Spring Series Round 1 - River Road
And bike racing is back on the menu.
Team Escape Velocity puts on a
series of races every spring, the aptly named Spring Series. The first
race is a nearly flat 4 corner circuit race in Langley. Specifically, this. Last year's
race was marked by sleet and snow towards the end of it. This year, the
forecast called for rain 'in the afternoon'. I don't want to give too much
away here, but the forecast lied.
Let's start out with a quick
overview of a lap of the course: Go straight with a tailwind. Turn right onto
a slightly narrower road. Enjoy a crosswind from the right for a minute or so,
then turn right again onto a yet narrower road. This is also dead straight,
but undulates slightly with a dip down most of the way through it. Turn right
yet again onto the narrowest road in the race, which is also entertainingly
the worst pavement in the race. Be bumped and jostled and lose 10m or so of
elevation and turn right one final time back onto the front stretch.
I should have remembered this from last year, but the C race at least plays
out in such a way that positioning is very important. With the yellow line
rule in effect, there consistently is only one good place to move up
significantly per lap, coming out of turn 4, onto the front stretch. Generally
out of the other three corners, there is the usual acceleration out of the
corner, then it slows right down again. As soon as that happens, the pack
bunches up and there is no room to pass. The front stretch is a bit wider and
takes closer to a kilometer before this happens, so moving up pretty much
needs to happen here.
As for how much? Based on the numbers I got
from the race, there were consistent accelerations nearly up to 50km/h out of
the corners. This slowed down to below 35km/h on much of the rest of the
course. What this actually meant was that the accordion effect was somewhat
mitigated. Even at the back where you slowed down for the corners, you did not
need to hit it too hard to stay on as the field slowed down significantly on a
regular basis.
As for my race? The plan was to tailgun for much
of it, getting a decent interval workout at the back. If I could position
myself well, then try attacking on the last lap or two. I couldn't position
myself and a couple of crashes in the dying moments of the race did not
inspire me to take further risks on the wet roads. Finished in the middle of
the pack which did break up somewhat in the final metres.
All in
all? I'm somewhat happy with it. It's pretty much the flattest road race of
the year for me, which is theoretically good for me, but not terribly
exciting. Next week is the Armstrong Road course, which is dominated by a
fairly serious climb every lap.