Nice capture of the the moment on that second photo, Todd. So if all you saw was my face, out of context with the bike, would you think I was:
A) A mountain bike racer, or
B) An axe murderer
Nice shots, but if you really wanted to see pain face you needed to take a picture near the uphill past the house – exponential pain

.
Almost 48 hours after the finish cannon went off, and my legs are still shredded. Huge, huge expenditure of energy by all who raced, and unlike anything I’ve done before. I did a 24 hour race 11 years ago, but we never made it past about 1am because a teammate broke his collarbone and scapula and we bailed and drove him off to the hospital. So those extra 11 hours this time were where the proverbial men were separated from the boys.
Doug “Animal” Kennedy and I headed up Friday afternoon to meet up with Team A (Prekaski, Lowry, Bauer, Hernandez). We also had Bill “consistent lap time” Turner and last minute addition Michael “sure I’ll do it, sounds like fun” Todisco joining us on Team B. We raced Expert 4-man and lined up against 6 teams in our division (there were something like 190 or so teams overall). To start the race, Doug had a midpack LeMans run but then nailed the first lap, so we were in 3rd place at the start of the second lap, I held our position with a non-spectacular lap, and then Bill nailed back 2nd place on his first time through the rotation. At this point we were feeling great and thought we would be in a protracted battle for 2nd place (1st place had already checked out by close to 10 minutes, running darn near Pro lap times).
By the second time through our rotation, things started to go slightly downhill. I had a broken chain that added 7 or 8 minutes to my lap time (lap times for us were in the 45 minute plus or minus range), and also all of our lap times were gradually approaching their steady state values – meaning we were all now running 1 tick below max effort, as opposed to the first time through the rotation where we were all running (at least) 1 tick above max effort. Unfortunately our 2nd place competition didn’t seem to slow down much and kept putting down consistent (but hardly spectacular) lap times. This is where the slow, grinding process of losing contact with 2nd place began. The good news is that 4th place was beginning the slow, grinding process of losing contact with 3rd place (us).
Our strategy was basically to rotate through the order for the first 10 hours, then come nighttime we would start skipping laps and moving to a “rolling” 3 man rotation. Unfortunately the cognitive abilities start to fade after midnight, and somehow our order got a little convoluted, and what should have been a very symmetric distribution of rest time turned out to be not so. At one point I was scheduled to go out for a 3rd lap out of 7 at about 2:30am, and Doug (who had just woken up from a 3 hour “nap”) realized I was about to die a thousand deaths if I went out again, he said he felt great and volunteered to take my lap (I obliged), and then his lap, and then another lap with only 1 skip. So for those counting at home, that’s 3 out of 4 laps from 2:30am-5:30am or so, and throwing down lap times that were 3-5 minutes faster than the 2nd place team. Hence the “Animal” moniker 2 paragraphs ago….
By dawn we realized that we were pretty much guaranteed 3rd place, barring something catastrophic. We all headed out for our first daylight lap invigorated by the great course and better weather, and we actually had lap times approaching our individual bests from the previous day. Then for the last time through the rotation we all cruised, partially because we weren’t fighting for a position and partially because we were dead men riding.
So in the end we did 30 laps, with Doug doing 2 more than the rest of us (hey, gotta get that extra ‘cross training in, right?), we finished 3rd place in the 4 man Expert class, 11th place overall, and even got a neat podium shot with the four of us in MRC jerseys with some hardware around our necks. For me it was an incredibly satisfying experience, the atmosphere at the event was great, having 7 other MRC teammates there was awesome, no (serious) injuries, and with the exception of 1 broken chain, 1 lost baton (5 minute penalty), and a little confusion and mismanagement during the night rotation, I think we did about as well as we could have.