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No easy wins for senior joyriders

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Nancy Brown, who holds the women’s records in the 5,10 & 15 km time trials for the Nebraska Senior Games, faces stiff competition and will need to ride hard and smart to hold her titles.

Scott Bulfinch and Tom Hanthorn will also represent Joyride in their respective classes.

Stay tuned. Racing begins early tomorrow morning.

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Report from Master’s Nationals

1 lap to go

We arrived in Louisville late Sunday evening; forgot about the time change! Monday did a warmup ride on the TT course, a 4-lane country highway about 20 miles outside of the city. Saw Nancy Brown on the course with a remarkably healthy-looking Sydney supervising.

Headed back out Tuesday morning for the TT. Nancy had gone off with the early starters & had already collected her hardware & left by the time I got there for my noon start. Did see Kaos’ Rich Pearson heading in as I was heading out; he had started about 20 min before I did. This was the real deal here; as you went to the start house, everyone placed their bikes on a “bike jig” to check for UCI compliance. I found that my saddle position wasn’t pushing the envelope after all, and that I still can legally come a couple of mm’s forward. All helmets were being checked for certification stickers, even the obvious brand-name ones. And yes, there was doping control (although you had to be faster than I before they would track you down for that)! We entered the start house and were sent off from a real ramp; only have done that once before. And then there was about 100m of flat, the last flat we would see before the hills began, opening with about a mile of steady upgrade. No way to ease into that, this ride was super-threshold from the start. I got all excited when I caught my 30 second man half-way up that first hill, but it was a long time before I saw anyone else. At least we got to come back down that hill to the finish line, and with my 650c wheels I spun out the 54/11. I love checking out the equipment at TT’s, particularly here, where there was a full complement of aero tandems that were warming up for their mid-afternoon starts.

I really only came to Nationals for the TT, and hung around for the RR on Wednesday just because it was there. The RR course is in a lovely park smack in the middle of dowtown Louisville, a 5-mile loop that has about 50m of flat. The altitude differential through the park is only about 100′, but you do that about 100 times. Those who have ridden with me know that climbing is not my forte, and when I was still living in FL in 2003, several of my strong Cat-2/3 FL riding buddies came up to do this same course and all of them DNF’d. So I had no real expectations, but couldn’t pass up the chance to race against an all-60+ field.

We went off about 10:15 in the morning. At noon, right after the finish, local radio reported 97 degrees with a heat index of 112, and I believed it. I lost my only water bottle with 2 laps to go, so was chasing the shade wherever I could find it. On the first lap the field held together, although well strung-out, but then broke all apart. I waved good-bye to the Cat 1’s (yeah, there ARE Cat 1 60 year-olds, I discovered!) but soon found that there were plenty of guys there not a whole lot faster than me, and even some that I could drop on climbs – a real rarity, so I found a grupetto that would vary between 5 & 9 riders throughout the morning, as some would drop off as others got picked up. We split up for good on the last lap, and I rolled in solo with about a minute’s gap both ahead & and behind.

While I didn’t garner any press coverage, my bike did. As I was sitting in the shade trying to stuff my lungs back in, the local ABC affiliate crew came over and asked if they could borrow my bike to get some “spinning wheel” shots, so Wednesday night in Louisville my front wheel might have been seen if you looked quickly.

Kept getting hamstring cramps all Wednesday afternoon, and couldn’t sleep that night, as both legs burned beyond the ability of my prescription-strength Aleve to control; a feeling I remember from hard efforts in year’s past, but one not experienced in recent times. And after a week of taper & recovery, forcing in as much liquid as possible and not to mention sitting on my butt driving for a total of 24 hours I’ve managed to gain 5#, so this trip needs to be paid for.

It is fun to win, and that of course is the goal. But I have always gotten as much satisfaction from finishing in the pack among a quality field as I have cherry-picking local races, so I count this trip a success despite finishing well down in the standings. And it is fun to ride a tough, technical course with total road closure & real professional race organization.

Nancy takes the silver in the tt.

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Congratulations!