I raced on Sunday.
Somehow I turned off my alarm Sunday morning, randomly I woke up and thought to myself "it's a bit too light out to be too far before my alarm." So I check my alarm/phone and I have about 10 minutes to spare before my planned departure. 10 minutes won't do, so I end up leaving about 15- 20 minutes late. That ended up ok as I got into Harbison State Forest at around 9 (with a 10 am start). Prior to departure I checked the local weather for Columbia... chance of thunderstorms at start time and throughout the race... so.... how will I find out if they cancel?? I pull up a few pages on the intelligent phone so that I can periodically check as I get closer to the race - it's decided, I'm going anyway.
When I arrive it's steady raining, but not super hard... I have a water proof jacket I could wear, but I know that I will overheat with it on... do I warm up with it on to stay warm before the start?? Nope, time was short as it was, so I finally get everything in order and get out on the bike in a short sleeve jersey and bibs. Once I'm in the woods the falling rain isn't an issue... it's the trails. Standing water down the middle of some parts, and it's just a sandy/muddy mess that is constantly thrown up by my front tire - not to mention the rear tire of anyone you are following.
Vision will be an issue, but I'm not about to battle the flying water/mud with just my eyes.
Finishing visibility |
For probably the last 2-3 miles vision was pretty much shot. There was no more picking lines, I was just riding and keeping my front wheel as light as possible. On forest road climbs I pulled my glasses down to prevent fogging, and of course, to get a better view of what was going on. By this point I was in no man's land anyway.
Our group was a bit smaller than I anticipated, we had 9 at the start. We got warnings about wet bridges, and to ride careful and slow (in a race) and then we were sent off. Off the start is a gravel road climb, and we all stuck together so I didn't have to push too hard. I was 4th going into the woods and I was right on the wheel of the rider in front of me when he missed a sharp left. He went straight around a tree to renter the trail and I followed. A branch popped up as he went over it and as it landed back down my front wheel caught it at a funny angle and I went down. HARD. It was in this instance that I was thankful that the ground was saturated as my left shoulder was driven into the ground. The pine needles and softened earth provided for a nice crashing experience. My bike, on the other hand, did not come out so coddled.
Luckily for me, a fast rider from the 40+ group came by a few seconds later and I was able to grab onto his wheel to get me back up into the singletrack. He started pulling away and I was alone. I kept looking ahead for riders, and looking back for challengers... but there was nothing. I could feel my pace slowing as I no longer felt the urgency of the race. I tried to focus on my tempo to keep my cadence up to push the speed and get myself back up into a respectable gear.
Then I saw it. A jersey through the trees as the trail started into a quick switchback section up a short hill. Instantly the energy returned to my legs. From the color of his jersey I didn't suspect he was in my age group, but it didn't matter - it was someone to catch. I lost sight of him and wondered if there had been a rider in front of me. I exited the singletrack onto another forest road climb and I saw him again at the top of the climb. I push it up the climb but have a feeling we are toward the end. I keep looking back as I reach the top of the climb to make sure no one is trying to put a late push on me. I'm in the clear. The trail is now speckled with spectators, I MUST be near the end. I push it hard where I can, but this section is tight and rooty.
Soon the trail open into the grass finish and I cross. I got 5th. Did the crash hurt my chances?? Probably not.
I was 2 minutes off 4th... so ultimately I probably would have finished closer to him, but I don't know if I would have had it to finish ahead of him as I know he is a strong rider. So I'm pretty happy with the race - minus the crash. I still need to work on the mental game of not losing it in no man's land, but overall I'm pretty pleased with where I am at this point in the season. Do I need to continue working harder, sure! But I'm getting there!!
I was one dirty MFer at the end of the race.
I found a nice scrape on my leg to match the gouge on my frame when I rinsed off the grime. |
I think that about sums up the grime I was facing all race. |
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