Last year this course was quite muddy, with a huge sloppy section of peanut butter mud that was a real leg wrecker. With that thought, and the memory of last weeks Fifth St Cross race (12+ hours straight of rain), I ran straight to Cutter's and bought a pair of Specialized Captain CX tires. It wasn't until much later that it dawned on me that the "2bliss" advertised on the tires wasn't 1bliss version 2.0, or a statement that these tires were going to make me extremely happy, but actually TUBELESS.
Cool, bonus. I had no idea.
So my mental confusion aside, and an extra pair of mud wheels just in case, I rode down with Greg and Roland to get there early for the "C" race. It was cooold, and the wind was really starting whipping up some frigid wind chill.
Greg decided to jump in the "C" race, so Lamprey Systems had a good showing with George, Roland, Greg, David, and Jeremy showing up. In usual Greg style, he took off from the gun and took the lead early. He was so far ahead of the next guys, that the announcer missed him on each lap, and called the guys behind him as the "leaders". Amy wasn't going to put up with that, so she straightened out the announcer for all of us. It looked like he was going to pull it off, but got passed right at the end by just a few bike lengths. Jeremy had a good race, pulling off a solid top 10 (7th?).
Although I had almost 3 hours to get ready for my race, I somehow managed to get to the line late, and barely got my call up position. Then, to top off my start, I had my number pinned on the wrong side. So I'm stripping off my jersey, trying to switch the number around, and dropping my pins into the rocks. Great.
Finally I was good to go (I think the officials waited for me, they didn't hide their surprise when I actually got the number on the correct that it was right side up). The start was fast and I came through the prologue loop somewhere between 10 and 15. After that it thinned out and I started moving up. I got up to the front with Joe and another strong rider. We had a great support crew cheering at the sand pit, so I decided to try and ride it, and actually got through. After the fast start, we settled down in the middle of the race and it didn't take long for us to grow to a group of 6 at the front. I wanted to try to keep the pace high so others wouldn't ride up to us, but the wind was absolutely killer and finding a wheel to sit behind was crucial, especially on the open back section.
Overall, I was happy with my riding, I was carrying good speed through the turns, my light weight was an asset here as I could take a tighter line with the same speed and make passes on the insides of the turns. I momentarily panicked as I burped a bunch of air out of my rear tire again, but calmed down when I realized it was holding, and as a bonus my bike felt even faster yet. I was bottoming out on the tree stumps, but the bike floated over the course and cornered great. What a difference. I probably finished with not much more then 20 psi.
I knew that if it came down to a sprint at the end with this group of 6, I wouldn't be able to really contest it, but trying some solo move at the end didn't seem prudent with the wind. Plus my right quad was cramping up and I didn't have much left by the time the last lap came around. In the end, I couldn't match the accelerations and rolled through for 6th.
But great racing; riding in the group helped with pacing, flow, and wind. Forty minutes never went by so quickly.
Philladelphia Ciclismo put on a great race, I liked the course much better then last year, and their food was awesome. The gusting winds blew the cheese off my chili, but it was still awesome.
What an awesome race...so much fun to watch you guys up front! Congrats on a great race.
ReplyDeleteMarten,
ReplyDeleteThanks for coming out to the race. Nice result too!