Norwell
Posted: Sun Jul 29, 2012 10:03 pm
As I drove down to Norwell today I was feeling kind of depressed. Maybe it was the drizzle or the lack of coffee, or maybe it was the remnants of my Hilltowns hangover. It all conspired to give me the feeling that I was about to have my ass handed to me by a bunch of cat 3s and that the best I could hope for was to not get dropped. I’ve realized that how I fancy my chances in a race plays a big part in how excited I am do to a race. That’s one of those thoughts that seems obvious once you acknowledge it.
Rob D and Carl were there at the start line. I think that we were all in about the same place confidence-wise. My mood had transitioned from negative to neutral once I got through my warm-up ride, so that was an improvement.
Last year when I raced this in the cat 5, I intentionally went slow over the climb on each lap and allowed myself to drop to the back of the pack. Then I fought my way back to the front around the rest of the course. This year I did basically the opposite. Since I was worried about getting dropped, I hammered the climb each time, usually with a fairly low gear. On the backside of the course, I focused on staying out of the wind and out of trouble and I generally lost places there. The interesting thing was that I was reliably gaining those places back, and more, on each time up the climb. Hmmmm…
With two laps to go I was feeling quite good and riding near the front. The second to last time up the climb I pulled up to the very front and saw a guy in a polka dot jersey blast off into a full-on sprint towards the finish line. I turned to the guy to my left and said, “We’ve got one more lap after this right?” “Yep.” The polka dot guy crossed the finish line 20 yards ahead of us and pumped his fist into the sky to the sound of the ringing of the bell lap. As we rolled past him over the top of the hill, I heard him say, “I thought that was the last lap!” Yeah, we know.
Now I was setting the tempo with nothing up the road. Whoops!
I managed to hang around in the first 5-10 places through the bulk of the last lap. The pace went way up about a ½ mile prior to the final turn, but I managed to hang around for that too. I made the turn cleanly and did my sprint for 19th place.
This is my best individual result so far this year and I wasn’t even sure if my head was screwed on straight at the start line. I’m happy that I went and did it even though I wasn’t thrilled about it beforehand.
Rob D and Carl were there at the start line. I think that we were all in about the same place confidence-wise. My mood had transitioned from negative to neutral once I got through my warm-up ride, so that was an improvement.
Last year when I raced this in the cat 5, I intentionally went slow over the climb on each lap and allowed myself to drop to the back of the pack. Then I fought my way back to the front around the rest of the course. This year I did basically the opposite. Since I was worried about getting dropped, I hammered the climb each time, usually with a fairly low gear. On the backside of the course, I focused on staying out of the wind and out of trouble and I generally lost places there. The interesting thing was that I was reliably gaining those places back, and more, on each time up the climb. Hmmmm…
With two laps to go I was feeling quite good and riding near the front. The second to last time up the climb I pulled up to the very front and saw a guy in a polka dot jersey blast off into a full-on sprint towards the finish line. I turned to the guy to my left and said, “We’ve got one more lap after this right?” “Yep.” The polka dot guy crossed the finish line 20 yards ahead of us and pumped his fist into the sky to the sound of the ringing of the bell lap. As we rolled past him over the top of the hill, I heard him say, “I thought that was the last lap!” Yeah, we know.
Now I was setting the tempo with nothing up the road. Whoops!
I managed to hang around in the first 5-10 places through the bulk of the last lap. The pace went way up about a ½ mile prior to the final turn, but I managed to hang around for that too. I made the turn cleanly and did my sprint for 19th place.
This is my best individual result so far this year and I wasn’t even sure if my head was screwed on straight at the start line. I’m happy that I went and did it even though I wasn’t thrilled about it beforehand.