Jester’s Hangover Hare Scramble 12/30/13 – And A WIN!

It was a good day for Lincoln Charities. I showed up at this race not expecting much, as it was the first race back after a couple of months down time from a broken wrist (from a crash at this very facility back in October). It was cold out, but conditions were surprisingly good considering the rain that had moved through the area in the days leading up to the race. The small MX track, which had been a greasy mud pit just a day before, was in great shape thanks to some 4-wheelers who had spent the afternoon turning laps in order to speed the drying out process.

Anyway, long story short…there were maybe 10-12 racers on the 40+ class. I got a decent start and was third into the woods. Unfortunately I was under the impression that I had left with the wrong class so spent the first minute or so just kind of riding along while trying to decide whether to go back to the line. I figured though since this is just a ‘for fun’ race I’d continue on and see how it went (good thing, too because it turned out I did start with the right class after all).

So, into the woods with two in front of me…cleared on after a couple of minutes. That left Tim Loen directly in front of me and putting up one hell of a fight. I was right on him but he was picking good lines, closing the door whenever I spotted and tried to take advantage of an opening, and generally riding really well. My opportunity came about ten minutes in when he went down on a slick root. I passed him for the lead and never looked back. An hour and a half later, I got the win with Loen taking 2nd a couple of minutes behind me. It was a good day 🙂

Here’s some video of the first ten minutes or so:

 

-b

 

VCHSS Blue Ridge II, 8/12/2012

This was the first race back after the mid-summer break. To say things had not quite gone my way during the off-time would be the understatement of the century. My mood this day was dark, my focus was elsewhere, I hadn’t slept much in the weeks leading up to this race, and was, as a result, in horrible physiological condition. But I was still leading the championship points and therefore had to show up to defend and try to at least maintain my lead, as Luke Brown (28S) was running strong and was hot on my heels. So, my mindset this day was screw it, I was either going to win this race or get carted out of here in an ambulance. That’s no exaggeration and, in retrospect, might be yet another understatement.

This was a big field; I don’t know how many riders were on the 45+ line that morning, but I’d say north of 30. Brian Dean was lined up immediately to my right, Luke Brown was all the way to my left at the opposite side of the line.

The start was a really cool arrangement. Dead engine, front tire in a small rut that ran the full length along the base of a tall, steep wooded hill. There was no run up to this hill, so as soon as you start moving, you’re immediately in a wooded hill climb. At my end of the line, there were only two possible lines the first several riders could pick, and only one of them was worth a damn. I looked over to my right and saw Dean scoping the same line. I sad ‘you going for that one?” he says ‘yup’, so I knew I had to go the instant that flag so much as twitched.

My starts hadn’t been very good so far this season. My reaction time was good, but there had been a problem with getting the bike fired quickly that I hadn’t been able to address until just a week or so prior to this race. Everything seemed to be ok now, but this would be the first start under race conditions.

So…our line is up. Front tire in the rut, right leg poised over the kickstarter, heart pounding, muscles tensed…the ‘TEN SECONDS” call is made…. It’s all I can do to not jump on that starter. A few more seconds and the flag goes up, the bike fires -immediately-, I dump the clutch, peg the throttle and am fucking g-o-n-e, baby. The entire field was in the dust behind me….it was a thing of beauty. As I crested that hill and hooked the left onto the main trail, I glanced over and saw all those guys who had picked the far left line getting tangled and jammed up with each other. I had no idea where the guys who started on my side were other than behind me, and that’s all that mattered.

I got the holeshot, got onto the main loop out front, and that’s where I stayed, flat-out for the next hour forty-five. All that other crap that had been weighing me down? Gone. It was just me, the bike, and the trail. The KTM was flawless that morning. The suspension soaked up everything I hit, settled perfectly into every turn, every rut, every berm, the engine tune was 100% spot-on, the tires hooked up like…I dunno, you get the idea. It was just layers-deep perfect. Everything just worked.

I don’t have much recollection of that race beyond what I just described….until, of course, what transpired in the closing few minutes.

We were getting towards the end of the final lap. I was pretty much home-free at this point; the second place racer was 45 seconds behind me, all I had to do was not screw up and the win was mine. There was no traffic to contend with, so….smooth sailing….right?

Yeah…..

Next thing I know, I’m on my ass. I couldn’t even begin to tell you what the hell happened, but there I was on the ground with the bike laying on its side a good fifteen feet that->>>way. I ran to the bike, picked it up and got it fired, but was so disoriented that I couldn’t find the trail. It  had to be right next to me – it had to – but I simply could not find it. I rode around the woods in the direction I was certain I’d come from, but ultimately jumped back on at a point down the hill and well behind where I’d come off. I rode that last mile or two to the finish hoping I’d salvaged the win, but David Coulter got by and took the win 18 seconds ahead of me.

In retrospect, the reason for the crash and subsequent disorientation was simple; I bonked. Ran completely out of energy, the end result of how I had been treating myself in the days and weeks leading up to this race.  It sucked hard, but it was a lesson hopefully learned.

We’ll get ’em next time….

Round 1, South Hill, Virginia 3/25/12: WIN!

Mud? What mud?

It was a nasty, wet day in South Hill, Va. Although there was no rain this morning, it had been raining pretty steadily in the days leading up to today, and predictably, the place was a muddy mess. Fortunately. I’d prepped for these specific conditions so at least I wouldn’t be in a tremendous disadvantage going in.

The start was an approx 100 yard downhill run with a wicked pinch at the end followed immediately bu a sharp 90-degree right-hander, another 60 or so yards up a hill and then through a short 180 into the woods.

As I’m preparing for the start, another rider in my class comes up to me, and after a minute or so of typical pre-race small talk says “oh, if you’re in front of me and I yell, move over, ok? I don’t play this “get a wheel up on him stuff”.  Alright…I wasn’t particularly interested in arguing with anyone at the line so simply said ‘yeah, OK’. What I should have said, and what I was actually thinking, was “you want the position, you can earn it and take it, motherfucker”.

As an aside, this (the VCHSS) is a friendly series. We’re almost all amateurs, and most of us have families to go home to after the race and jobs to go back to on Monday. The level of camaraderie is high. However, I share to a certain degree the sentiments of Bob Hannah, who said something to the effect of “I’m not here to make friends. I want to beat these guys into tomorrow, and if you’re friends, it just makes it harder to do what you need to do to win.”

Anyway, 20 riders on the line. The flag went up and it was on. Oh wait, my bike wont start. One kick….two kicks…..three kicks. Finally, mercifully the bike fires and I’m off and into the woods in about 19th.

The woods? A freakin’ mess. Ugly. Even if this were a dry day, these trails are beat to hell and back. I know, because I helped cut some of them a few years ago and they have seen their share of races since.

Almost immediately, guys were dropping. The slick wet clay in these early sections had guys sliding and spinning all over the place. Remember when I said I’d prepped? I was hooking up and passing people at a ridiculous rate. By the time we came out of the first woods section – maybe a mile or so after the start – I was in tenth (according to a friend who was counting S-class bikes at that particular section of track) and moving up.

After a short run on some grass and then the motocross track, we dropped back into the woods. The nastiness back here is almost indescribable. Slick, soupy in spots, rutted, rooty, and bikes were getting collected all over the place. Picking the right lines through these areas, particularly when someone else was already stuck, was crucial.

The first real trouble came in a section where the marked trail seemed to simply vanish beyond a pile of crashed and stuck bikes. Myself and another couple of guys found a way around and continued on. Shortly thereafter, on a slick section that ran along a creek, I somehow managed to slide directly front-wheel-first into a tree and went down. I was fine but the gas cap somehow popped off my bike and spilled a shitload of fuel on the ground and all over me before I was able to get the bike picked back up and the cap back on. Got the bike re-fired and set off after those that had gotten by, and said a little prayer that there was still enough fuel left in the tank to get me to the finish.

The next bit of trouble came shortly after this. There was a short, soupy mud bog followed by a short but very steep and heavily rooted uphill. I made it through the mud OK but lost traction on the roots about halfway up this hill, had to bail off the bike and push it the rest of the way. This was a h-u-g-e waste of energy, so I hoped to be able to find a better line the next time around (note: I didn’t).

I had no idea where I was running at this point and it didn’t really matter, just had to keep on pushing. But, much to my surprise, I came through scoring on that first lap 3rd in class (!)

The second lap was more of the same, only this time when I got stuck on that same heavily rooted uphill (it would get me all three laps), stuck right next to me was 48s, Larry Butler. He got up and going before me, and at that point I figured any shot at moving up just evaporated. Butler is fast. However, I don’t know how or where I passed him back but I did; my assumption is he got stuck in one of the bottomless mud pits somewhere along the way with everyone else. Coming through scoring at the end of the second lap, I was in the lead.

Lap three, getting beat to hell and back but pushing on. Came into a turn a bit too hot and ended up in an airbox-high rut that I’d been avoiding up until now. Problem was there was another bike stuck in this rut right in front of me. It took what seemed like forever to get out and get going again (realistically about a minute and a half), but not one single bike came by us the whole time. Didn’t know if that was good or bad or how much longer my luck would hold, but I rode from that point on as though I were on fire. Through scoring the final time….still 1st. Checkered flag. A win??? I’ll be damned…. a WIN! By two minutes and change. Unbelievable.

Not a bad way to start a season 🙂

March 2012 Update

Been a while since my last post. Haven’t been feeling very, I dunno, literary  lately I guess. That said, lots going on these days. Race season is one day away and I’m sitting here just counting the minutes.

Ran a couple of races in the off-season. First up was the Hangover Harescramble @ Virginia Motorsports Park back on New Years day. FUN race, despite the complete and total clusterfuck that was the start. No starting rows were marked out which meant a large portion of the field left off with the wrong class. But, the mood was light on this day and everyone, including yours truly, just took it in stride. Of course, when the gate dropped, everyone’s gate dropped except mine. So there I sat, watching the last of the field disappear in a cloud of dust while trying to back my bike up enough to get around the stuck gate when it finally dropped. I was on the gas from that point forward and made up a ton of positions by the time it was all said and done. I don’t remember my finishing position….it wasn’t spectacular, but it was a good time all the same.

Next up was the Burnt Gin race down in Sumter. This was a national, and I blame nobody but myself for the disaster that of a race it turned out to be. Got a great start and hung with my class (those local boys are f-a-s-t), but about 15 miles in started getting lapped by the pros. You know, Mullins, Bakken, Raines, etc…, and it got to the point that I had to spend so much concentration on what was coming up behind me (do YOU want to be the guy who holds up Charlie Mullins? me neither…) that it totally blew my ability to focus on what was in front of me. After several stupid and otherwise totally avoidable crashes, I decided the rest of the afternoon might be better spent watching these guys and maybe learning a thing or two rather than continuing to hammer the living shit out of my knee for nothing but the privilege of being a rolling roadblock.

I did come home with a really cool orange t-shirt though.

Otherwise, not much seat time since Pipsico but I’ve been spending a lot of time in the gym, as in every single day. Originally my goal was to lose weight but I screwed up nutritionally and ended feeling weak and tired much of the time, losing a bit of muscle along with the fat I was trying to target. So, after getting the nutrition thing sorted out, I started wandering from the elliptical machines over to the weight area from time to time and messing around a bit, which evolved into some minor weight training being incorporated into my workout, which has since evolved into a full-on weight training program along with my already fairly intense cardio program. My weight as of this morning is @ 167 (down from 202 in August) and I feel great. The real test came last weekend though when I took the bike out for the first time in about a month. I don’t know if I was any faster but the level of control I had over the bike was massively improved, as was my stamina. Took a half day off from work and went out again yesterday to make sure all the kinks were worked out for Sunday’s VCHSS season opener, and it was all good.

On the down side, the knee has been starting to hurt again. I don’t know if the CTI unloader brace is doing what I’d hoped it would, and may have to go back the the less riding-appropriate but more effective Ossur unloader for the first couple of races and see how that works out. In any event, I will be approaching this season as though it’s my last and giving it everything I’ve got for as long as I’m able.

So, it’s on to South Hill! Race report to follow…

-Bob

Race Report: VCHSS Pipsico 100 11-13-2011

bob_pipsico_counting_bikes

Hmm…that’s a lot of bikes.

What a day.

There were 29 riders lined up in the 45C+ class today, probably the biggest turnout in this class all year. The entire C-class field was 201 riders strong.

The start was short and intense – an abbreviated run off the line to the first turn – a 180-degree hairpin followed by a relatively short s-turn before funneling down to the entrance to the woods.

My strategy for the starts is simple, and borne more out of a sense of self-preservation than any attempt to score well: try to stay out of trouble and not wreck or get caught up in someone elses wreck. That means, for me, starting on one extreme end of the line or the other and getting going quickly. If you can make it to and through the first bottleneck – in this case, the first 180 – cleanly and ahead of the pack, you’re usually home-free.

Getting into the woods first is another matter entirely, and something I need to work on.

The flag went up and the KTM started on the first kick. Dumped the clutch, pinned the throttle and it was on. Got off the line near the front of the pack but lost a bunch of positions at the 180 and ended up getting into the woods in around 10th or 11th.

pipsico_start_crash

F-Class start. Yikes!

The first lap was a bit rough, but my first laps are always rough… It was a short one, under two miles and through scoring before heading out for the first full-length (7-mile) lap.

I came through scoring in 9th place and, once through the scoring tent, got on the throttle hard. Although there was a lot of new trail cut for this race, the route in and out of the scoring area has apparently remained unchanged for years, which means ruts, roots, and all other sorts of general nastiness. I mention this because about a hundred yards or so out, I lost it in some of this nastiness and crashed hard. Highsided right into a tree. Did a quick “am I dead/paralyzed” inventory to make sure fingers, toes and other important stuff still worked, picked up the bike and got back to it. Several guys had gotten past for position, so I had some serious work to do.

The forks had gotten tweaked in the wreck (bars pointing one way, wheel pointing another) so hopefully this wouldn’t pose a problem.

The first thing I noticed is that this wreck didn’t slow me down at all. In fact if anything, it knocked some focus into me. I started picking off positions almost immediately to get myself back into the game.

pipsico_hunting_down_82s

On the hunt – Chasing down Dillard for 5th place

Came through scoring at the end of lap 2 still in 9th place, but had now caught the tail end of what I call the “S Train” – a group of riders in my class who were all running nearly identical lap times and were well within striking distance of each other. I was right there…

Got past 37s (Tony Carthan) for position somewhere on this lap, moving me into 8th by the end of lap 3. I was still in the S Train, but laps were winding down and if there were a move to be made, it would have to come on this lap.

On the 4th lap, I picked up two more spots when both 59s (Andy Vasquez, who I had been following for a while earlier in the race – I could catch him but could not get past him – dude is s-m-o-o-t-h) and 50s (Mark Coolidge) went off course. That put me in 6th and directly behind 82s (Kevin Dillard) who was in 5th. I was right-freakin’-there, but once again found myself behind someone I was a bit faster than but not quite good enough to get around. This guy made zero mistakes that I could capitalize on.

Within the next few minutes, the S Train had reassembled. It was Dillard, me, Vasquez and Carthan wheel-to-wheel, hauling ass and each praying we didn’t screw up and that the other guy would. At the same time I was trying to stay focused, I couldn’t help but think how cool it was to be running competitively with these guys after the kind of year I’ve had.

Then it happened. Coming around a turn, I either missed a shift or stalled (don’t remember, doesn’t matter, sucked just as hard either way). Got passed almost immediately by Vasquez but got fired and moving again just in time to keep 37s from getting by also. I set off after Vasquez hard,  but a slower bike from another class was between us, and the guy wouldn’t give me any room.

It’s generally accepted practice that if someone not in your class is in your way, you can yell – typically something like ‘woo-wooooo’ – and they give you room to pass cleanly. This guy wouldn’t move, and instead sped up to try to stay in front of me and ended up riding over his head and beyond his ability. I think I saw the trouble he was getting himself into before he did, but still not quick enough. Before I could preemptively adjust to the crash I knew he was about to have…he crashed, and I slid into him and came to a stop.

chased_by_37s

37s on my tail

So, here comes Carthan with 24s (Ken Plotz) right behind him. Carthan cuts right and tries to short-cut through the woods to get around us but got hung up himself.. In the mean time, Plotz comes around my left and almost takes the spot from me, but I got clear of the crashed rider at the last possible moment and throttled out of there before he could complete the pass (hats off to Plotz, he could easily have pressed the issue and made it ugly for one or both of us). You can see this last-lap mess unfold here courtesy Tony Carthan’s helmet cam @ about the 2-minute mark.

We were maybe a mile or two from the finish; I knew that barring any mistakes by the riders in front of me, the chances of picking up any more spots were slim. With Plotz on my ass and Carthan close behind him, all I could do was ride hard as possible and protect my line, which is exactly what I did.

Through scoring the final time, took the checkers in 7th! Plotz finished 14 seconds behind me and Carthan 4 seconds behind him.

This was an awesome race, and I couldn’t think of a better way to end the season….except to add a few more races to the schedule – It feels like I’m just getting warmed up 🙂

To top it all off, this race also doubled as a fundraiser for Lincoln Charities. We were able to raise over $1000 via pledges on my performance today. My heartfelt thanks to all who contributed and made this possible.

The take-away from this race: If I’m to finish any closer to the front of this highly competitive class, I’ll absolutely have to to get better at passing, and get more aggressive on the starts.

And with that, I think this will be the last post in the “The Comeback” category; it’s safe to say after this run that the road to recovery is fairly complete.

Race Report: VCHSS Birch Creek 10-30-2011

VCHSS Birch Creek October 30, 2011

At least it wasn’t muddy…

I spent the week leading up to this race with one eye on the weather forecast and the other on the VCHSS site for whatever information I could glean on the condition of the course. Rain was in the forecast but times and amounts kept shifting. All I cared about was that this wouldn’t be a mud race.

I hate mud. No, wait, that’s not nearly strong enough; I loathe mud with every fiber of my being.

Don’t get me wrong, I could care less about getting dirty, but riding in the mud is difficult. Not the fun, challenging, ‘climb every mountain and sing a fucking song at the top’ kind of difficult, but the ‘damn, this #^%$@*&!# suuuuuuuuckkksss, I’d rather be forced to sponge-bathe Hillary Clinton, and now I’m soaked from head to toe and will have to spend the next six hours washing this crap off the bike, and for what??” kind of difficult.

The suspense ended Saturday though when the reports were that the rain was coming down heavy and there was standing water throughout the Birch Creek facility.

So, this was going to be a mud race. Wonderful.

We arrived at Birch Creek around 8:30am Sunday morning and my first impression was that the place looked to be in great shape – a little damp in spots but nothing too crazy. Then we saw the motocross track – the mud had to be at least a foot deep, without exaggeration.  We actually watched some kid leave the starting line for a last-minute trip to the porta-john, and his bike just stayed there. Upright. By itself. Without using the kickstand.

Aaaanyway, the course layout was actually pretty cool – part motocross track, part supercross track, part grass track and part woods, with a total combined length of right around five miles. Most of the mud was reserved for the motocross and supercross tracks; the grass sections were relatively dry, and the woods would turn out to be not all that wet at all and very rideable.

We watched the start and the first couple of laps of the mini race to get an idea of where the lines would develop before heading back to the truck to get geared up for my race.

Got to the line a few minutes early. I wanted to get an idea how the bike would react and whether I’d have any traction in this slop by running up and down the start area a few times, but there was no way to do so without kicking up roost and covering everyone else with mud, so I had to forget about it and just hope for the best.

There were 18 bikes (including me) in the 45+ class today. As the rows of bikes in the classes in front of us took off, big ol’ globs of mud were getting roosted back all over us. I thought it was going to be ugly when the guy directly in front of me took off, but he (mercifully) feathered his clutch and kept the revs down.

I, on the other hand, gave no such consideration to those behind me. When the flag went up for our class, I was on the throttle hard. Got a good jump off the line but got passed by a whole lot of bikes by the time we got to the first turn. I’d never really ridden or practiced on anything like this and my inexperience was now paying off for the other guys. Coming down the first big hill on that motocross track with the front wheel plowing through the mud while desperately searching for a rideable line and the bike dancing all over the place underneath me was…well, it was white knuckle time. Big time. I did manage to keep up with the tail end of my class though, and when things sorted out, was somewhere around 15th

Bob racing VCHSS Birch Creek 2011

By the time we came around to the supercross track, I was wondering just what in the hell I had gotten myself into. BUT, no sooner had I asked myself that question than I started to make some passes for position. As much as I’d like to say the passes were a result of my superior skill and finely-honed reflexes, the truth is simply that these guys were having just a bit more trouble than I was. No complaints from me though… Once out of the supercross section (and out of the mud) we hit the first grass section. This was my first taste of traction and I pinned the big 300. Man this bike is fast. Several more passes – I know at least a couple were for position – and then we were finally in the woods.

From this point on, I can’t really tell you the order of things. I know we came in and out of the woods a couple of times with some more grass track in between, then some rock obstacles, then finally back onto the motocross track and through scoring.

First lap I came through 10th, a surprisingly good position considering the freight train that passed me by on the start. At the end of lap 2 I was 9th, having picked up another position in the woods somewhere.

By the third lap, some decent lines were developing on the motocross track, but there was still a lot of the deep mud left and it was starting to take a physical toll. Upper body was starting to ‘rubberize’, but the layout of the course was such that every time the muscles seemed about ready to give out, here came a smooth section that allowed me to regroup enough to get through the next bit of nastiness. However, by the end of this lap I was regrouping less and less and starting to make mistakes.

Lap 4 was not pretty. My strength was almost sapped but I was still keeping up a decent pace. The bike was handling really well but I was starting to drop it occasionally due to my rapidly increasing fatigue. At one point I came across a 5 or 6 bike bottleneck caused by one racer stuck on a hill. I saw a clear line through the woods that would have taken me cleanly around it, but I didn’t have the energy to pop the wheel up and swing it around the 90 degrees necessary to point me in the right direction to take advantage of it. I scouted an alternate line and took it instead, and promptly got stuck behind another rider who had the same idea but then got themselves hung up on something.

Once clear of this bottleneck, and having lost all track of how many laps had gone by, I pressed on with everything I had left thinking this was the last lap. When I came around through scoring, there was my position – 9th – on the board, but where were the checkers?

Oh. Shit.

I was, at this point, more tired than I’ve ever been in any race. Flat-our exhausted; I had absolutely nothing left, having used up the very last of my ‘reserve’. My heart was pounding, the sweat was pouring off of me in sheets, there was mud in my mouth and my goggles, I was barely able to steer the bike through the tape at the scoring tent….and I had to run at least one more lap.

The thought of bailing out briefly crossed my mind, but just as quickly, it was gone. I’ve done that before in the past, and the shame of going home a quitter is not a pleasant thing. I came here to race, and as long as I could still hold the bike up, that’s exactly what I was gonna do.

This last lap was like no other I’d ever run. Ever. In fact, I don’t even remember running most of it. I was in pure 100% survival mode, the body and mind just doing what it knew how to do with no real conscious input from me. The most prominent recollection I do have is of coming around the motocross track that final time, seeing the scoring tent not 50 yards in front of me and wondering/hoping/praying that I’d make it.

Funny thing, not only was that my fastest lap of the day, but I also managed to pick up another position. Took the checkers 8th in class.

Back at the truck, there was a bag of pastries sitting on the dash which I had bought a little earlier in the day from the Horizon Riders (young racers 4-11 years old) bake sale. That half-melted cream cheese-filled cream puff was quite possibly the best thing I’ve ever tasted in my life.

A big, big shout out to my friend Bruce Lyttle, who gave me possibly the best, most timely advice I’ve ever received with regards to racing. Having coached his son through a few years of motocross, he told me to stay loose and let the bike do what it wanted to do in the mud on the MX portion of the course. So I did, and it saved my ass more times in those five laps than I can count. Thanks, dude.

Oh, and the forks? They kicked ass.

Next up: Pipsico 100 on November 13th. Woo-hoo!

Race Report: VCHSS Cross Trails 10-16-2011

Bob at VCHSS Cross Trails race 10-16-2011

It was a beautiful day in Cartersville, VA. I headed out before dawn since it’s a 3-1/2 hour trip. Arrived with plenty of time to spare (for a change).

The layout of this course was interesting. There’s an infield area where the course is marked off with tape. When you enter it coming from the woods, you hit a flat straightaway for maybe a hundred yards or so, then a very muddy 180 hairpin, back up about 75 yards, through the scoring tent, then out through a large piece of storm drain pipe, down a bit and then over some truck tires endurocross-style, back around and then over the pipe, around a large, fast sweeper, through a couple more mud puddles and finally up a big hill and into the woods. (couple of vids here and here)

In other words, plenty of opportunity to be either a complete hero or total dork in front of a pretty large crowd of spectators.

The start was dead engine, front tire over a log with 30-second intervals between classes, so it went quick.

My plan was to hang back and tail the back end of my class for the first lap and then start actually racing come lap 2. I hadn’t competed in 11 months and needed to get my racing legs back under me before mixing it up with other riders.

Starting flag went up and we were gone. I got a great start, somewhere in the top 5 or 6. This 300 is a beast off the line; there was plenty of throttle left if I needed it. BUT, I backed it off because up front was not where I needed or wanted to be at this point of the race. I let several of the faster guys by, but realized that waiting for the rest of the pack – who were in no apparent hurry to get past me – wouldn’t do. I picked the pace back up and got into the woods somewhere mid-pack.

Once in the woods, it got nasty, quick. Almost immediately we were in some super tight, rutted, rooty, rocky and worn-out single track that had obviously seen more than its share of races. The massive bottleneck that followed took probably a couple of miles to clear, but I was able to make a few passes for position as riders in front of me went down or tried shortcuts that didn’t quite pan out.

Once the bottleneck cleared, I was in with a pack of about 8 or 9 riders and settling into a decent pace. However, this is when I began to realize a couple of things – a) my front suspension was still awful, and b) this may have been the wrong race at which to to try and stage a ‘comeback’.

Ooops…..

Anyway, catching and passing this group in front of me wasn’t too difficult, staying in front of them was. The front end of my bike was skating all over the place; no sooner would I get the last of this pack behind me than the front wheel would either deflect off a root or pop out of a rut in the middle of a turn and down I’d go…and right back by me they went. This pattern would repeat itself several times over the first lap and a half.

Lap 2 was more of the same. I was getting beat up pretty bad, triceps and shoulders felt like rubber and I had fallen way off the lead pace. Finally, near the end of the 2nd lap and tired of hitting the ground and fighting – rather than riding – the KTM, I’d had enough. Pulled off to the side of the course, took a few minutes to adjust the forks (slowed the rebound a bit to help it stick better in the corners), take a B-I-G pull from the Camelbak, and then got back to it.

The third lap was better. Decent actually; I’d gotten my second wind, and along with it, a better feel for how to get around this course. My speed was better, I was smoother, but the forks were still killing me. I was getting tired.

About 3/4 of the way through this decent-but-relatively-uneventful lap I came upon a rider who was off their bike at the side of the course and yelling like crazy for some help. Typically, when a down rider calls out for help from another passing rider, it’s because of something major – broken bone, medical emergency, etc… so of course, I stopped. What was this persons emergency? Their bike was stuck on a root and they couldn’t get it off by themself. Yes, I was a little irritated, but I’m nothing if not chivalrous…..

Anyway, back on the bike, I finished off the lap and took the checkers 17th in class (out of 22).

I was a little disappointed in both my finish and overall performance in this race, but as my wife reminded me, I was off the bike completely for nearly 9 months and hadn’t raced in 11, so all in all I really didn’t have much to complain about. She’s right, of course, but the competitor in me just can’t swallow a 17th place finish. Ah well, I’ll have another shot at it in two weeks when we race Birch Creek on October 30th.

The best part of the day? The big, greasy, gooey cheeseburger I allowed myself after the race. Screw the diet….for today, anyway. 🙂

There was a bit of good news to be found though once the lap times were posted. On my last lap I was shown as 9th fastest in class. But, remembering that I stopped and helped that stuck rider, which easily took a minute if not more, and which when factored in means I was running a solid top-5 time for the last lap. Yes sir, I’ll take that.

The forks were in pieces on my workbench within an hour after arriving home and unloading the truck. The problem still continues to be massive stiction from these crap seals (they’re red, triple-lip style, which makes them either All Balls or MSR) someone else installed, so I sprung for a set of the new SKF seals that everyone’s raving about and should have them by the weekend. If these don’t do it, I’m gonna bite the bullet (and break out the checkbook) and send the whole suspension out to Trail Tricks in Ca for a full rebuild and revalve.

-Bob