Saturday, September 27, 2008
- Race Reports
Got 3rd at the Mt. Tam Hill Climb today. I stayed with Nate for a little bit, exploded, then I got caught by Chris. I think my time was around 41:00. I generally didn't have that "good feeling" in my legs. I could list a bunch of other excuses, but I'll spare you.Just kidding. I wouldn't really be taking my cycling seriously if I didn't have a whole bunch of reasons for why I didn't win. Here are a few of them.
- I'm training for a bigger race. Which one? I don't know, something in March or April.
- I didn't want to go over 85% this time of year.
- Something my wife did. Not exactly sure what yet, but it wasn't my fault.
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Sunday, September 7, 2008
- Race Reports
Got a new frame yesterday and spent the whole day putting it together. For a test ride I headed out to Mt. Shasta for the hill climb. It's about 14 miles with 4100 ft of elevation gain, ending at 7700 ft.
I was motivated by this on the website:
I figured it meant that if you ride hard and win you get a 100 bucks. When I got to Mt. Shasta, I learned that the record was 1 hour 26 seconds held by Justin England. So "first rider" actually meant "first rider ever." Great.
Anyway, got in a warmup, sent the wife up the hill early and got ready for the start. The plan was to go out harder when there was more oxygen and then hang on for the second half. I kept on looking at my average mph to see how I was going. At 30 minutes I had a 15.0 mph average. After about 45 minutes I was going 12 and the road was flattening out. Every time I tried to pick it up the altitude would put me back in my place.
The finish was a little complicated, the one hour record line was at the old finish about 500 meters before the new finish. I was 59:30ish to the hour line and 1:01:22 to the actual finish.
I couldn't find a jersey to try out Race Day Tip #1229, sorry. Oh and skipping the sun screen is taking it a little too far. Just FYI.
Well, it was a long drive for a one hour time trial but I got a $100 check in the mail. Although I've heard that before, Tour *cough* de Nez *cough*.
More on the new bike later.
Monday, August 25, 2008
- Race Reports
While Michael Phelps was probably just flirting with a girl from UC Santa Cruz, I was actually racing there. This was my 6th race at the university in 3 years, the most recent being back in March. I have a good record amongst collegians but haven't raced well against the big boys until now.Last year this race was more like a workout Michael Phelps must do every day. 10 VO2 Max intervals followed by 9 recovery laps (yes, I got lapped). This year I wasn't coming off a 6 week break so was hoping to be a little more competitive.
The day stared with a 4am wake up call. That's when Michael Phelps wakes up and that's what it was going to take to get me to Santa Cruz on time. During the drive, I scanned through radio stations looking for some Hip Hop and Rap because that's what Michael Phelps listens to but could only find Country.
Showed up to the race to see Tony Cruz, Jackson Stewart, Neil Shirley, Jared Barrilleaux and 8 Cal-Giant in the parking lot. I was glad Michael Phelps wasn't there because he would have kicked all our butts.
The race was 20 laps and the first 10 were pretty mellow. Everyone was looking at Cal-Giant to set the pace. They played their usual game and sent James up the road so they could just focus on covering attacks. The pros and other strong riders quickly realized this and were waiting till the last few laps to make their move.
I got bored of the slow pace and with 4 laps to go I attacked. This worked well the last time I tried it. Mark from Cal-Giant was 20 seconds up the road and I caught him in a lap. Then I caught Greg the triathlete, who was another 40 seconds ahead, 2 laps later.
The last lap I dug deep to hold off Neil Shriley from Jittery Joe's for the win. At the line I tried to give my best Michael Phelps impression but it fell short. Can anyone really compare to Michael Phelps?
Being part of the local media, I hope that this post fulfills my obligations to the phenomenon that is Phelps.
Monday, August 18, 2008
- Race Reports
The last stage of the Tour of Utah was a 7.5 mile time trial. It was pretty flat with a bunch of turns. A nice course.
There was definitely a lack of motivation in most of the peloton. While I didn't feel fresh I decided to go hard because this is the Tour of Utah after all. The times in my range were all pretty close. I ended up 28th, 10 seconds out of the top 20.
Jesse and Max made fun of all my "useless" effort at the finish line, but according to my calculations I moved up to 25th in the GC by 4 seconds. Even though I'm a PhD candidate in Applied Math I'm going to wait for the official results before I celebrate. Our U23 rider Erik Slack also moved up to 4th.
The real show was the battle for the top GC spot. Jeff Louder was 7 seconds down on Blake Caldwell going into the last stage. The Health Net boys had Louder 8 seconds up about half way through. It looks like he maintained that pace and took the win.
Oh and did I say I felt good on Saturday. This picture was taken by my man Carson Blume at the end of the stage.
Spent the rest of the day driving back to Davis. Over the last 10 days I've become very familiar with I-5, I-15 and the I-80.
Want to thank the Bobs-Bicyles.com guys again for letting me race with them, it was a blast.
Saturday, August 16, 2008
- Race Reports
Anyway, I finished 32nd which puts me 26th in the GC. I'm semi happy with it, here is how it played out.
The first half was pretty chill. We hit the first 800ft roller hard but then a break went up the road. Later as I was hoping the peloton would take a "nature break" we got stopped at a train crossing. One of those old time tourist trains with a bunch of kids in it rolled by to see about 60 cyclists losing some fluid.
About 52 miles in the first major climb started. I tried to stay with the lead group as long as I could. I got dropped with Danny Pate and tried to stay on his wheel but then got dropped again to join the second group. I was actually feeling pretty good, I just couldn't match their power. The pace was a little jumpy in the back and every time they accelerated it would put me in the red.
The decent was technical and I almost died twice. One time making a total ass of myself as I almost shot straight into the trees on a hairpin turn.
We hit the second climb of the day about 1:40 back on the front group. We went up it pretty mellow and it was clear that everyone in the group had given up. As we worked our way to the final climb the pace was way down and we hit the bottom 6:40 back from the leaders. I was pretty mad that we had slowed down so much, my top 20 GC hopes were going up the road, but there was nothing I could do.
I gave the final climb everything I had and ended up about 12:45 down from Mr. Louder. I was second from our chase group.
Overall I felt pretty good all day. It was nowhere near as hard as Stage 2. Had I been in that front group however, things probably would have been different.
I'm the top amateur in the GC right now and with a short 7.5 mile time trial tomorrow I don't expect much to change, but you never know.
Friday, August 15, 2008
- Race Reports
Since I don't have much to say I'll leave you with some random thoughts from the week.
Yesterday I almost got spit on by Tyler Hamilton. He was looking around all funny then dropped back to miss me. Damn, I could have sold that on ebay.
Word is that Rory Sutherland, NRC points leader, said that yesterday's stage was the hardest race he's ever done in North America. And I finished with him.
The wife and kids came back from grandma's at the host house we're staying at. I've learned that if you listen to 5, 3.5 and 2 year olds, they'll just keep talking and talking.
It's awesome having a team for support. I wake up in the morning and my bike is ready to go. I get done with the race and everything is ready for me to just sit down and chill. The guys are awesome. Thank you Bobs-Bicyles.com.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
- Race Reports
The top of the first climb was 10 miles in. Talk about a crazy start. It wasn't long before I was wondering why I worked so hard to get into this race.
Over the top there was a small lead group followed by a chase and then me and two other guys about 15 seconds back. We chased back on as Toyota started to organize itself. They railed it hard over the second climb before they slacked off to feed from the caravan. At this point we were in a group of thirty with only 4 or 5 amateurs. It was pretty sweat.
At some point another large chase group caught us and we had like 60 people. Before the second sprint Garmin got on the front and strung it out single file all the way into the climb. I was trying to conserve but it was hard just staying in the group.
The final climb had a more constant grade compared to the first one making it a little easier for me. I think I was in the top 30 over the top but in the second group. On the way down some people caught on and we had a good rotation. I finished somewhere in this second group 1:47 down. There were about 15 guys up the road.
Official results have me 30th. But I'm basically tied for 15th on time. Now I just need to recover during the crit tomorrow so I can lay it all down again on Saturday's 14,700 ft 98 mile monster.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
- Race Reports
First stage of the Tour of Utah today. Was 51st with the same time as everyone else, but I think the Official Results are a little sketch. I swear Jesse was ahead of me and some of the guys on my team, Bobs-Bicycles.com, know they finished in a different order.Now before you start passing judgement on the whole Jesse thing, I got a flat in the last kilometer. Thankfully it was just a slow leak, but I was still pretty sketch in the final turn about 400 meters from the line. It was no big deal, I was out of the action anyway.
Other than that the race was pretty mellow. The only interesting part was when the break got lost. The officials stopped the peloton so they could catch back up and get their 3 minute gap. Pretty funny.
Anyway, I think everyone knew that today meant nothing because the real show starts tomorrow. I'm looking forward to it.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
- Race Reports
So about those Elite National Championships, basically it was a lot harder than I expected, a hot 115 miles with a 25.5 mph average. Complete Results.At the start the officials announced that any group 3 minutes or more behind the leaders would be pulled. They started doing this in the U23 race earlier but had never told the riders, so it was a cluster. For our race, it just made it fast right from the gun. Since the course was relatively flat, this didn't really mess with my "get in an early move" race plan.
The race was 6, 20 miles laps on a hot dog course. Out and back with the start/finish in the middle. It had a couple of hills at the ends, but nothing I would consider serious.
Somehow the heat, hills, and constant attacking combined to allow groups off the front. About 1 lap in, 20 of us rolled off on one of the hills. We never had that much of a gap and people kept bridging up. Every time I looked around, the group was bigger.
Anyway, as the laps went on, the hills kept making selections till we had about 15 guys half way through.
Here is Jesse off the front with Christian Walker at about 2.5 laps to go. I think I'm the last guy on the right. Moments after the picture was taken, I bridged up with Steve Reaney from Cal-Giant in tow. We stayed away for about half a lap.When we got caught, Andy, James and Thurlow countered wisely. I was pretty gassed from the previous move so couldn't follow. A couple guys tried to chase but it wasn't enough. I helped a little but knew I would just blow myself up for the finish.
I sprinted at the end for 6th and I'm pretty happy with it. Riding solo against organized teams is hard, especially when no one stays around to feed you. Thanks to the Cal-Giant guys for helping me out.
The funny part was, last week I got made fun of for chasing down the Cal-Giant guys all the time and then getting out sprinted. This time I just sat in and let others chase only to get yelled at for sprinting. Can't please everybody I guess.
Quote of the race:
Monday, August 4, 2008
- Race Reports
Over the years I've found there are two ways to win a race. One way is to beat everyone else to the line. The other is to convince yourself that everyone who finished ahead of you is either lucky, a moron, or you let them win.
So while the results say I got 8th at the Distincts last Saturday, I actually won and here's why:
- Steve Reaney - Soloing to the finish is bad ass unless you have 20 teammates blocking for you, then it's just cool.
- Andy J-M - Lucky to have like 20 teammates.
- Adam Switters - Update your blog you moron!
- Fabrice Dubost - Wasn't lucky and I didn't let him beat me, so he must be a moron.
- Nate English - Consider it a gift, one former runner to another.
- Roman Kilun - Friend of the Blog. You're welcome.
- Andres Gil - Must be lucky or a moron, I'm not sure.
Anyway, Fort Ord course with two crazy turnarounds and the twisty climb wasn't selective enough because of a headwind. Cal-Giant had like 20 guys, so you guess how it played out: I spent a lot of useless time on the front. I got dropped the final time up the climb but caught back on because the group started playing games. Overall I had a good time.
Big props to Dan Sweet, P.E. for pulling back the Jesse Moore.
Amazing quote of the day:
– Some Cal-Giant Guy
Makes me all the more excited for Nationals and Utah.
