Monday, September 22, 2008

1.2.3.....Tahoe, Michaux and Bear Creek

The season is winding down. You can kind of tell this do to the fact that all the series I've been participating in are having their "Series Final" races. It feels as if summer camp is almost over and we all know it's going to be nothing but short days, and numb feet soon.

After recovering from the unplanned fractured wrist at the start of August, I was mostly healed just in time to do the NUE series final in Tahoe. One last 100 mile race to close the book on a wacky 08 season. Amid rumors that Lance Armstrong was going to be there, we gathered in the wilds of the Sierra Nevada's of northern California. With no hotels, or groceries within 1.5hrs, everyone was going to be camping out. I've been doing it all year, but I wondered how that exposure to the hard ground was going to effect the Trek boys who have been out of practice camping the night before.
Apparently they were just fine. I was hoping my month off of racing, but still training, was going to leave me more rested than my competition. So the short of the long is at Cyclingnews.com. I ended up in fourth, and cinched a fourth overall in the series. Much repect goes out to Schalk, Eatough and Plews for coming out and throwing down. I did my best against the best. I'm hoping next year will go a little more smoothly and I'm pretty invigorated to return stronger than ever. The NUE series definitely stepped up it's game and profile, and that growth is only going to continue. The one day Endurance races are really appealing to lots of people.


Michaux 50 The Terror of Teaberry.
My favorite race series ever! Three races, each 40-50miles, single loops and each different than the other. Lots of rocks, ferns and wet roots. Truely the hardest races ever.
At 5:10, the Teaberry was longest Michaux 50 I've ever done. Oh and I got the win. My favorite, but most agonizing part of the race was the 30min I spent running or riding a rim after my Co2's went bad and I had to go until I found someone with a pump. The Stan's Flow Rim on my Ti Deluxe came out straight. End the end I guess it was good CycloCross Training.

Bear Creek, MASS Series Final: Short Track, Super D, XC

The thing that excited me the most about this weekend was the Super-D race. I love that 6-20 minutes of absolute pain, sketchy lines and almost blown corners. It's so fun, and I get the biggest kick out of beating as many people on 4-6in travel bikes and baggies with my TiDeluxe 29er.
On Saturday we started out the Short Track race, which lasted about 30 min, and included some great technical lines. After a lap as the #2 wheel I took off and lead the last 4 laps to finish pretty comfortably in the lead.
I went back and prepped my bike for the Super D, which meant I took off the 2.1 WTB Nano Raptors tires and put on the WTB 2.55 Weirwolves and lowered the seat 1.5 inches. I was excited to see 55 people signed up, mostly because it was a totally different crowd than i'm used to seeing at the normal XC races. There were a few of us spandexed types still on the start line, but it was the 48 other baggy shorts wearing dudes that got my competitive juices flowing.
My friend Janelle decided to do it as one of only two or three girls in the event.
We went off in one minute intervals. I was number 18 off the line. The drop-in was awkward, and a slow controlled roll-in was my goal to set me up for the first 1/8th of a mile which needed some pre-walking to figure out the best lines. I made it through that section pretty smooth, biffed a pedal on a little berm, but didn't feel a significant slow down.
It's funny how much faster race pace is than practice pace. I took the turns at just the right speeds, the kind where you feel like your slowing down too much but if you went any faster it would be chaos. Made the chicanes, dropped the steep hill into the creek bed with no brakes, pedaled the flat sections and pretty much took the rest of it as smooth as possible.
At the end of the day, 53 people made it to the bottom and the top four guys were all spandex XC compatriots. I took first at 5:15 25sec up on Aaron Snyder who was on his 20lb carbon XC hardtail. Aaron, Brandon and Lichtenwaller were all tenths of a second apart in the 5:40 second range. I think we stunned a bunch of the buff dualie bike dudes!
Sooo much fun!

XC race'n

Sunday we lined up for the final MASS race of the year. This has to be the second most technical race of the year. 7 miles and a ton of rocks. I left the WeirWolf 2.55's on. We climbed to the top of the ski hill in a nice round about way, then dropped over the back side on a course that was rougher than the Super-D. Not a lot of fan fare on this one. I went off the front in the first lap, and tried to hold the advantage in the rocks. A fun race but pretty uneventful.

I still have a bunch of events coming up.
Specifically I'll be heading to NC for the Triangle Fat Tire Festival on October 4th. I'm not racing but I will be there with a tent, giving clinics, talking about bike stuff, and riding with people during the 6hr race. Come out and say Hi!

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Buck's SSWC update.

Just a quick update for those who have and haven't herd. I "ran into" (ha ha) an injury at SSWC
Now that I have all the info I'll let you all know what is up.

I completely tore my right ACL during SSWC08'.
Surgery scheduled for the 21st of Oct.
Planned return to full power mountain biking ....the end of July 09'.

Fortunately I have a sick road bike to use as my main recovery tool.

Thanks for that IF!!

I have raffle tickets if you need some, and if your not currently on an IF you need one.

BK

P.S. If you're the guy with the purple hip who won the worst injury prize. Just think of me when you use it. :)

Monday, September 8, 2008

Shenandoah 100

IF racers and support headed south of the Mason-Dixon line for the final East Coast leg of the NUE Series, the Shenandoah 100 at Stokesville Camp Ground in the heart Virginia. In what has become normal weather for the series, racers were once again greeted with thunderstorms the night before the race, thus ensuring the already soft course would also have that nice greasy finish to it.
This year's race had a mind boggling 500+ riders toeing up to the line for the start and with the first 1/2 mile containing washed out sections, placement at the line was critical to avoid the bottlenecks.
Leading the charge was Trish Stevenson, taking 51st overall and 2nd in the Women's, and securing 3rd overall in the series. Mark Elsasser placed 66 overall and 13th in single speed and the elusive Mike Ramponi came in 91st overall and 18th in single speed winning a Grammy for the best on course rendition of Led Zepplin's Whole Lotta Love. Chris Wurster was seen crossing the line testing a taco shaped wheel/zero tire pressure setup designed just for November's Baja Epic. He managed to cross the line in 133rd to take fourth in Master's and secure at least 4th in the Master's overall. Struggling with knee problems but still getting it over the line was Alex Kopko in 146th and the encore was performed by Swamper bringing it home in just under 14 hours.
Special thanks goes to Kerry Combs who had positioned herself at the Shenandoah Mountain picnic area atop the longest climb of the day. There was no better site then Kerry coming up and tending to our needs as we regrouped mentally for the final slog home.....thanks a million KC!

Friday, September 5, 2008

Univest Grand Prix / Universt Crtierium of Doylestown - Coverage

IF Racing's Development Team, Fitness Together / IF / Carpenter, has been invited to race in the Univest Grand Prix. It is one of the biggest races on the North American Pro Tour Calendar. That's right, I said PRO TOUR. We are one of a handful of Domestic Amateur teams invited to this prestigious cycling event. We will be pitted up against some of the top PRO teams from North America and Europe.

Please take a moment this Saturday to try and catch us on one of the many television and radio broadcasts below.



Saturday, Sept 6 -- Univest Grand Prix
Live Webcast 11am-3pm / TV Coverage 5pm-9pm

Sunday, Sept 7 -- Univest Criterium of Doylestown
Live Webcast 11am to 1pm / Live TV Coverage 11am-1pm



Saturday, Sept 6 -- Univest Grand Prix

Live TV Coverage 11am-3pm

Sunday, Sept 7 -- Univest Criterium of Doylestown

Live TV Coverage 11am-3pm
/ Live Webcast 11am-3pm



Saturday, Sept 6 -- Univest Grand Prix

Live Radio Coverage 10am-3pm



Race Highlights:

Saturday, Sept 20 1pm-2pm

Monday, Sept 22 3pm-4pm

Sunday, October 5 8pm-9pm

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