Monthly Archives: September 2015

Lafeyette Park Criterium – St. Louis

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Last night was the first of 4 National Racing Calendar criteriums in St. Louis this weekend.  It went pretty well, considering.

The considering is that I really haven’t been doing any speedwork all year.  And it was the 5th criterium I’ve done this season, the last one nearly a month ago in Colorado.  But, it wasn’t so bad.

The course is one that Mike has used for a long time, but they moved the finish line around the corner so it finishes on a little downhill.  I didn’t think I would like it, but it was fine.  The course is around Lafeyette Park and is pretty much a square, with just a tad of elevation change.  Super wide open, smooth course with left hand corners.

The race started at 9:30 at night, so it was pretty dark.  Like night dark.  The course is lite up most places, so it was just night time criterium racing.  It is always sort of sketchy the first few laps with everyone getting used to the shadows and the pace of the course.

I don’t really have much to say, other than we rode around for an hour and it was a huge field sprint.  I never participated at the front and was hanging out pretty far back in the field, at least for me.

The night was super muggy.  It was only 80 degrees, but it felt way hotter.  I’m a little worried about racing in the sun today.  It is supposed to be 95 today and is already close to 90.  I’m not use to this humidity.

Anyway, with about 9 laps to go, I got up to Bill, who had been riding nearly the whole race in front of me and he told me he didn’t think he was going to finish.  I thought that was nearly impossible, we were doing 2 minute laps, so it was just 18 minutes longer.  But, Bill was right and he stopped with 3 to go.  He said he could have finished, but he was riding at the back of the field and wanted to watch the sprint.

I started moving up with about 5 to go.  UHC had started they stupid riding the inside of the course leadout thing with 9 to go, so the field was on high alert.  But, it wasn’t going to work out well for them because the course was so wide open and there really was no advantage doing a leadout like that.  Those guys are smarter than that I’d hope.

I got into okay position with a couple laps to go and with a lap to go I as good, maybe 15 guys back, on Brad Huff’s (Optum) wheel.  But I got a little out of place and a blob of riders came by me on the 3rd side.  I probably , in retrospect, should have used one of my jumps and moved back into a better position, but I didn’t.

On the 2nd to last side, I passed a few guys and a few more threw the final corner, but was way too far back. I ended up 25th, which wasn’t in the money.    In reality, it is probably just about where I deserved to finish the race.  I didn’t do anything to finish any better, so that is really about right.

I am okay with the race.  Downloading my power to Strava, I was pretty good.  I had a max heartrate of 181, which is a ton higher than Colorado and the highest I’ve seen since I’ve been wearing a heart strap the last couple months.  Plus my max wattage was 1431, which is the highest I’ve had since I broke my hip last year.  The race averaged 30.1 mph and the last lap was 35 mph.  Pretty quick, especially considering it was dark.

Daniel Holloway won, with Brad Huff finishing 2nd.  Brad is here, racing solo, so it was a super result.  The best that UHC could muster was 5th.  Kind of unusual for them.

After the race, Bill, Catherine and I went to a local bar and split a burger and a chicken sandwich, then Catherine and I rode the 10 miles through town back to our hotel in Clayton.  It is my favorite part of racing in St. Louis.  I love exploring St. Louis by bicycle.  Especially at night.

I went down some streets I’d never been on and the houses were huge.  Here is St. Louis, they have blocked off a ton of streets to make whole neighborhoods isolated.  Lots of gates and barriers in the middle of intersections to make streets dead ends.  Some of the homes are unreal.  Like 15,000 sq. ft. limestone unreal.  We rode into a street, Washington, that was just a few blocks long and each and every house was magnificient.   Most of the older homes, nearly all, are either built of stone or brick in St. Louis.  Very interesting architecture.

Today we race at 5:30.  Another square, but this one has just a little more elevation change.  It has had breaks work before, so a field sprint isn’t guaranteed.   I’m going to go for a ride this morning, even though I didn’t get to sleep until after 2:30 am last night.  I’m always way jacked up when racing after 10 at night.  But I like it a lot.

The women's race was pretty quick. I think there were 60 women there, so a pretty good sized field.

The women’s race was pretty quick. I think there were 60 women there, so a pretty good sized field.

This photos at night don't do the houses justice.

This photos at night don’t do the houses justice.

This was a smaller house, in a less affluent neighborhood. It was still incredible.

This was a smaller house, in a less affluent neighborhood. It was still incredible.

Breakfast of champions.

Breakfast of champions.

 

 

 

Day 2 – Gateway Cup

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Yesterday we rode circles around Francis Park in St. Louis.   The course is very similar to the Friday night race.   It is a big, open course, with just a little bit of up and down.  Fast, but not quite as smooth.  But, it wasn’t dark.  That being said, the riders in the Pro-1 race had problems staying on their bikes.

That was probably my biggest observation.  There were a lot of guys, not a ton by numbers, but quite a few crashes that involved somewhere between 2 and 10 guys.  Maybe 6-10 different crashes that didn’t seem to be at any critical moments.

I’m not sure of the reasons for this.  A couple times, riders hit a manhole cover, on the backstretch, that was recessed into the asphalt.  Daniel Holloway fell pretty hard this way.  But the other crashes were just stupid, random mistakes.

The race wasn’t strung out enough, too blobby, so everyone was tight, thus twitchy.  It never ceases to amaze me how much contact there is nowadays in criteriums.  I’m not saying that was the cause of the crashes yesterday, but I hate it when guys take their hands off the bars to tap someones hip when it reality it is way better just to brake.  The sport has way too much contact, when it would be just so much safer if guys went out of their way to not make contact.  This is a big change that has happened over the years.

Not much happened during the race.  There are too many teams here that are banking on the race coming down to a field sprint, thus it will nearly always be a field sprint.

I nearly went over the bars when I was jumping and my chain slipped.  I’m not really sure what happened.  I jumped and next thing I know I’m on my front wheel with my rear wheel a foot off the ground.  I landed a little crossed up, with one foot unclipped.  I probably should have fallen, but got lucky and didn’t.   That was my adrenaline rush for the day.

Business as usual the last couple laps.  UHC didn’t start until 3, maybe 2 to go.  Everyone swarmed and it was chaos.  I felt pretty great all day and was looking forward to the end.  I was towards the front, but then it went south.  I got caught up on the wrong side of the field and got way shuffled back.  I made a couple big moves, but still was 30 guys back with 1/2 a lap to go.

On the 2nd to last stretch, I jumped by a few more guys and went way wide through the last corner, passing a few more.  The sprint is sort of downhill and I was pretty spun out in an 11. When I have to sit to sprint, then it is all over.  That happened about 50 meters from the finish. I had a max speed of 43, so that is pretty quick.   I thought I was really far back so eased up some and a few guys went by.  That was a mistake.   I finished 22nd and would have been in a more respectable place if I would have just keep at it to the line.  I think I’m not used to being that far back at the finish.  If you would have asked me 50 meters from the line where I was at I would have guessed in the upper 30’s.  Strange.

So, I’m happy that I felt much better, but can’t be happy with the finish.  Today is a much harder race, on the hill in the Italian section of St. Louis.  It is an hour earlier, so it is going to be way hotter.  Catherine raced at 4 yesterday and it was 95 on her Strava and mine said it was 85.  So, 10 degrees hotter an hour earlier.  Yesterday a lot of guys were doing the iced hose (nylons stockings) on their backs yesterday.  Today it will be the same.

I ended up with 80 miles yesterday.  We did a pretty nice ride around St. Louis in the morning, checking out the neighborhoods.  Like I said yesterday, the houses here are incredible.  Then Bill and I rode both to the race and back to the hotel, so another 20 miles.  I guess it will be the same today.

Okay, here are photos of some of the magnificient houses I saw yesterday.  And this is hardly any of them.  There are 1000’s of more.

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