A new strategy
I'm not the world's fasted bicycle racer. In fact, the opposite to that is
fairly close to the truth. My general goal is to not come dead last and thus
far I have generally succeeded, though tenacity counts for much of that. More
than once avoiding the dreaded DFL has come down to mechanical incidents by
competitors. This is especially true with cyclocross where nationally ranked
riders are in the same category as me.
Generally, a cyclocross
race starts out very fast and then disintegrates into a bunch of individual
time trials for all competitors. As the speeds are generally quite low,
drafting does not play much of a part. In that respects, 'cross racing is much
closer to mountain bike racing than road racing. With all this in mind, my
strategy in most races for the past two seasons has been pretty simple. Go as
hard as I can for as long as I can when the inevitable happens, just keep
going at the limit until the race is over.
The major downside to
this strategy is that it tends to mean that after the first ten minutes of the
race, I am pretty much useless. From then on, I generally just slowly get
passed and drift towards the back. This week's race, I took a different
approach. I would start hard as normal, but make a more concerted effort to
stay within my own abilities and try to avoid blowing up too badly.
It worked, sort of. On the one hand, I placed in pretty much the same place
I always do, around the same group of riders. On the other hand, I actually
felt like I was a part of the race with a couple of attacks and clawing my way
back up to these riders when they attacked. I don't know what to make of it
yet. My splits were also nice and tight. The first lap was my fastest, but
even between it and my slowest was only 30 seconds. Not counting the first
lap, the rest were within 6 seconds. I even managed to finish strong, nearly
closing a 20m gap on a pair of riders in the closing half lap.
All in all, productive. Hopefully with a couple of good workouts this week,
next week in Almonte, I can actually move up a couple of places. On the other
hand, Almonte also has several climbs of doom, which are often my undoing.