Friday 5 July 2013

National Series Racing

Flipping heck I was supposed to write about all this in more than one blog and some time ago - but anyway here we go.......

So last time I wrote I was about to get stuck into the next of the Women's National Road Race Series with the 2-day Surf and Turf race.
The weather forecast wasn't particularly helpful for the Saturday in Blackpool (Surf!) - but thankfully it was wrong and it was dry, vaguely sunny and only a bit windier than you might expect from being by the seaside. Stage 1 was the worlds shortest time trial - 1 lap of the cycle circuit - the entire field of 60 riders was only split by 15 seconds and I was at 6 seconds down and in 34th place - as I had hoped difficult to lose a lot of time!
Stage 2 was the crit race around the very same 1km circuit that we'd done the time trial on - and to be honest I was a little bit concerned about there being so many riders of the circuit. It's not super wide and the 2 corners are reasonably tight. My fears were not entirely unfounded as the race saw 3 crashes, one very early on where 2 girls from the same team took each other out (they jumped up quick and carried on), in the last 10 laps which involved 2 or 3 people who didn't get up quite so quickly but were ale to finish and then the last one was the lone leader at the time who overcooked into the final bend on what I think might have been the last lap - oops! Anyway, I was worried I wouldn't be able to hang on in there with the sort of riders that are at the national series races, but despite a couple of yo-yo's off the back I managed to grit my teeth and come home with the peleton and a 36th place.
Day 2 (Turf) was a road race on the Nateby/Piling circuit that I raced on earlier in the year as part of the CDNW Women's League - but this time we would be riding an extra lap of the course to give a 53m race. Once again I was aiming at managing to stay with the front group and not get tailed off and with some big efforts and determination by the time we were heading to the finishing straight for the last time I was well ensconced in the group. The sprint finish was inevitable and the group accelerated towards the line......I decided I was going to give it everything I had left and just kept increasing my speed. As the line drew closer I gave myself a bit of a talking too and held my nerve, getting faster and faster. I could see lots of people going backwards and the line was approaching fast, I knew I was nowhere near the front, but also I was nowhere near the back either - as I crossed the line I could see I was definitely in the front half of the group and right in the midst of the sprint. I do not envy the judges trying to sort that lot out! But I ended up 22nd in the road race - pretty happy with that and overall 27th on the GC. Quite a substantial improvement on the last National Series Race up in Perth. I felt as thought I'd accomplished my mission to make sure that I stayed in the race and didn't get tailed off. Next mission is to be a bit more part of the race, get myself closer to the front and not be afraid that the rest of the field is so much better than me.

Start line


I only had 2 weeks to contemplate this resolution as the Curlew Cup was the next event in the series. A big road race up in Northumberland. The race was being run in conjunction with the Beaumont Trophy  which is one of the Premier Calendar events (mens big races), so the whole event was BIG! Really well organised with an incredible number of motorbikes from the police and the National Escort Group out on the course looking after us. The course was "rolling" and very, very windy, each lap was 13.6 miles long and the speed went from 12mph into the strong headwind to 40mph down the tailwind descent - phew!

This being one of the bigger races on the calendar for the women there was a really strong field and once again I was nervous that I just wouldn't be fast enough either on the uphill or the downhill! It was not an easy day out on the bike, there were definitely a couple of moments where I wasn't sure I was going to hang on, slipping a few metres off the bunch on one of the ascents the only thing that made me dig that bit deeper was knowing that Phil Leigh was in the neutral service car behind me and wanting to make sure I was doing the Manchester Wheelers jersey proud for him, being an ex-president, one of Andy's race mates from years ago and the person who sorts out the kit for the club too - it would have been a bit embarrassing to give up without a fight. The race was 4 laps long and had an intermediate sprint each lap - I so nearly got caught out by the first one as the pace rocketed and then the course goes up a short sharp hill. The next 2 laps I tried to make sure I was closer to the front to make it easier to stay in the wheels and it worked. The last lap came around and I was praying that the speed wouldn't be stupidly high up the climbs, a small breakaway had managed to get clear on the last lap and there was riders from all the big teams so there wasn't much chasing going on, so speed was reasonable and I knew I was going to make it to the end without getting dropped. My next thought was how brave could I be on the descent, could I weave my way through the group a bit and try and stay with the acceleration into the finish?
I moved forward a bit and held my nerve to the finish, accelerating as hard as I could through the gaps that started to open up. I came over the line in around 18th place in the peleton, which gave me a finish position of 23rd - nice! What would have been even nicer would have been 3 places further forward and I'd have made it into the prize money too! Note to self - get forward sooner - make life easier for myself!


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