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#1
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RR: De Bortoli Tour 17-18 July, D Grade.
My first real road racing experience, apart from a handful of crits; picked a tough one. Stage 1 Sat am. 72km from Yarra Glen including 1 major climb (Toolangi via Chum Creek Rd) and 2 laps of the aptly named “Death Valley”. Weather: cold with gusty, biting southerly wind. 50-odd starters Stayed with bunch to the foot of the long climb, including getting suckered into a short stint on the front chasing down an early escape. “Reverse attacked” the leading group of 20-odd in the 1st km of the main climb (~9km @ 4%) as the HR soared well into the red. Climbed tempo from there, passing a few later reverse attackers. Fairly slow descent into a strong headwind which meant pedalling all the way down. Picked up late in the descent by 5 big guys who’d eat me for breakfast in a crit. Rolled turns with them for about 10km to Death Valley (Old Healesville Rd). Grovelled up a horrible berg (1km @ 9+%) to the KOM where they weren’t awarding points for 20th D-grader over the top. Rolled a few more turns with the breakfast-eaters before encountering another horrible berg. Hit by buffeting cross / headwinds over top of said berg, causing further reverse attack. Waved farewell and gritted teeth back into Yarra Glen, to start second shorter lap of Death Valley. Breakfast-eaters still visible about 1km ahead. Chatted briefly to some friendly women riders I passed just out of Yarra Glen, then about 1km later got walloped by “l’homme a marteau” (man with the hammer = frogspeak for hunger flat) together with more horrible cross / headwinds. Horrible carbo gel packs having no obvious impact except for making gloves and jersey very sticky. Crawled another 8km to start of Death Valley being passed by no-one which would have amazed me if I had felt alive enough to be amazed. Homme a marteau obviously travailling overtime. By now would have happily tried any pills, syringes etc being offered by Aussie Olympic team hopefuls stationed on side of road. Wondered if I’d be able to walk up horrible KOM berg, riding all the way seemed clearly out of the question, but spirits lifted by sight of dropped A graders going past not much faster than my 8 kph. Last gel and or serious endorphins must have kicked in at this point since final horrible berg and winds didn’t seem as bad as feared and no-one else in D-grade passed. Still, lost 10 mins to breakfast-eaters in last 22km lap giving them time for lunch and the leaders a start on dinner before my arrival at Yarra Glen. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Stage 2 Sat pm. 18km ITT Steels Creek, gently rolling road, f(*&ing gusty wind Start. Hurt, hurt, hurt, hurt, hurt, ... (you get the general idea) . Finish. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Stage 3 Sun am. 84km from Healesville including 2 loops over Pantons Gap (~ 8km @ 5%) – or so I thought. Horrified to learn from clubmate on arrival that course involved 3 loops over the climb. Total of 2000m climbing when other lumps added in. Clearly plenty of others had realised this already because they hadn’t turned up. About 35 starters. Ecstatic to hear organisers announce at start line that D grade course reduced to 56km / 2 loops. Funny how getting back what you thought you always had can make you wildly happy. Must remember to try this with the kids sometime. Stayed with bunch to the foot of the 1st long climb, cleverly avoided getting suckered into any stints on the front chasing down escapes. “Reverse attacked” the leading group of 20-odd in the 1st km of the main climb (sound familiar? – sure felt it). Plugged away at the climb which ends with ~3km of dirt road. Minor chaos near top where a B grader climbing on the wrong side of the road had earlier headbutted a (hopefully) slowly descending car. Climb finishes with one of those beautiful, gently easing gradients where for a km or so you get to put it in the big ring and feel like a superstar (if there’s no one good around to pass you). Bombed – well, maybe grenaded, at least pop-gunned – the descent towards Healesville with clubmate and worked turns with him all the way round to foot of main climb again. “I’m stuffed” he duly announced – “No, I’m the one who’s stuffed, I thought you were going well” – “I thought you were, I was just hanging on” etc etc etc. Saved breath, gritted teeth and suffered up second climb – three laps would have been impossible, let alone A grade’s four. Actually passed someone!!!! More superstar stuff over the top and another fast descent with “stuffed” clubmate until a Healesville ho named Cheryl (according to her rego plate) pulled out from driveway as we approached 100m away at 60+ kph. Fortunately laws of physics still on our side and we followed Cheryl as she meandered slowly down the road (looking for customers?). Rolled over finish line with clubmate and felt hugely satisfied to have survived a pretty intense introduction to open stage racing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vital statistics: finished midway in the field (including the DNSs and DNFs) 30-something mins down on winner. Average HR for every stage ~170. Ouch! -- Unregistered |
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#2
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RR: De Bortoli Tour 17-18 July, D Grade.
Well done. I was hoping to be in the race, but then I had my accident......... What was the organisation of the race like. My understanding is that the event has grown to become the biggest non UCI event in Victoria which is pretty good. Would love to some day wear a yellow jersey on a race like that. -- jazmo |
#3
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RR: De Bortoli Tour 17-18 July, D Grade.
Unregistered Wrote: My first real road racing experience, apart from a handful of crits; picked a tough one.[snip] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vital statistics: finished midway in the field (including the DNSs and DNFs) 30-something mins down on winner. Average HR for every stage ~170. Ouch! Hey, well done! I'd like to have a go at one of those kinds of races one day. Hmmm... Ritch -- ritcho |
#4
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RR: De Bortoli Tour 17-18 July, D Grade.
"ritcho" wrote
Hey, well done! I'd like to have a go at one of those kinds of races one day. Hmmm... Do you like hills? The climb to Toolangi is nice but it's a different matter at race pace! Old Healesville Road (Death Valley?) was the location of stage one's KOM and according to my Polar, it's 1.4k at 6.5%. I don't know if that's big or anything but by that stage of the ride I wasn't going up there in a hurry, that's for sure! hippy |
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