I've been away from the national racing scene for a while. It started out as a mid-season break--after 18 races by the beginning of May, I was getting a little tired--then extended somewhat when I went "home" for a HS reunion, and continued when I had some pretty severe IT band issues in one of my legs. After doing several local races to get back into racing shape (local Colorado guys are fast!!), I'm gearing back up for the national scene. I'll be leaving shortly for Oregon and the Cascade Cycling Classic, then a few after that I'll be out to Chicago for a few. It's going to be crazy for a while, so I'd better get this thing updated.
BIG RACE STORY #1 involves the Sea Otter Classic, Monterey, CA in the middle of April. This is pretty much THE event of the year in the US for amateur racers. I've done this thing 8 years running now. This year I convinced my parents to come along. My dad and I drove out, and my mom flew. The first of three races I did at Sea Otter was the Cat 2 circuit race. This was the race that I had my picture taken in (see 5/15 post) for the local paper. In addition on having that pic on the front page banner, they also plastered me (in larger form) across the front page of the sports page. Anyway, I digress. The race started with me being unsure of myself and hanging out in the middle of the group, to me realizing that I was one of the faster guys and pushing the pace. As other guys tired, I spent more time at the front of the race. After putting in a good effort in the last minutes of the race to try to shed the remainder of the riders not already dropped from the lead group, I was outsprinted in the final 200 meters, and had to settle for 17th. Guess I played my cards too soon, and at that point, should have just saved myself for the sprint.
Day two was the Pro road race. This was one of my few opportunities to race against the big budget pro teams. Last year I didn't even finish the race, so finishing was the primary focus this year. Things shifted though, when I figured out that I could do better than just finish. I followed some blistering attacks, though nothing really stuck. I was with the main group until the last several miles, and held on to finish 32nd out of approx 90 starters--one of the top amateurs. Now to explain the shredded tire pic in a couple of posts below (see April 29 post). I was behind a crash in the first lap, slammed on the brakes to avoid it, and apparently skidded. I rode the whole race with the tire looking as in did the pic without knowing it, and only found out about it after the race. Pretty impressive I was able to ride something like 60 miles with the tire like that.
Day three was the mountain bike cross country (XC). Things went well aside from a small crash mid race, and though I finished 20th, my time was a little over 5 minutes faster than last year. As usual, I passed a bunch of guys on the final climb, but didn't have the greatest start--I'm going to have to figure out how to pull together both of those to be in it to win.
On the way back from California, we went by the Hurst Castle (took a tour), through Vegas (I've never been) and the Hoover Dam.
Very soon after Sea Otter was:
BIG RACE STORY #2--Tour of the Gila. Stage 1 was a road race instead of the traditional first stage time trial. This format made for livelier racing, and there was a lot of people trying attacks, and the group chasing down escapees. I was at the front of the group coming into the last feed zone, and took a water bottle in the chest while my hand was off the handlebars, which caused me to crash. With my hand shredded pretty good and my handlebars slightly crooked, I chased the group, and was able to catch up to the back end when they blew apart on the final climb. I finished 33rd, but unfortunately was 12 minutes down from the stage winner.
Before stage 2, I was unsure if I could even ride. My knee was the size of a grapefruit due to my crash the day before. We had to go buy a new helmet, and barely made the start. Pedaling for the first few miles was quite difficult, but as the adrenaline kicked in, things got better. Having an easy day was not in the cards, however. The pace was the fastest I'd ever seen during this stage, and I was luc
Day 3 and 4 were the time trial and crit. These days were fairly uneventful. In the time trial, I lost several minutes to the winner and finished 33rd, but fared well against the guys I had a realistic chance of beating. The crit basically stayed together the whole race, and finished in a bunch sprint, meaning there was no real change in the overall.
Day 5 was the hardest and longest stage of the race. I had a shot at making it into the top 20 of the overall, and the final climb of this 100+ mile stage was a good place to gain time. The race pretty much stayed together as expected, though the group inexplicably allowed 3 riders to ride off the front of the group on a downhill. Two of these riders ended up finishing 4 minutes ahead of us. As usual, the group shattered on the final climb, and though I didn't initially make the small lead group, I worked with a Colavita New Mexico guy and was able to catch the leaders about 10 miles from the finish. At about 3 miles to go, I attacked the group with one other guy and was briefly thinking of a top 10 finish. However, I ran out of gas, was caught with a mile to go, and had to settle for 17th place. Due to my efforts, I put time on the guys I needed to, and moved into 19th place in the overall. Despite my crash and injuries, I had finished better than last year, so there was definitely something to celebrate.
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