We got back to civilization and I have to say that I had a great vacation, but was really disappointed with my race performance.
Since there is such a stark contrast between the two aspects of the trip (vacation and racing) I will break them up here too!
For the trip my mom graciously loaned us the sweetest MTB trip setup on the planet! We were rockin a 38' motorhome complete with a Jeep Wrangler in tow. This worked out great for the 4 of us! The motorhome and Jeep had just enough space for everyone! The weather in D-ville was awesome the entire time and you just can't beat the Sierras in the summer! Enough talk, here are some photos.
Dan and I learn the finer points of RV'ing...
The Jeep was the perfect shuttle vehicle for us!
It takes all my concentration to make my first cup of coffee in the morning and there is no smiling until after drinking the sweet nectar!
Skipping rocks in the Yuba, it would be so nice to not worry about the future and retirement and all that crap and just live life by the moment... but someone has to work to support the people that refuse to.
Of course riding in general in D-ville kicks major ass!
And my bike worked flawlessly!
After some hard riding, food and a jump in the river are all that are necessary to complete the day.
Especially when you have great company!
The craziness of all the people in Downieville proper was a stark contrast to our little capsite in Sierra City...
What a great vacation!
Now on to the racing aspect...
The pink socks and pieces on the bike were appropriate. My race results were crap, nearly getting beat by my wife in the overall results.
Saturday we got up super early and had a great breakfast. I felt good, maybe a little less rested than I had hoped, but still very good. I pedaled around a bit and got my bike weighed in. I did a few hard efforts up the road in an attempt to get my body in race mode and then went over and stood where we were told to line up. I intentionally skipped my usual warm up routine to get a spot towards the front for the start. Much to my dismay about 200 riders then lined up in front of where we were told to line up. Lame.
Suddenly people started ringing bells, the race had started and the mass of people in front of me didn't seem to be in race mode as they slowly marched with their bikes toward the start banner. Eventually the bovine mass thinned slightly and I was able to pedal through them. I was angry because I had not warmed up properly and played by the rules and these people warmed up fully and just jumped in front and were now doing their best to be a bio-roadblock.
As the start fail moved from the front of my mind to a memory I figured out that A) I had climbed back into a decent position in the race and B) I was probably going way too hard. I stopped passing people and started sitting in as the conga line of the lead group climbed up the dirt road. As I looked around I noticed a few familiar faces. Rachel Lloyd and Joe Lawill were just a couple of the faces that suffered along side of me, and not far ahead I saw the Gary Fisher kit of Willow.
As we neared the top of the climb my glutes on both sides started to ache, before I knew it I was in so much pain that I could not sit on my saddle. Something had gone horribly wrong and I still have no idea what it was. I descended fast down Sunrise Trail and then did my best to tuck down into an aero position on the fire road without sitting down. On one of the climbs I passed Joe Lawill and said "Good job man!" He looked at me and said he was suffering. We rode together for a bit and then he asked how much farther we had to climb to which I responded, "Not far." I climbed ahead out of the saddle...
After a bit more climbing we reached the "Babyheads" descent. I felt great descending this section but still couldn't sit down. Near the end of this section is where my quads started to go south. Climbing up the rocky pitch on the far side of the big water crossing both quads locked up and I tipped over into the bushes. It was horrible. I was still descending pretty fast but couldn't put in any efforts at all to climb and wound up walking stiff legged up several sections. I was going backwards in the race and could do nothing about it at all.
I got to the intersection of Butcher Ranch after walking the final climb on Pauly Creek and tried to get back onto race pace. I passed a few guys on the descent and felt like maybe my legs would come around. No such luck. I was going painfully slow up the climb to Third Divide when my wife caught me. At that point I knew I was out of the race. I walked some and pedaled some.
At the top of Third Divide someone caught me and said something about wanting to pass, I shouted good luck and shifted to my big ring. A 2 year old could have put in better pedal pressure but I was going all out on the DH sections. I passed a bunch of people and I guess the wife heard my Bear Bell bearing down on her. She pulled to the side and yelled at me to pin it.
Soon afterwards, climbing back up towards Lavezola Road she caught me again. This time though the climb wasn't long enough for her to gap me we found ourselves riding down the road with each other! For most of the dirt road I was tucked in behind her then my legs came around! I shifted into the big ring and took the lead.
When I hit the single track known as First Divide I thought she was right behind me. Turns out I was wrong. I was making time and looked back expecting to see her, but she wasn't. My race was already over so I decided to sit up and try to push her to the finish. When she didn't appear quickly I started to panick and stopped riding. Eventually a guy came around a corner, a little behind him was a younger kid followed by Allison. I waited for all of them to pass me and then jumped in behind. To both our horror Allison sliced her sidewall about 1 minute later.
Lucky for her I was there to oversee the tire change and she only lost around 4 minutes. Once rolling again we had both recovered and I rode behind her pushing her to the max. We had to have passed at least 12 riders before the finish line. My time was a 2:34 or something weak like that.
Sunday my legs still felt horrible. I was really cold on the start and went too slow on Sunrise, was having a hard time getting in a groove. I hit Butcher Ranch and still wasn't feeling it. I was scrubbing too much speed before the jumps. When I got to the single track I finally started feeling some flow and felt like I was finally going fast. I stepped over the bars just after Waterfall and lost some time remounting but was unhurt. Near the bottom of Butcher Ranch I got horrible arm pump in my left arm. I could hardly hold the bars and had to slow way down because I couldn't use my fingers to brake at all. Reaching the bottom gave my arm a chance to rest and I passed my one minute man on the climb to Third Divide. I hit Third Divide hard and was feeling pretty good, left arm wasn't 100% but I wasn't pussing out. I passed someone fixing a flat and don't know if it was my 2 minute man or not. On First Divide I was pushing hard and caught the guy that I think was my 3 minute man. I looked up and saw him ahead of me as we weaved back and forth on the side of the cliff, unfortunately looking up distracted me enough that I nearly fell off the cliffside. I managed to land on the trail and arrest my bike before it fell down to the river below but lost more time. After remounting I pedaled hard and passed the rider I had seen earlier where the trail widens. I did my best to push hard to the finish and wound up with a 53 minute run. Not all that fast considering that Allison turned in a 56.
My lackluster performance put me 11th in a field of 25 registered riders. I have my work cut out for me if I want to do better next year!
Happy Tuesday.
3 comments:
sometimes ya got it...then sometimes, well...
racing is racing...gotta leave it at that!
rofl at that picture of the four of you where you are in the blue and orange jersey! what kind of face is that?? ghee!! hahaha...very jealous of the trip, maybe next year i will get registered early with y'all!!
i have heard the same from other racers this month...
were you dehydrated?
altitude problems?
lacking recovery the days before the race?
i was not dehydrated.
never had altitude problems that i know of.
probably could have used more recovery, but i think my problem was more related to being overly hydrated leading up to the race. hard to tell though.
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