The Afterglow (CX)
12/15/12
Cat 3
It's raining, it's cold and I'm about to race my bike...this is everything I signed up for, a classic Belgian setting. There were several things I needed to work on from Montrose and before the race I was really honing in on working through these. Really quickly getting on and off the bike, working with clipping in quickly, carrying the bike properly, etc.
I started off in the back out of respect for everyone else. I knew it would instantly be a detriment in putting up any respectable placing, but again, I'm here to learn and have fun. The course was friggin awesome: slippery, muddy, wet, rainy - a lot of turns and twists, a really neat setup. I started off way behind everyone else as I was having issues clipping in from the gun, but after that, I was able to pick it up a bit. I'd eye someone up the road and pick them off on the nearest straightaway as I quickly came to recognize that my road speed from years past proved helpful. As each lap went by, the course became more and more slippery and it tested my bike handling skills to an extreme. Even though I crashed about 5x, I think by the end of the day, I learned a ton about how to handle it in sketchy situations, which was the biggest takeaway from the day. That and having a ton of fun. I spent a solid 2.5 hours Sunday morning cleaning the bike off...and its still pretty dirty. Great day, great race, I did much better than two weeks ago, and I look forward to doing it again and doing it well here next year. Definately among the most fun days I've had on a bike in recent memory.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Montrose Harbor CX
Montrose Harbor CX Race
12/2/2012
Cat 3
So...I knew I was going to suck...this was my first race in over two years, I hadn't trained, I've never done a cross race, I was going up against people who have been flying all year, I was going to start in the back, (insert classic cycling excuse here), and it's the state championships.
But I wasn't here to win, I was here for fun and the experience, a complete attitude departure from years past. Maybe the attitude stems from some combination of loving the sport and needing to come back to it and needing to carry a certain level of humility as it's certain that living up to the expectations of years past were far out of the question. So maybe thats why I have to just have 'fun' with it, having any other attitude would prevent me from ever racing again.
But maybe I just simply want to enjoy racing for racing...and thats why the casual fun-loving Cross scene is a perfect match.
The race itself was rather uneventful for me. It set off with me in the back and it ended with me in the back. I had brief moments of feeling good passing people in the sand, but far far more moments of learning experience after learning experience. But in the end it was fun and I was back racing.
Several takeaways before attempting my next race:
1) Learn how to jump on your bike faster - this isn't Little 5, just get on it.
2) Learn how to hit your pedals quicker
3) Adjust your gearing, you can't have your bike skipping all day again...
And need to improve on...
1) Sand...
2) Bike handling...big time.
12/2/2012
Cat 3
So...I knew I was going to suck...this was my first race in over two years, I hadn't trained, I've never done a cross race, I was going up against people who have been flying all year, I was going to start in the back, (insert classic cycling excuse here)
But I wasn't here to win, I was here for fun and the experience, a complete attitude departure from years past. Maybe the attitude stems from some combination of loving the sport and needing to come back to it and needing to carry a certain level of humility as it's certain that living up to the expectations of years past were far out of the question. So maybe thats why I have to just have 'fun' with it, having any other attitude would prevent me from ever racing again.
But maybe I just simply want to enjoy racing for racing...and thats why the casual fun-loving Cross scene is a perfect match.
The race itself was rather uneventful for me. It set off with me in the back and it ended with me in the back. I had brief moments of feeling good passing people in the sand, but far far more moments of learning experience after learning experience. But in the end it was fun and I was back racing.
Several takeaways before attempting my next race:
1) Learn how to jump on your bike faster - this isn't Little 5, just get on it.
2) Learn how to hit your pedals quicker
3) Adjust your gearing, you can't have your bike skipping all day again...
And need to improve on...
1) Sand...
2) Bike handling...big time.
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