| |
| |
SDSU [Collegiate MTB] XC.D - David Gingrich Saturday morning promised dry and really hot (like 95°+) racing conditions on an 18-mi course beginning with a 1-mi sandy doubletrack, a tough Tuna-like road climb, and awesome singletrack descents, rollers, and climbs with mx-style bermed corners and granite slickrock sections. My appeals to race XC B's, showing a road A's license, were denied without Hanns' presence and I was forced to register in the D's. The fields were dominated by SDSU, followed by UCSB, then UCLA, and USC, as the northern schools were at Chico. We agreed to start all collegiate and NORBA categories in one mass-start launch, after joking of adding a mass Le Mans start. All fields besides the A's and cat 1's rode the same single lap of an 18-mile course, while the A's/1's added an extra loop. Several A's and a 1 drilled it on "go" and I hung on as we instantly broke away in the likes of a World Cup Cyclocross start complete with the sand. Once on the 9-10% road climb I was in the company of 2 A's and the 1 after we dropped a couple of A's. I was happy to deposit time in the bank as I was on a hardtail and was certain to make heavy withdrawals on the descents to full-suspension riders, hard-core mtn bikers, and local Aztecs on trails I hadn't ridden before. At the top of the climb the A's and 1 went right and I went straight, entering immaculate rolling singletrack just as a 2 paced up to me. After the skilled 2 left me, I was alone during the next hour desperate to make time on any ascents and flats while trying to descend as fast as I dared. After that hour, I stopped at an intersection where a marked singletrack crossed the road I was climbing. I couldn't figure out if I should turn left, right, or continue straight since there were none of the previous arrow signs, so I decided to wait for the next rider rather than take the 0.66 odds of taking the wrong way. The next rider to roll up was a strong SDSU D's rider who was also unable to make the race day upgrade. He knew the way and we rode to the top and I said "see ya at the bottom" as we dropped down a long singletrack descent and his FSR fs rig disappeared immediately. It was a little disconcerting how fast even his dust trails dissipated as I dropped further back. So I thought my victory was gone, as we only had a few short miles on road and flat to the finish. But I was surprised to find this SDSU guy stopped at the turn to the last 2k finishing section of dirt since he wasn't certain of the way to go. I let him lead out and followed him til I needed to launch a sprint, shouting words of encouragement to him as I passed and finished well clear. Finish time, 1:40, ahead of all B's, C's, and D's. The sad closing is that a near majority of riders got lost, missing the course markers, and the official declared the race nullified. 380-mile drive and 1:40 suffering for nothing - not victory nor even upgrade value.
SD.D - Peter Felton After the failed XC race that morning I was motivated to do well in the Super D. It was my first non-XC race I had ever done, so I wasn't expecting too much. It was kinda intimidating because most of the competitors were on big downhill bikes. The actual race was really fun. The course was mostly twisty singletrack, and even though it was pretty loose ad rocky at some points it was still fast. I felt like I was in my groove, hitting the berms and water bars. One jump though I hit way too fast and went right off the trail into the bushes. I got right back on and kept going, deciding to not take anymore unnecessary risks. There were a few flat/uphill sections where I passed a couple of the downhillers ahead of me. Then before I knew it I came through the last section and finished. My first downhill race experience was a really good one, I had a lot of fun and apparently I finished 2nd? Cool. Thanks for taking me down David/Anna. Good to meet all you guys, and hopefully I'll be riding a lot with you.
STXC.D - Andrew Axley Keegan, Jon and I stayed the night and raced the XC short track on sunday morning. A fast, relatively flat course turned out to be Keegan's specialty. Racing both the C's and D's (all of UCLA was riding D's), Keegan pushed hard and came out number one. I came in 4th, and Jon was a little further back. Not bad for UCLA's first MTB race of the week.
LA Velodrome Racing Assn. Cup #4 [USCF Track] Omnium.4/5 - Joseph Patterson I crashed out of the points race (40 laps, sprints every ten laps), but won the tempo (15 laps, point per lap) the scratch (15 laps, only final lap matters) and the omnium. I spent my winnings on Tegaderm to cover up the square foot of skin I lost while sliding around the Siberian pine slip'n'slide. The high price of upgrade points...
 |
|
|
|

| |
 |
Subscribe to Posts [Atom]
|
|
|
|
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home