Monthly Archives: April 2016

God’s Country MTB Marathon

This entry was posted in Racing on by .

I did a MTB marathon on Sunday.  It didn’t really seem like it lived up to the word marathon for cycling, but the way MTB racing has gotten, anything over 3 hours seems to be classified as a marathon.  It used to be just a race.  Now the races are more like cyclo-crosses and the marathons of old are ultra endurance events.  Anyway, it is what it is.

Chris Locke and his crew have been putting on races for years.  I had never made it over to one of his MTB races, but had a free weekend and am trying to switch it up some this year, so why not.  Chris promoted a full weekend of events with a duathlon on Saturday, MTB marathon Sunday morning, then a cross country at noon.

The race is on the Lawrence River trails, which is a nice trail system North of the river in Lawrence.   The trails have been there forever.  I raced there a bunch in the 90’s, but haven’t had the pleasure since.  They are a blast.  They flow like water.  Lacking technical challenges, but that is fine.

This was a local race, I think maybe 30 riders started the marathon race.  Brian Jensen, was racing with me.  He is from Denmark and had flown to Chicago on Saturday, to escort his mom, who was visiting, to escort her from Midway airport to O’hare International, then flew back. Pretty nice son.

So Brian was rested and I was tired.  I am always tired the day before a MTB race.  That is because I go to the course and to too much pre-riding.  Plus at MTB events, you tend to stand around a ton.  I really didn’t care because I knew that it was just for training and fun.

The race was pretty uneventful.  We didn’t even have to start that fast and I led into the singletrack.  Then it is singletrack for the next 9+miles.  After a few minutes, Brian must of gotten tired of watching me blow corners I couldn’t see and said he’d lead.  I moved over and Brian proceeded to be on the front the next two laps.

The course is by the river and is pretty sandy in sections.  The majority of the race it is hardpacked, but the back loop has a few sand pits.  Brian was super fast on the normal trail, but the back section we were both iffy.

I led the 3 laps, knowing we were going to do 5, which would be a tad under 50 miles.  The lap times were quicker than I had guessed, around 37 minutes, which is flying by MTB singletrack standards.

I stopped at the end of lap 3 to get a bottle out of a cooler.  I had frozen a couple bottles and it worked out fine.  Brian waited up and then we continued.

I got to win since Brian won the weekend before.  I know it seems a little weird not racing team mates at a MTB race, where team tactics don’t really apply, but you don’t really want to be racing your team mates at all, ever, so it was normal we didn’t.

I felt better the last lap than the previous 4.  My left leg wasn’t working great, but it wasn’t horrible either.  I think I could have done a pretty quick lap the final lap, but when we started to go fast, I slid my rear wheel out on some sand and I unclipped and jammed my left foot on the ground to stand upright it is sent a shock to my hip.  I decided to just bail on the fast lap time and ride in.

The weird thing about these trails is that it isn’t that big of a time difference between riding super hard and riding easy.  Like a minute a lap.  I think when you are going hard, you tend to come into corners too hot and then have to grab a bunch of brake and then re-accelerate.  Our last lap was hardly a minute slower than our other laps and it seemed like we were crawling.

I think we had the 3 fastest lap times of the day, which was nice I guess.  I think the course was more chewed up for the cross country riders, so it is really comparing apples to oranges.  I have the Strava KOM on the course now, so I guess that is something.   Strava KOM’s on MTB courses are sort of stupid, really.  It is like weather conditions for road Strava KOM’s.  Wind aided, or no mud is always going to be faster.

Anyway, I wasn’t too hurt from the day.  Yesterday I spent most of the day doing taxes, then got done just in time for the evening ride.  I drug the group over to the North Topeka postal annex to mail my taxes.  Then we did a good ride after.  I didn’t think I was going to get 45 miles in, but it was good.  I felt pretty good most of the way, then completely fell apart the last 5 miles.  I realized I hadn’t eaten anything since breakfast, which consisted of two pieces of toast and oatmeal with blueberries and maple syrup.  I guess I bonked.  I don’t bonk much anymore, so it was unfamiliar somewhat.

I plan to do some more MTB races throughout the year and this was a nice start.  I think my bike handling got better.  I know it got better during the race, it was downright ugly the 1st lap. Baby steps once again, always a learning or relearning process.

Waiting around for pre-race instructions. Catherine won the women's event. She got a new dual suspension Specialized and it seems pretty crazy light. It was a good start for her re-enty back into the sport.

Waiting around for pre-race instructions. Catherine won the women’s event. She got a new dual suspension Specialized and it seems pretty crazy light. It was a good start for her re-entry back into the sport.

Brian leading the first couple laps. He was riding a dual suspension Eriksen and I was on fully rigid. Go figure.

Brian leading the first couple laps. He was riding a dual suspension Eriksen and I was on fully rigid. Go figure.

The podium. Nice local MTB vibe going on. Music, brats, beer, MTB racing. It all goes together.

The podium. Nice local MTB vibe going on. Music, brats, beer, MTB racing. It all goes together.

Tucker is always playful.  If I don't play with him, he always finds something else to do on his own.  Pretty user friendly, except when he is chewing stuff up.

Tucker is always playful. If I don’t play with him, he always finds something else to do on his own. Pretty user friendly, except when he is chewing stuff up.

 

 

Heading to Arkansas for Joe Martin Stage Race

This entry was posted in Comments about Cycling on by .

Today I’m driving to Arkansas for the Joe Martin Stage race, which starts tomorrow. Catherine is going with me.  We’re doing a couple detours on the way through Lawrence and then again through Kansas CIty.

I’m racing the 1/2 race there.  This will be the first time I’ve ever done that.  I don’t have enough guys on my team to race the Pro 1 race and I didn’t have any luck finding a slot on a team to “guest ride”.  It still might work out?    I was planning on doing the 1/2 race a few years ago, but fell on the time trial descent, going 47, warming up, and separated my shoulder.  I hope to have better luck this year.

You know the weird part is that the 1/2 race is going to be much harder than the Pro race.  It is going to be more of a bicycle race, not a hillclimb, then tempo session.  I think I would do better in the Pro race than the 1/2 race.  I don’t have many race days so far this year and am racing to get fitness.  But the 1/2 race is going to be racing each day, a full on free-for-all,which is going to be fairly exhausting.  Funny how that is.

Anyway, the next few days should be interesting. I like racing around Fayetteville.  I’ve been going there for close to 40 years.  That is nuts.  I did the race the first time in 1979.  I finished 2nd in the hillclimb to John Howard, who was on the ’76 Olympic team and was a cycling god. That really gave me motivation to continue the sport.

I’ve never won the race overall.  I finished 2nd a couple time, but it was never really on my radar screen.  It has really grown into a National caliber event.  One of the best races of the season. Bruce Dunn is the promoter now.  He races and looks after the riders.  Those are always the best promoters.

Joe Martin was racing the race then.  I knew Joe pretty well. He and his wife Nancy.  I saw Nancy a few years ago at the race.  She looks great, as she always has.  She is a very smart woman.

Okay, of course, I’ll let you know how it goes.  Better get packed up.

Joe Martin on the left, with Eddy Merckx in the center. Pretty cool photo.

Joe Martin on the left, with Eddy Merckx in the center. Pretty cool photo.

I've been taking Tucker out to the country. He has evolved from chasing butterflies to birds. So, he really is a bird dog.

I’ve been taking Tucker out to the country. He has evolved from chasing butterflies to birds. So, he really is a bird dog.