Spring Series Round 3 - Armstrong Road
Armstrong Road is a short road of about 3km in North
Langley. About half of that is smooth, good pavement, the other half is rough
and bumpy. Over the first 2km or so, it raises 80m in 3 stairstep pitches.
12%, 10% and the last, on the bumpy pavement is something like 8%. This
feature utterly dominates the Armstrong Road Spring Series race.
Not being someone who handles sustained climbs very well, I expected this race
to be over fairly quickly. The last truly hilly races I had done, admittedly a
couple of years ago, the Ottawa Grand Prix in Gatineau Park generally ended up
with me being shot off the back on the first major ascent. I saw no reason why
this race would be any different.
The race starts at the top of
the course. A straight downhill gets the speeds up nice and high. A sharp
right hand bend into a further downhill. This next stretch is great fun as the
road lazily winds down the hill. Bottom of the hill is a hard right, then onto
the flats for a couple of kilometers for a few turns. After River Road, you
take a turn to the right and head up the hill. The first pitch is the steepest
and it tops out with a long false flat. Then it kicks up again. The second
false flat is short and is noted by the road surface going from great to
horrible. One more climb and then the finish line.
I started out
at the front intending to remain in the top ten or so places as long as
possible. Going into a climb at the front means you do get a bit of a chance
to drift back and use a touch less energy. I hit the hill in about 8th place
and to my surprise stayed there. A couple of attacks went off and various
people ramped up the pace to bring them back but nothing doing.
I
could have been done after that first climb. My heart rate was in to the mid
180's for most of it, which is well into the not sustainable level for me. If
the remainder of the climbs were this fast, it was just a matter of time.
A couple of laps later, a couple of guys rode a fairly serious tempo
up the hill. I basically hung on for all I was worth to a chase group and we
all came in contact again on the final uphill before the finish line. I was
sitting in about 10th place, looked behind me and saw nobody. Great, I was in
a break on a climber's course. This was going to end well.
Due, I
think, to some poor rotations and some serious effort on the part of the
remainder of the race, the pack made contact again about 5km later at the base
of the climb again. I made it to the top in the main pack again, but at this
point, 4/7 climbs through the race, I could tell that I was getting into
trouble.
I was shelled on the second pitch of lap 5. The lights
went out and I lost 50m in probably a minute. What remained of the pack slowed
over on the bumpy roads, and I closed most of the gap, but I never actually
got back on. I very, very seriously debated climbing off the bike there, but
decided I'd at least ride to the corner where I parked, which was about 800m
past the finish line and flat/downhill.
"Well, I only have to go
up that hill two more times, there are some other dropped guys ahead of me to
maybe ride with and I can totally bomb down this descent with guys flagging me
through corners. Yeah. I'm going to finish this race."
So I did.
Rode hard on the flats, survived up the hill and bombed the descent. It was
awesome.
Placed probably around 20th, based on the size of the
peloton that went up the road. 40 starters so that's pretty good. Considering
I spent some time in a break and was riding at the front until said lights
went out, I'm pretty happy with the whole thing.