Ruts and Guts Weekend Roundup

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I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. Cyclo-X stage racing is very hard. Especially when you’re not very fit, a little sick and it is very hot. That was the case Sunday in Tulsa for me.

I didn’t hold too high of hopes, but knew it would be all over in an hour. It really didn’t take close to that long. It took about 2 laps, which was less than 10 minutes. That is about when I did the final systems check and had to pretty much shut it down. But, little did I know that was just the start of it.

It was like I was the pilot of a cripple airliner and the red lights on the dashboard just kept coming on. I’d think that I had it under control somewhat and then, the new red light, and I’d have to shut down another system.

If I was listing my “Mike excuses” (see comments on Saturday’s post), then they would be in this order. 1. I am not fit enough to race 3 cross races in a row right now. 2. It was nearly 90 degrees and I totally melted, especially on the uphill tailwind sections. 3. My lower back held out for about 20 minutes, then it was a governor. 4. I’m a little sick, and that along with the dust, gave me little mental encouragement. 5. I didn’t sleep much either Friday or Saturday nights, so never much recovered. Plus, I have a lot more, but those are the most pertinent.

I finished 9th yesterday. I would of finished 10th, but moved up a place on the last lap because of a flat of the 9th place rider. Bryan Fawley won the race, as he did on nearly the exact same course Friday night. Jacob Lasley was in 2nd, but he flatted too and had to run some to a pit, so he didn’t have a good day. He did finish 2nd in the overall omnium. Bryan won. I finished 6th overall. There were only 18 finishers in the race, so over half the guys quit, and I don’t blame them the least.

I have to say that I am mildly relieved the weekend was over. I never thought I was going to do that well, but I had no idea that I was going to suffer nearly as much. I do have to brag (Mike again) about my persistence. I rarely ride for such duration in such pain, with knowing that there would be little rewards. It was one good aspect of the weekend.

Tanner and guys do an awesome job for this weekend. I think how the time gets away from me and I’m only racing for an hour a day, while those guys half to set up the course, run the races, and tear them down each day. It is very impressive. Plus, the prize list is great.

Right now I’m still taking Colostrum. The jury is still out on it, but I’m not against trying new things. I don’t feel any worse than I did on Friday before the race, so I can’t complain about that. Trudi is much sicker than me. She was sleeping about 14 hours a day and feels worse than me and sounds much worse. And she never gets sick, so it must be a bad bug. Luckily she gets well quickly too.

I guess I just need to wait and see to figure out what I’m up to now. Hopefully this will pass and I’ll be good to go for the Berryman Epic MTB Race next weekend. I just looked at the weather for Steelville, MO and it said the high next Saturday is only 46. Plus a chance of rain. That would make it pretty epic.

Overall podium. Not one bit of cycling clothing or gear. Passes the podium test, especially since it’s in Oklahoma.

This is about as much as I looked up all day. Check out the Helium front wheel on my bike. Blast from the past. It’s Catherine’s.

I rode both stairs sections each lap. It was definitely slower for me, but I didn’t have enough energy to dismount and jog them.

I went out to warm up and this is how I found the car when I got back, Trudi and Bromont were taking a nap.

One of the reasons that they can pay out so much prize money is that they use child labor to set up and take down the course.

I saw this guy driving North on 75 heading toward Bartelsville, OK.

Can These Guys Quit Saying – “The Sport is so Much Cleaner Now”

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I’ve been reading all the articles on this “drug scandal”, from the riders perspective and others. And the reoccurring statement that I keep seeing is that the sport is so much cleaner now and that was a different era.

Bradley Wiggins saying Lance’s era was 10 or 15 years ago? I will state once more, Lance bumped Bradley off the Tour de France podium, to 4th, in 2009. I don’t even want to go back and link all the articles, from tons of different sources, riders, the UCI, the Pro Teams, but somehow everyone is on the same page and has this theme that the sport is in a different, cleaner, era now. Why?

I have no idea what they are using for facts to make that statement and why they are assuming this is anything more than positive thinking. Did you see the list of guys in this article that condenses the Gazzetta dello Sport report on the Padua investigation in Italy? Here are a few – Yaroslav Popovych, Franco Pellizotti, Michele Scarponi, Denis Menchov, Alexandre Kolobnev, Vladimir Gusev, Vladimir Karpets, Mikhail Ignatiev, Evgeni Petrov and Alberto Ongarato. Plus, the Italy police are investigating Liquigas, Lampre, Colnago, Geox, Androni, Katusha, Quick Step, Cnf-Inox, Farnese Vini, Acqua&Sapone, Astana, RadioShack, Vacansoleil, Isd, Csf, Lpr, Diquigiovanni, Tinkoff, Rabobank, Gerolsteiner and Milram. Plus, I could make another list, at least this long, of people’s names coming up in testimony. It is incredible.

That’s a lot of guys and a lot of teams. Many of the teams are defunct now, but many are current. But do you think it is close to all of them? Looking at that list, what percent do you think it is of the current riders still taking drugs in the profession ranks. Think it’s 5 percent? 10 ? Those are pretty big percentages. I’d say it is much less if I had to guess. Either way, whatever the percentage, the sport is still definitely in trouble and still really polluted.

Tom Bonnen from Cyclingnews.com“We must just keep doing what we do now, everything is well with us,” he said. “The only thing we can do is perhaps imagine that they follow us 24 hours a day, so the world can see what is happening in racing and so we recover our credibility.”

And here’s another Tom Boonen quote, just for fun. And it’s… USADA is also exaggerating. They’re also pretending like they’re the holiest business in the entire world right now, and they’re also full of crap.”

Everything is well with us (the sport of bicycle racing)? And, USADA is full of crap? I’d like to see the facts to back up those statements.

And here’s a beauty about Lance from 5 time Tour de France winner Michguel Indurain, from Velonews.com“Even now I believe in his innocence. He has always respected all the regulations… He has won all the cases he’s had,” Indurain told Radio Marca.“ Then he goes on to say, Armstrong “has always been a fighter. What surprises me is that he doesn’t keep fighting… I think he will come back and appeal and try to show that he played fair for all those years.” Wish I could bet him on that.

And what about the guys working with the riders. How about Allen Lim, Mr. Skratch Labs. I don’t know him personally. As far as I know I’ve never met the guy. He’s got a PhD. in sport physiologist, it seems. In this article, it states that Floyd said Dr. Lim helped him with blood transfusions. As far as I can tell, other than Lance, no one else much is calling Floyd a liar nowadays, except Allen Lim.

It goes on to say that – “While I became aware of Floyd’s attempt to dope himself and Levi [Leipheimer] in 2005, my actions were neither complicit nor complacent and I made it clear that this wasn’t right, encouraging them as much as I could at the time to ride clean,” Lim wrote.

I can’t really agree with that statement much, but he said it, I didn’t. He was employed to work personally for Lance Armstrong for 2009 and 10. He goes on to say the reason that Floyd made this up is – “I believe that Floyd made the accusations he did about me in 2010 because he knew that I knew what he had done in ’05. I also figured, but don’t know, that he was mad at me for working for Lance and that he resented my attempts to thwart his doping,” Lim wrote.

Whatever. I needed to include this in the “I Have to Call Bullshit” post from last week. It makes no sense. And here is Dr. Lim, personally training Lance Armstrong. He states that “The PowerTap was a major part of my doctoral work….” And he can’t tell that Lance is taking drugs? After he has been doing work with Floyd and Levi who he knows, for certain, that were taking drugs. He has all the numbers. And he is Mr. Squeaky clean? Bullshit.

I’m sorry Dr. Lim, but you came up with your new gig a little late. Now you have a legitimate niche in the sport, one that is probably good for the athletes. What can’t you just fess up like the others?

Taylor Phinney, Tim Johnson, Christian Vande Velde, and lots of others, train with him. I’d have to advise them that they probably shouldn’t associate with him anymore. Much like Greg LeMond suggested to Lance about Dr. Michele Farrari a “generation” ago in the sport. It makes the sport look bad.

From the original Velonews article, Mr. Lim is quoted – “I do believe that the sport has done an incredible job at cleaning itself up over the last five or six years, primarily due to the hard work and risk taken by the riders who are now coming out. There’s an entire generation of cyclists who have never been exposed to what the previous generation have had to see or deal with. Given what has been revealed in the last few months, that fact is pretty incredible and gives me tremendous hope and pride.”

Pride? He takes pride in what? I’m also wondering what Dr. Lim thinks a generation of cycling is? It must be less than 5 years, since everyone simultaneously came clean by 2007. Our new young riders haven’t been exposed to the drug issue? Here’s a guy that has been paid for years to train Floyd and Lance and bases this training on wattage. I don’t even know why I wrote this after reading what he said. It all must be true.


Why not? There isn’t anyone left to confess it’s so clean.