
haha, great pic.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Monday, 14 June 2010 23:43 (fourteen years ago) link
uh... so... more Race Report time. I'll try to keep it short... er, med length.
47 miles = 1.67 laps of a 27 mile loop. almost all false flats except for 2x400ft bumps that come in rapid succession and then a 1000ft hill climb averaging 8%... the second time around you finish at the summit of the climb.
Being short on climbing skills (=fat mantis), I tried to push the pace as much as possible before the hill but this was a huge mistake as the lead pack (50 of about 75 starters) just launched up the climb at a pace that was far beyond my fitness... so I stayed in my comfort zone (95% of max HR) for the 8:30 minutes (my PR by 90 secs up this hill btw). This left me with two options after reaching the summit: (a) head back to the parking lot and call it a day or (b) solo all the way back to the lead group. I chose (b) and via some sort of miracle, I caught the pack right around the start of lap 2 (solo'd 10 miles at around 24mph, mostly downhill grade but with headwind).
Once I caught back on, I was a little more humbled not to push the pace... until about 7 miles to go, realizing that there's no way I could outclimb these guys and we're just pootling along at 22mph just recovering for the final climb, Fat Mantis Steve Shasta decides to uncork another TT effort. I have my HRM broadcasting in large type on my computer and I keep my head down and figure I can push it to about 95% and still have something for the final climb so I just mash until I get up to 95% of max and then peak over my shoulder....
Instead of the 4 abreast and 12 deep pack going 22mph, there is now a single file line of 50 riders going 25mph. I have accomplished little in the grand scheme. So I sit back up and drift back to mid-pack and decide to recover with everyone else. Final climb, I decide to throw HR to the wind and ascend nimbly (not fast enough to blow up) and then to slowly pick off whoever I can. With about 500m to go, I have a guy on my wheel breathing harder than me (an impressive feat tbh) and then a guy with a kit I don't like who keeps getting out of the saddle and attacking, putting 3-5m on me and then when he sits down, I'm back on his wheel. I'm a sitter (unless it gets real steep), so I'm content to just spin and drive through the hips, keeping the cadence as high as possible yet still pushing enough watts to get me ~10mph up a climb of this difficulty.
Guy with ugly kit ends up attacking one last time about 100m to go but I realize it's too early. I go with him rather then let him take his 5m and as soon as he lets up a little I go past him and aim for the 2 guys about 15m ahead of us. I fall short of catching them, but I drop ugly kit and heavy breather at least.
Final result: 27th out of 75 starters, 63 finishers, 1:17 back from first place. Not great, but I have been training very hard with no taper and this course was definitely not suited best to my Fat Mantis ability. It was also a mixed field, combining my level with the one above so I'm curious to see how I fared out of just my category.
Lessons learned:(a) stop registering for these damn hilly races. It's hard enough being a Fat Mantis; being Pack Fodder is just insult to injury.(b) never give up. I had a dark moment where I considered calling it a day but I powered back to the leaders and ended up beating ~1/2 the guys who dropped me on the climb on the first go-around.(c) when you see a Ritte Team Rider with their dope-ass sexy bikes and kits, make sure you beat them. That felt good. It is nice to have a cool-looking bike and kit, but it is also nice to have good training and fitness level to back it up iykwim.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Monday, 21 June 2010 06:54 (fourteen years ago) link
Good work. The most important thing is beating the guy with the ugly kit.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 21 June 2010 17:33 (fourteen years ago) link
http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4066/4720096060_3c517101ca_b.jpg
I go past him and aim for the 2 guys about 15m ahead of us. I fall short of catching them, but I drop ugly kit and heavy breather at least.
ugly kit is obscured in this pic, heavy breather in the neon green kit fading in the background.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Monday, 21 June 2010 18:47 (fourteen years ago) link
is that duck phillips in the lead?
― cozen, Monday, 21 June 2010 19:20 (fourteen years ago) link
Today's my birthday and I sensibly started celebrating it this morning by doing a time trial. It was on the same 10.2-mile course which I rode 3 times last season - not a fast course, and quite lumpy (if not actually hilly as such - you can stay in the big ring the whole way round, but get slowed down to about 15mph on some sections). My best previous time was 27.19 (22.4mph), so noticeably slower than my ten-mile PB on a flatter course.
I got a new track pump so I made sure the tyres were right up to 120psi before I started warming up. Unfortunately I somehow managed to catch my hand in the locking mechanism, so I had to ride with a bleeding palm and blood blister, but never mind. I set off incredibly fast, averaging 25mph for the first 4 miles. By the turn (after a long drag) my average was about 24mph and by now I had a couple of distant riders in my sights.
The return leg had a slight headwind, but I wasn't focusing on speed, just on trying to reel in the two riders. First, after about 6 miles, I caught and passed one of my clubmates (not the fastest guy, it must be said) for three minutes. Then I gradually started gaining on my minute man. It was painful progress: every time he went past a landmark I'd count the gap between us. First 19, then 16, then 12... Eventually, after having him in sight for about 3 miles, I came past and dropped him. He was on a proper time trial bike with rear disc wheel, so that felt very satisfying. The worst of the 'hills' are in the final mile so I was beginning to feel a bit ragged by then, but I gave it everything.
I knocked more than a minute off my course best, time 26.12, average speed 23.4mph. And then at the results board the organisers gave me a birthday card and a bottle of wine. Nice.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Saturday, 26 June 2010 15:47 (fourteen years ago) link
*very polite but enthusiastic applause*
well done NB+S!!!
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Sunday, 27 June 2010 03:46 (fourteen years ago) link
LONGGGGGGGG:
With temperatures peaking at 110F Saturday and cooling to a mere 101Ftoday, the brutal heat became a massive factor for the purportedly"unchallenging" stage profiles of the Ch1co Stage Race.
I registered in the Masters 35+ 4/5 Category. Not because I like topick on old people, but more because the Cat5 field was really small(~10 riders) whereas the Masters 35+ 4/5 was the largest (36 riders)and also offered a pretty large ca$h money purse to top 10 placementin the GC. Boo-ya.
Saturday was the P4skenta Road Race, a 44 mile loop through the dryrolling hills about an hour northeast of Ch1co. Yeehaw. Prettyawesome to see both Mt. Shasta and Mt. Lassen's snow covered peaks onthe horizon despite the triple digit temps. Our heat only had to dothe lap once and I'd heard from several sources that the course wasflat and fast. Which it was, for the first 25 miles. One rider whowill remain nameless (5t3v3n W00 - Th1rd Pill@r) was wearing armwarmers (uh...?) and then when reaching for food from his jerseypocket, dislodged his point and shoot camera (UHHHHHHHHH?) and it fellto the ground, then bounced into my VIRGIN BRAND NEW* REYNOLDS ATTACKwheel (*well I got it for $175 off craigslist, 2 years old, okcondition). What.the.frak. I assumed that the cat4 masters werewisened zen-masters, apparently not true.
At mile 23 the smooth pavement turned to cracks and potholes and thenthrew in some dipsy-doo rollers. Someone (me) attacked during thefirst set of rollers and split the field in half. Ouch. At mile 35the road gave way to 10km of "gravel", which was the same false flatuphill rollers, but this time with squirrelly dirt and loose rockswhich sent riders who weren't on the front unexpectedly sideways withvery little warning. Tension! At this point in time I had gonethrough both of my 24oz. water bottles filled with ~93 degree cytomax(YUM!) and my mouth was parched. Not fun. Once the gravel sectionended with only a few miles to go, our group of 12 surged upthe final short climb. Well all except me. Have you ever bonked?Dizzy, cross-eyed with no legs? Burping up hot cytomax mixed withstomach acid? Weaving all over the road until you actually roll offthe road into a ditch? Oh you have too? Nevermind then. There I wasthree miles to go, in my granny gear, whimpering for my mommy untilsuddenly.... Could it be a neutral feed zone on the horizon? Yes! Abottle in my mouth and a bottle over my head = me back in business.Finished 12th but lost a critical 4 minutes to the stage winner, andabout 3 minutes on the other 10 riders ahead of me.
Today (am): Agu4s Fri4s Time Trial (for the record, there are noagu4s fri4s anywhere near this forsaken wasteland). Flat 10 mile outand back. Triple digit weather, even at 10:58am. I borrowed [DUTCHMAN]'strainer and [CLIMBA]'s clip-on aero bars. Both of those guys areawesome by the way. I managed to place 6th (0:52 behind the leader)but only one guy who beat me in the RR placed higher in the TT. O_o
Today (pm): Downtown Ch1co Criterium. I'll be honest with you guys:I had pretty much "checked out" at this point. I was fried, my legsACHED, the weather was miserable (I promise I won't ever complainabout the fog again). I totally lagged getting from the hotel to therace until oh only 20 mins before the start time and then realized inmy laziness I had forgot to take the aero-bars off my bike. Ruh roh.Obviously my "No-Fail 45min Crit Warmup" on [DUTCHMAN]'s trainer was out ofthe question, instead I opted for a half-assed lap around the blockand then sat under a tree with some ice water and some Missy"Misdemeanor" Elliott. Work it!
The 45 min race goes off. The pace is a brisk ~25-26mph. Thedowntown tarmac sticks to the wheels. Oh, I've never done a crit racebefore so I'm all over the place. Bad lines, poor handling, etc. Ifyou've ridden with me you know what I'm talking about. Hey who wantsto do Giro di SF with me lolz. Typical dudes doing attacks off thefront for chances at lackluster lower category primes, blah blah.About 20 laps in the pace slows to 22-23mph and I find myself near thefront, when suddenly a hometown rider (Sierra Nevada jersey, prettyunmistakable) blasts by me. I grab his wheel and we do a lap gainingabout 5-10 seconds on the field. After the lap he sits up and I'mlike "sup dude, let's work together..." and he's all "i'll try, i wasjust going for a glory lap" and i'm like all "..."
So I decide to just put my head down and mash to see what happens andthe next thing I hear the announcer say "5 laps to go, and 5t3v3 5ha5t@ has opened up a 30 second gap". nowai. On one of the u-turns Ipeak a look and I see the pack indeed about 30secs back. I startdoing OCD math internal monologue in my head: "In order to catch methey need to make up 6 seconds a lap which over a course of 0.6 milesequates to roughly an incremental velocity differential of..." andthen I just shut up and started mashing harder. My max HR is 185bpm.I finished at 191bpm for a 9 lap solo break win. Primes collected:5sec time bonus prime and Giro Semi Compact sunglasses. Finished 18seconds up on the group sprint which earned a 20sec time bonus aswell.
Not sure what the GC final standings were, I had to book it back to SFbut I'm definitely happy the way things turned out.
When you least expect it and are least prepared, crazy things can happen.
Thanks for reading and thanks for riding.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Monday, 28 June 2010 07:13 (fourteen years ago) link
congrats!
― caek, Monday, 28 June 2010 07:21 (fourteen years ago) link
THE FIRST WIN? KUDOS!
also lol
― cutty, Monday, 28 June 2010 13:38 (fourteen years ago) link
I assumed that the cat4 masters werewisened zen-masters
why would you think this?
― cutty, Monday, 28 June 2010 13:39 (fourteen years ago) link
Definitely inspiring me, I'm down 2 kg and well on my way from obese mantis to fat mantis status, aiming to at least do the kiddie pool cat 5 at the washington boulevard oval before the summer is out.
(slowly reading through the Nutrition Nazis thread and will be putting a proper plan into effect once I get my house move sorted)
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Monday, 28 June 2010 13:40 (fourteen years ago) link
Holy shit, Shasta, that's fantastic!
― Mark C, Monday, 28 June 2010 14:29 (fourteen years ago) link
PODIUM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FUCKIN A! SHASTY!!
― ddb, Monday, 28 June 2010 15:10 (fourteen years ago) link
Did you do a Fat Mantis fistpump when you crossed the finish line solo?
― sous les paves, Monday, 28 June 2010 15:30 (fourteen years ago) link
PRO TRIP: you say PODIUM when you AREN'T the winner...
― cutty, Monday, 28 June 2010 16:02 (fourteen years ago) link
nasty shasty, what will this newfound success do for your wakeboarding career
― flapjackin (gbx), Monday, 28 June 2010 17:05 (fourteen years ago) link
well done
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 28 June 2010 17:54 (fourteen years ago) link
went out and did boring training ride this morning in the cold, so inspired was i by this tale
― assiest boy in america (haitch), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 03:38 (fourteen years ago) link
worst salute evar:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIZzzZzwYzE
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:22 (fourteen years ago) link
you won the race. but you failed at winning. ;)
<3
― cutty, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:56 (fourteen years ago) link
dude srsly at least a weak fist pump or something christ
― fresno's wet (gbx), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 03:24 (fourteen years ago) link
ohai let me recap 4 U:
2 day stage race (3 races) in 103-110F weather.
9 lap SOLO breakaway averaging 25.5mph through a tight crit course (six 90 degree turns in <1km).
that last effort to the finish line is 32mph (yeah i know looks slow compared to Cav but my data says 32.3mph/191bpm/338W).
i finished 1 second ahead of the guy behind me in the GC. so u tell me bro: what's cooler, a salute or dropping a position in the GC?
;-P
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 04:54 (fourteen years ago) link
a salute!
― cutty, Wednesday, 30 June 2010 14:18 (fourteen years ago) link
bah, h8 u
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 1 July 2010 17:46 (fourteen years ago) link
Pain and suffering. 64 miles of a moon crater course profile featuring a 3.7 mile, 1800 foot climb at mile 17 but the worst was that miles 11-32 were, how do I put this... honest to god THE WORST ROADS imaginable. I know that there is a current trend in cycling races for "{x}-Roubaix" style races but this was unbelievable garbage. New Deal-era roads that haven't been paved since. Potholes EVERYWHERE.. sometimes potholes in the middle of giant potholes. Washed out pie crust "roads" with long sections of deep sand and loose gravel in the corners. Washboard-style kidney abuse. Basically my back feels like it was jackhammered for 3 hours. I tried to stay loose but too much time in the drops made the last hour intensely painful with lower back cramps (cue Jens: "shut up back!")
The first 11 miles were uneventful and then once we hit the first rough patch of road, there were quite a few surges and attacks, but not without a cascade of bottle ejections littering the road. The climb begins slowly and I didn't have the ambition to stay with the leaders (2 teammates in the mix) so I let the lead group of 15 climbers get away up the road. I was in no man's land until about 5 mins before the climb really starts and was caught by a group of 3 riders, 2 of which wanted to work together and the other one went up the road. I almost went down in a really deep sandy section as my front wheel had a hard time going straight through the slop. With 2 teammates up ahead I had no reason to work particularly hard once I was caught so my pulls were very modest. With about 5 mins left in the climb we were caught by the Masters 35+ 1/2/3, led by a guy I train with on Tuesdays. He looked marvelous and we chatted a bit while he made his move, on his way to solo-ing the entire race for an amazing victory. I crested the hill and began my Fat Mantis style TT attack to break away from the guys who caught me who were themselves on the verge of getting caught by the main pack of our race.
Within minutes I had caught one of my teammates who was having mechanical problems with his chattering headset/front fork which made his descents really sketchy as it had rattled loose and would begin an oscillating wobble at speeds in excess of 35mph. He sent me ahead to try and help our leader, who within minutes I see on the side of the road with a flat and with no wheel vehicle in sight he was helpless. I offered my wheel but he waved me on, although I did envy him in the shade with a beautiful view of the sunflower-laden fields and longhorn steers grazing nearby while I was getting pounded into submission by the unrelenting potholes and washboard road.
Here I found myself in a familiar position: no man's land in pursuit of the lead pack and fearing the chase behind me. I'd see a rider here and there and slowly make my way up behind them to check their race number to see if they were in my race or not and then make my move around them accordingly. I ended up catching 2 guys who were dropped by the leaders and they wanted to work together up the last two short climbs. That's fine with me because I can't climb and I was looking forward to the final 25 miles of the race: roads of fresh smooth tarmac, a long fast non-technical descent and a tailwind all the way in to the finish line.
The final short ascents were not too bad and we had a neutral water feedzone at the crest of the final one. I had brought 4 bottles with me (2 in my jersey) and I had gone through 3 of them thus far. I took 2 neutral waters on board which made a lot of the pain go away. I started pullng towards 2 more riders from our race at the summit and then I turned on the Fat Mantis TT afterburners hitting 50mph on the descent and then 27-32mph on the false flat descent with tailwind. There was a group of riders ahead but they were pacelining and I could not seem to make any ground up on them. I could ~feel~ the presence of a chase group on my heels but couldn't see them so I just did my best to just maintain high speed, stay aero, and look for stragglers up road I could pick off. There were a few including one whippet/mantis from my race who I surprised with a 31mph blast-by just to make sure he didn't come along for the ride.
Ended up 8th of 28 with quite a few DNFs due to the course conditions. A couple bad falls and some crabon casualties spotted along the way as well. Kinda satisfied with my result as this is really not a Fat Mantis friendly course but wish I could have had a teammate or two at the end to keep the pace high.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Sunday, 4 July 2010 03:43 (fourteen years ago) link
That course sounds mental. Perhaps they should liven it up a bit more by spreading tacks on the road and throwing half-bricks at passing riders.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Sunday, 4 July 2010 06:58 (fourteen years ago) link
I offered my wheel but he waved me on, although I did envy him in the shade with a beautiful view of the sunflower-laden fields and longhorn steers grazing nearby while I was getting pounded into submission by the unrelenting potholes and washboard road.
^^ haha :)
― caek, Sunday, 4 July 2010 09:08 (fourteen years ago) link
pretty zen imo
shasty u r makin me want to go racing
― fresno's wet (gbx), Sunday, 4 July 2010 18:33 (fourteen years ago) link
BIKE RACING!!!!
― cutty, Sunday, 4 July 2010 21:16 (fourteen years ago) link
unamerican
― fresno's wet (gbx), Monday, 5 July 2010 01:59 (fourteen years ago) link
My second time at the Dunton circuit:http://www.gmap-pedometer.com/?r=3883667
In my first race there (6 weeks ago) I made the mistake of being near the back of the bunch when the bell rang for the last lap (2.7km/1.7miles). I fought hard to work my way through the pack, but the gaps weren't really there and I ended up 26th out of 46 (about 40 of whom were in the bunch sprint).
This time round I told myself to make sure I was well-positioned towards the end. Last time round there was a strong wind from east-to-west which meant you could attack on the 'hill' (more of a lump, to be honest) and then speed away down a slight descent with a tailwind on the backstraight. This time round was completely the opposite: a strong wind from west-to-east, which meant there was a tailwind for the home straight, but a hideous headwind after the climb.
The headwind was so strong that no breaks stood a chance. It didn't stop people going, but no group ever got more than about 100 metres advantage and it inevitably came back together time after time on the backstraight. I just bided my time, no attacks this time round, and if I noticed I was getting too far back in the bunch I would work my way up towards the front on the tailwind section.
When I guessed there were about ten minutes to go I decided it was time to get in place. I jumped up on the outside, even though it was into the headwind, and slotted in behind a couple of riders who were slightly clear at the front. I was still sitting there in third place as we passed the finish line and they rang the bell – excellent – I was exactly where I wanted to be.
We had to pass a lapped rider on the climb and I moved up into second place. I stayed on the first guy's wheel in the headwind section and kept looking round to see if anyone was going to come past us: nobody did. As we reached the loop at the top and started to turn into a crosswind I came past into first place and started to wind up the pace. There was just over a kilometre to go.
With about 800m to go two riders came flying past me – I got out of the saddle and gave it what I could to go after them. I slowly started to reel in the second of them, but with 500m to go a pack of riders came roaring past on my left. I couldn’t respond immediately as the rider I’d been chasing seemed to have blown and was going too slow, but I couldn’t come out to get past him. With 400m to go we were on the home straight, but the whole pack (of ten or fifteen riders) had come past me. By the time I’d accelerated up to top speed I was about ten bike lengths behind and couldn’t close the gap at all. Gah! I beat some people who were some distance back, but in terms of the bunch sprint I went from first to last in the space of about 30 seconds.
Average speed: 23mph, Time: just under 1 hour.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Thursday, 15 July 2010 21:22 (fourteen years ago) link
damn! what a riveting report. i like your style!
the only thing (in my very limited experience) i would change (and again this totally depends on your style of riding) is to hold off attacking in pure head/tailwinds. Ideally, attack on a pure cross wind and stay on the extreme leeward side so nobody can get a solid draft off of you. YMMV on this. I defer to Cutty/Hunt3r obviously.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 15 July 2010 21:32 (fourteen years ago) link
(which you did so wtf am i on about?)
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 15 July 2010 21:38 (fourteen years ago) link
Well I love *both* your race reports. Group hug!
― Mark C, Thursday, 15 July 2010 22:26 (fourteen years ago) link
Yay - group hug!
I don't even know if I have much of a sprint because in most races I've been dropped before it gets to that stage. Theoretically, I think I'm better suited to an uphill finish. Anyway, I think I'm slowly learning: first time round I left it too late and couldn't fight my way through, this time round I went too early and didn't have enough left when they came past me. Next time round....?
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Thursday, 15 July 2010 22:41 (fourteen years ago) link
lol group hug
― cutty, Friday, 16 July 2010 10:15 (fourteen years ago) link
My third race in five days this morning. Tuesday evening was the final 10-mile time trial on the Hog Hill circuit - equalled my PB for the course. Thursday evening was the road race on the Dunton circuit (upthread). This morning was supposed to be a two-up time trial on the lumpy 10.2 mile course.
A frantic start to the day: up at half past six for a bath because our shower broke yesterday, quick breakfast and then just about to set off for the 30-mile drive to the race HQ when I remember I've forgotten to put my clip-on tri-bars back on (removed for Thursday's road race). Some desperate allen key action and then a high speed drive only to arrive at the race HQ and find out that my partner had pulled out due to illness.
They said I could ride it individually, but technically my result wouldn't count as part of the individual event. I was in two minds as to whether to bother - the temperature was horribly low for July, the sky was filling with black clouds, and there was a swirling wind all around. I was running late and had a five-mile ride to get to the start, so I just decided I might as well do it seeing as I'd come that far.
There were a pair of women off two minutes in front of me, a pair of men off two minutes behind me, and a fast pair off two minutes behind them. I was expecting both pairs after me to catch me, so I decided I would try to match their pace once they did that, even if it hurt a lot. Obviously I wouldn't be allowed to ride in their slipstream, but I thought I would try to hold them at 20 yards.
I went out hard and fast, thinking there was a tailwind for the first section and wanting to take advantage of it (and hoping adrenalin would take care of the return leg). I reached the turn at just under 24mph and could see that I'd narrowed the gap on the pair in front of me to about a minute, while the pair behind me didn't seem to have made any impression.
The road twists and turns and goes up and down, so I kept losing sight of the pair in front, but bit-by-bit I was reeling them in on a five-mile pursuit. I was burying myself now and if they hadn't been there as a carrot I don't think I could have motivated myself to keep up that pace. I finally came past them just as we crested the final hill about 300 yards from the finish line - nice!
When I left there was only one result missing on the results board (for the fast pair four minutes after me), but I'd beaten all the other pairs on my own. Not bad.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Saturday, 17 July 2010 12:03 (fourteen years ago) link
lol nice work
― hi I'm tyler farrar, quitter of team garmin-transitions (cozen), Saturday, 17 July 2010 13:10 (fourteen years ago) link
My 2nd crit, very early this morning. Simply: I didn't race smart. Spent wayyyy too much time out front. Two unsuccessful breakaway attacks @ 20min (solo) & 22min (two-man counter on the catch). The course was not technical at all but had a couple easy rollers. I was not paying attention to the lap countdown and by the time I realized it was bell lap I was in a very poor position and had to spend most of my remaining energy chasing down the field sprint leadout trains to no avail. Estimated place: top 1/3rd but out of the top 10.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Saturday, 17 July 2010 17:03 (fourteen years ago) link
stats:13.1 miles25.1 mphavg 254Wavg hr 164bpm
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Saturday, 17 July 2010 17:05 (fourteen years ago) link
holy cow NB+S, solo TT machine.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Saturday, 17 July 2010 17:18 (fourteen years ago) link
To be fair, there weren't that many pairs in the two-up.
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Saturday, 17 July 2010 17:36 (fourteen years ago) link
Criterium weekend part 2:
Today's course was much more fast despite being technical and more rolling. This one ringer broke away in lap 2 (after almost crashing after digging a pedal on turn 1) and stayed away for the remainder, impressive*. 26mph average over tight, technical rollers for 40 mins soloing is pretty crazy. I put in some attempts at bridging and attacking across but was unsuccessful and nobody wanted to work or were already redlining and just content to hang on.
(*This guy has won every race he's competed in but doesn't seem to be in any hurry to upgrade (spaces his races out 6-8 weeks). In fact, in the Hill Climb TT I raced in upthread, his time (despite being in a high category) would have placed in the top 5 pro 1/2 race including one ex-world champion and one current top US domestique.)
So when it looked like it was a race for 2nd I stayed in top 6 all race and attacked a couple times to try to thin out the selection in the final laps. I took 2nd in the field sprint (3rd overall). 40+ starters, only 17 finished (course marshalls pulled riders when they were dropped). We almost caught the lead guy (8 seconds) but he may have sat up when he felt comfortable with the winning advantage.
I felt MUCH better than yesterday. I actually got some sleep compared to the night previous and was way more relaxed and loose about things pre-race. I am realizing that the more pressure I put on myself the shittier my results are and when the winning move is made, I have trouble responding or keeping my wits about positioning and patience (too little or too much). Today was much faster, a far stronger field, way more challenging course and I had a podium finish. Something to be learned there imo.
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Sunday, 18 July 2010 18:02 (fourteen years ago) link
Good stuff
― I Ain't Committing Suicide For No Crab (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Sunday, 18 July 2010 18:35 (fourteen years ago) link