Dave Acheson
The Enumclaw Stage Race is my favorite race of the
season. It has great courses, is well run, and usually has strong
fields. Because it is a stage race that is scored on total elapsed time
rather than on points like an omnium, my time trialling ability
usually keeps me in the thick of things. Entering the weekend, I was
sure my time trial form was pretty good but was unsure how the criterium
and road race would go for me. The weekend began with all sorts of
good omens. When the time trial start times were posted, I discovered I
was to be the final rider off in my category. And as I rolled into
town late Friday night, a shooting star fell shot across the sky, surely
a sign of good fortune. Saturday morning dawned clear, sunny, and with
little wind and I rolled to the start line quietly confident. The time
trial went very well for me and I posted a personal best for myself on
this course. The time was good enough for second place and I only
missed my first win by two seconds! Having placed myself near the top
of the standings, now the key was not to lose time in the criterium or
road race.
After
getting a call-up and getting to start on the front row due to my time
trial result, the criterium started well. As the race progressed, I
thought to myself, this is one of the most civilized criteriums I’ve
ever ridden. The pace was very steady with little in the way of surges
due to attacks, etc. I avoided being caught up in or behind any of the
handful of crashes and finished safely in the bunch with the same time
as everyone else. The overall leader for the weekend picked up a
3-second bonus in a sprint, but other than that no major time lost in
the criterium was just what the plan had been. Day one of the stage
race could hardly have been better for me.
Sunday’s
road race was going to prove to be a different type of experience. It
was dry when we woke up, but by the start of the race, a steady rain had
started that would be with us the rest of the day. I still felt good
and optimistic as I had focused a little more on my nutrition this year
and was five pounds lighter than last season at this race. Surely that
was going to help me on the climbs. The race rolled out uneventfully
towards its first trip up the Mud Mountain Road climb about 7 miles into
the race. I settled in near the front of the group and as we headed up
the climb, felt comfortable (as comfortable as you can be climbing a
steep hill in a race!). The pack was steadily shedding riders and as we
reached the steepest pitch about ¾ of the way up, only about half of us
remained. Suddenly, I went from being comfortable to being powerless.
I popped off the back of the group like a sinking stone. It was an odd
sensation, there wasn’t any period of struggling. One moment all was
fine, the next moment I had blown and was crawling up the hill. After
topping out, I tried to gather myself and hook up with other riders for
the chase back on. I had very little power though and found myself
having to skip pulls to even stay in contact with the chasers.
As
we hurtled down the descent, I smacked a pothole and my “food” bottle
of Perpetuem bounced out of its cage and was gone. I now had only a
single gel in my pocket to get me through the race. I continued to
struggle and eventually lost contact with the chase group. As a final
insult, I managed to drop my remaining gel while trying to open it. All
in all, a day to forget and one that thoroughly scuttled my ambitions
for a high finish for the weekend.
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