Race
Report
Dana
Stryk
Evolution
Cycling p/b Long and Foster
Races
|
Shenandoah
Time Trial and Miller School Road Race
|
Date
|
July
27 and 28
|
Field
|
6
and 15
|
Field
Demographics
|
W1/2
and W35+/45+
|
Weather
|
Sunny,
Rain, Locusts and other Plagues
|
Topography
|
Hilly
|
Title for this novella:
“Into each life some rain must fall.”
Saturday, July 27th, Shenandoah TT, 40K of hills with
a ceramic pig, tractors and VA championship on the line.
The Shenandoah TT, host to the VA State TT Senior
Championships, is one of three road race events promoted by Chris Gould. Each time I race in one of his events, I
think to myself….”I should come back to the Luray area and just ride so I can
enjoy the beautiful scenery.” The
rolling hills and surrounding countryside are beautiful and the hospitality of
the region second to none. For example,
at registration, the Mayor of Shenandoah, VA was on hand to welcome each person
to his town.
I really like this course. Unlike Church Creek, the terrain changes from
climbing to false flat to downhill.
After winding through a neighborhood, you hit the main road with rolling
hills and a wicked false flat that convinces you that your fitness is poor,
your tires are flatting and you are better off spending Saturdays on the couch.
The race report:
I started, I suffered, and then it was over. I knew going into the event, there were three
women that are faster than me and two that I could beat. Amanda (ABRT) passed me early on in true
Amanda fashion – on her road bike looking like she was having fun. I caught my 30 sec person and gained ground
on my 1m30sec person. For the first time
in a time trial, Katy (ABRT) did not pass me. Before you want to know my TT
training plan, you must remember….start times were alphabetical and I started
after her….
I ended up 4th overall and the silver
medalist in the W1/2 VA State TT Championship.
Sunday, July 27th, Miller School Road Race: MABRA and VA State Age-Graded Road Race
Championships, 30+ miles of hills, and an interesting dance by Mr. Katy Giles
aka Scott.
For this race, the 35+ and 45+ women would race
together but be scored separately for the MABRA and VA State RR Championship
with medals and a jersey at stake. Last
year, Sue (ABRT) was off the front to win the 35+ race and a last lap attack by
Katy (ABRT) splintered the field with Chris (Kenda) winning the 45+ race. I ended up 9th overall (thanks to
my now teammate, Wendy, who yelled at me to get on her wheel after Katy
attacked and descended like a mad woman to get us back to the main field), 4th
in the 45+ race and the gold medal for VA 45+.
This year my goal was the MABRA RR Championship
jersey for W45+. I expected the race for
the 35+ jersey would be intense, with Katy (ABRT), Sue (ABRT), Mary (NCVC),
Michele (unattached), Jenette (Jeff’s Bike Shop), Ali (Velocita) and Wendy in
the field. Hopefully I could use that to
my advantage. For my race, I had to
watch Chris (Kenda) and make sure that I knew her location in the pack to make
sure that she did not get into a break without me. In the race I was lucky to have two
teammates, Wendy and Christine.
Hopefully amongst the three of us we could bring home a jersey and some
medals for Evo.
We roll out and start the first climb. A strong rider whose name I do not know, also
in the 35+ race, set the pace for most of the early portion of the lap. A couple of ABRT attacks were unsuccessful
and we turned onto the steep climb on the road prior to the finish line climb. Katy is at the front of the group and
accelerates up the hill as raindrops start to fall. I think…Sufferfest one-minute Revolver
interval #15 effort (the one with the dinosaur chasing)…keep the wheel. As I am about to die, I look behind and
realize that I am the back of the pack…there are 5 of us and more rain drops.
As we look up the road, we could see the
rain. Not a gentle, this is a refreshing
kind of rain but more of a, “look, the animals are lining up two by two should
we be concerned” kind of rain. Upon
cresting the hill, the race changes from fear of attacks to fears of
crashing. When I attempted to slow my
descent, braking met zero resistance.
Not good.
Thank goodness for the finish line hill….we had a
chance to wipe our eyes, reposition glasses and breathe a sigh of relief. Scott, Katy’s husband who was planning to
feed ABRT, switched modes and provided an interpretive dance as we crested the
hill that sadly was, in fact, a THUNDER dance.
Another
scary downhill. Sue bridges up and we
are six in total and I am the oldest in the group….the only 45+. If I can stay away and stay upright, I will
meet my goal. The rain lightens and soon
stops. Thank God.
Then the Thunder God, upon seeing Scott’s dance,
decided to send the storm back over the course with the extra effect of
thunder. The second downpour was heavier
than the first and I had to spill as much speed as I could at the top of every
hill, dropping me from the main break.
Now there are 4 in front. For
most of the remaining lap, I could see the final four but could not bridge the
gap…when I would make progress, a downhill would loom and I would slow down
again.
I rode with the aforementioned unknown 35+ woman
and let her pull me up the first part of the final hill. I sprinted around her and across the line….5th
in the combined field and 1st in the 45+ race. Christine joined me on the podium in third
place. Emily, one of our junior women also
added to the Evo jersey collection, suffering through the same conditions to
emerge the Junior 17-18 Champion.
Lessons Learned:
Check
weather report before a race and pick wheel set accordingly.
Kudos and Shout-outs
Scott Giles: Your
silly dance lightened the race for a second or two…..just next time, make sure
it is a SUN dance!
Chris Gould and
the town of Shenandoah: Thanks for a great
race in an amazing venue.
CA: For another great weekend of racing with the
SWagon….and understanding my need for Starbucks regardless of the time of day.
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