I started off like 4th row which I am no longer keeping track of because despite good results I'm still seeded 29th for Gloucester and I am definitely fine with this and do not at all plan to be a huge queen about it. I can't complain too much for this race though because we went with the pro/1/2 field and got scored separately, which is As It Should Be. The main reason I am seeded 29th for Gloucester (which I am not mad about at all) is that there is a choice between results/upgrade points (3/4 field) or crossresults points (1/2/3 field) and I love to make the WRONG CHOICE. By the time I get low enough points for a good start position I'll have been automatically upgraded even though it's not a big deal and I totally don't care.
The difference between starting in the back of a 3/4 field and a 1/2/3 field is that instead of people just kind of being in the way, they're in the way but going as hard as you, so I had to be more aggressive with passing. The front of the race walked away and I was surrounded primarily by fellow 3s in the first few laps, so I'd find a group, chop my way up to the front of it, gap it somewhere and repeat. I low-sided on the 2nd turn before the finish line early on and lost four positions which then had to be made up again over the next lap. This also snapped my left shifter body so it was only being held on by the brake cable from that point and provided a few fun and cool decelerations.
It sounds like I have Don to thank for the dirt pile with logs in it. It occurred to me during course cleanup what kind of brain you would need to have in order to think that an additional 600lbs of log placed just far apart enough to keep anyone from clearing the gap is just what the course needed. Nice work Don, I loved casing these with both wheels somehow.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vCJmGH1KDGM
Godspeed, Mark
Speaking of casing, my lack of 'casing' out the course well enough during pre-ride led to me 'casing' the log run and coming to a near-stop every time I rode them, which was probably still faster than running them which I did the first lap and got passed. There was a rhythm to going up these and I never got it, watching me ride them probably felt like when you see someone fail while going for the high note in the national anthem. I was embarrassed for how embarrassed the spectators were for me. This is how I know I have advanced as a rider.
I also got passed running the barriers the first lap, so I hopped them the next few, then hung up and flipped over the bars on like lap 3 or 4 which was great, my shoulder loved it. Remember when I was Mountain Bike Guy, and everyone thought I was good at technical stuff because my bike weighed 30lbs? Lancaster Fairgrounds remembers.
This race felt super hard, much harder than Night Weasels. I have heard this means I am good at running. Discovering that you are secretly good at running is like finding out you are secretly good at testing asphalt viscosity, or patent law. Like, cool, but why couldn't I have been good at surfing or doing drugs on a cigarette boat.
Anyway coming up to the front of our little field within a field I noticed that riders were starting to race a lot harder for position when I'd start coming after them so there was much more of a fight to get by the RaceCF and AP riders. I didn't know it but we were contesting the podium. By the last lap I was in no-man's land once again, with nobody within reach, so I rode defensively and hoped my brake lever didn't further disintegrate, which turned out to be good for 2nd in cat 3 and 10th overall.
See you all at Gloucester! (490th row, nbd)