Monday, June 30, 2008

Peoria Corner Bakery




Ahoy!

Another recollection of another sub par performance in a bike race coming your way.

A few days ago I decided to sign up for the IL State Championship Criterium being held in Peoria, IL. I didn’t have an intention of racing this, but signed up anyway. I realized after the fact that the course was what one would call “technical”. Eight corners on a 1.0 mile loop through downtown Peoria seemed like a fun race to watch, but not necessarily participate in for someone who has limited racing experience on such a course. It was going to be a learning experience - hopefully.
I was going down with a couple of teammates and when I received a text message from Erik about a 4:30 am departure I had some second thoughts. It was a summer festival extravaganza in Chicago the day before the race, Stevie Wonder was playing at the Taste of Chicago for free (now who would want to miss that?), and then there was BAM (Belmont Arts and Music Festival) later in the evening with The Redwalls playing at 9 pm. Well, I did manage to wake up and get to his place around 4:45, and we loaded the bikes on the roof rack in the midst of a summer rain shower. Two and a half hours later, we were parked in Peoria watching the juniors warming up on the course.
We had almost 3 hours before the Cat 5 race, so I rode around the parking lot to warm up and watched some of the races. At 9:45 or so we did a practice lap and that was my first look at the corners. The roads were wiiiide no doubt about it, but there was a strong headwind in the longest open stretch of the course that headed into a slight uphill before the final stretch. I lined up and with the sound of a gun 38 of us catfivers were off. After two laps I already started losing ground on the corners as I was very hesitant to take the turns at high speeds without braking, and on the third lap I heard a loud bang ahead, going into a fast descending corner. Seconds later I see Erik getting up from the ground. It was he who crashed after his tube exploded. Instinctively, I slowed down a little to glance if he was ok and lost yet more ground. By this point, I was trying to catch the pack on the windy stretch and that was just not happening. 10-15 meters seemed impossible to bridge, and I could hear my heart thumping as my legs were crapping out.
So I lost contact but kept riding, at least I was going to practice cornering. I can’t say that I didn’t feel like pulling out of the race for a moment (you know, when you’ve realized you blew it 6 minutes into a race) but what good is that. I recovered a few minutes later and then got into a somewhat steady pace and was able to catch 3 others who got spat out from the back of the pack. I eventually got a chance to sprint against these guys but it seemed that I was the only one interested in a little competition at the end of it.
A guy from the local Proctor team ended up winning the race, while Erik jumped back on his bike after a free lap (with a borrowed Zipp wheel) to sprint for 6th. He is one tough dude. The results showed me finishing thirtyfirst. Doesn’t that number sound familiar?

I completely missed the Euro Cup final, but had 3 people text me with updates so I knew that Spain had won it (as I forecasted it, including the goal scorer Fernando Torres). Eventually, I will watch the tape of it. I prefer live viewing of such events anyway.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Sherman Park, Euro Cup recap.

Hey there!



So, I ended up racing on Saturday at Sherman Park, a race that's organized by my team. I signed up to help out with the setup early in the morning before the first (my) race at 8:00 am. Helped set up barriers, spent 10 minutes trying to sweep off remains of a dead squirrel from the course. That thing was glued to the asphalt, yuck!

Warmed up with 20 mins to go before the race, lined up, had our rights read by the official and Randy, including the warning about not posting up in a case of a victory unless you're way ahead of everyone. Smart thinking, but I for sure wasnt gonna be making that decision today.

Whistle and off we went- a pack of 50 riders, almost half of whom were my xXx guys. I struggled in the past to stay with the pack, either because of fitness issues or turns and subsequent accelerations. This time around, due to the ease of Sherman Park course, I had an easy time riding with the bunch. I rode on the outside a number of laps, not taking advantage of a draft, to which a few teammates commented aloud. " Grab a wheel, don't waste energy!": they'd say, but I felt fine the whole time. Just before the final lap, I was in the middle of the pack when an ABD rider went down inches from me, and that killed any ambitions to take risks and move up on the final lap.

I simply rode it out and finished with the pack. I rushed off for course marshalling duties and didn't get a chance to see and verify the results. A few hours later, I went to check the results and saw no placing next to my name/number. Apparently, the camera couldn't catch my number as I crossed the finish line and since I wasn't there within 15 minutes to review the tape, I was not assigned a placing in the results. Talked to an official and they wrote in a "pack finish" but couldn't alter the posted results. Fine, I wasn't in the top 10 anyway so who cares. My guys went 1-2-3 and that is a great result.

Spent a few more hours marshalling, saw a couple crashes both of which were not supposed to happen if you ask me.

This EuroCup is turning out to be exciting, with Nederland, Portugal and Croatia being the most impressive teams so far. One more game left in the group of death with Italy, France and Romania still in play to go through to the Quarters. Turkey pulled of an amazing comeback Sunday to make the knockout stages, by scoring 2 goals in the final 3 minutes. Now who can say football is not exciting !? You should have watched this game.
I pick Dutch to win the whole thing, but you never know. We'll see.