Thursday, October 15, 2009

Chris Cross Cyclocross

The Chris Cross Cyclocross race was this past weekend. It was awesome, but I made a bonehead mistake. On the last lap, I was sitting 8th or 9th and decided sit up a bit and let the group I was racing with pull ahead. My plan was to give them a long enough leash to keep them within closing distance. The finishing stretch was a long brick section and I was pretty sure I could out sprint the group I was with. Problem was that I should have never eased up, because I started to get a little tired and had a bad dismount/remount at one of the barrier sections. So, the gap got a little bigger than I wanted. I ended up sprinting past one of the guys and got close to the other 3, but the finish was about 100 yards too short and they got to the line before I could bridge up to them. I ended up in 12th out of 27 starters. I talked to Chris after the race and he said it is not a road race, so you have to keep the pressure on as long as you can and recover when you can. Taking 2 years off from racing has really hurt my racing brain, but I think if I can get my cyclocross racing skills down and learn to suffer a little better, I can finish top 10 every time. I am getting close, but still haven't cracked a top 10 finish. Rich Anderson and Chris Locke did a great job with the course design and it flowed well. Heck, the only places I had to dismount were where the two barrier sections were. I heard a couple of guys grumble about the course being rough, but come on guys it is cyclocross, not road racing. The course was sweet!

I also wanted to mention that I heard someone complain about not getting a payout for winning their class. I have a huge issue with this and I probably won’t make any friends with the comments I am about to make, so I truly apologize if I offend anybody. To start with, people know there is no payout before they signed up. The flyer with all the detail is almost always available a month in advance. If you want to win some money, then quit cherry picking the non-paying categories and race the Men's Open class. In my opinion, if you are such a talented racer that your talents garner a cash payout, then race against your peers. The Men’s Open class is just that; open to CAT1, CAT2, CAT3 and CAT4 racers. These guys like to act like they are pros who deserve to get paid to race. If you are that good, then race with the big boys, you win money in those races. It is not like your racing skills bring in the crowds. I doubt anybody other than friends and family are coming to the events to see you, specifically, race. No offense to anybody and I know it brings in more money to the promoter having more race categories, but I think the Master's Categories are a sandbagger’s paradise. If you are a CAT3, you are a CAT3, no matter what your age is. So, the next time you sign up for a race, look at the flyer and if you want to win some money, then race the class that has the payout. It does not cost anymore. For those of us never will be’s, we are happy just to get the opportunity to race and expect nothing in return. It’s tough work promoting any race and promoters need positive feedback, not complaints, to make their events the best they can be.
On a side note, the Lynskey was awesome! That thing handles like a dream and I was able to rail through the corners. It was stable, yet stiff when I was out of the saddle and pretty darn comfortable off road. I give it 2 enthusiastic thumbs up! Thanks to Mark, Jack and Don over at Lynskey for taking the time to make sure that I got the perfect frame. It was well worth the wait.

No comments:

Post a Comment