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	<title>Bikes and Code &#187; winning</title>
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		<title>Victory</title>
		<link>http://warrentaylor.ca/2010/06/03/victory/</link>
		<comments>http://warrentaylor.ca/2010/06/03/victory/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jun 2010 21:05:08 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Bikes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[biking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[racing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[winning]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://warrentaylor.ca/?p=276</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Took long enough. Richmond Coastal Challenge, May 27, 2010, C race. Cool and a bit breezy but otherwise a great night for racing. I got there nice and early for the 6:30 start only to find out that the start was, in fact, at 7pm. Ten guys starting, a couple who recognized me as &#8216;Cannondale [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Took long enough.</p>
<p>Richmond Coastal Challenge, May 27, 2010, C race. Cool and a bit breezy but otherwise a great night for racing. I got there nice and early for the 6:30 start only to find out that the start was, in fact, at 7pm. Ten guys starting, a couple who recognized me as &#8216;Cannondale guy&#8217; from two weeks ago and mentioned they&#8217;d be watching me. That&#8217;s cool.</p>
<p>So the race starts, a Devo rider and someone else go off the front almost immediately. A couple of other guys follow, but the two get serious and are off on their own. They take the first prime and are holding a fairly steady gap. The field is not working well together to pull them back, but since they are not really getting further ahead, I&#8217;m content to sit at the back and keep an eye on things. A couple of laps later, the gap actually starts to go out a bit again so I work my way into the rotation and when I hit the front accelerate a touch. Two goals: One, bring the race back together. Two, stretch out the legs of everyone a bit.</p>
<p>I got a bit carried away and twenty seconds later had a tiny gap. I eased up, so did the field behind me. In the interest of punishing this kind of behaviour I stood up and crossed the gap, leaving the pack behind. They accelerated and a lap later, as I was coming off the front of the break, the pack rejoined.</p>
<p>A couple of laps later, another prime was called. The Devo rider took it and when he had a gap, continued riding pretty hard. I bridged up to him and when he pulled off, continued onwards. Unfortunately, I think he was blown this time. I eased up a bit but ultimately it all came back together again a half lap later. Four to go.</p>
<p>The next three laps were slow. Really, really slow. My plan was for the last lap heroics so I was content to rest and recover. This was solidified as I had decided that even if I wasn&#8217;t going to win, a fast last mile would at least make it a bit safer, so I was going to pull the entire time. The two short breaks had gone well and I felt pretty good. 50m before the start/finish line on the bell lap I sprint as hard as I can. Someone yells something to the effect of &#8220;Get on his wheel!&#8221; but no one does. I got a few seconds on the field almost immediately and by about halfway through the lap it was clear to me that this might work.</p>
<p>Glances back on the corners showed that the field wasn&#8217;t really closing in. 300m to go and I peek and see someone coming across the gap. My brain was totally fried so I took another look to confirm a couple of seconds later. Yep, definitely one dude coming quickly but not fast enough to catch me. Damn, I&#8217;m going to win.</p>
<p>Numbers (I need to get a power meter&#8230;) : 53km/h to get the gap, up from a ridiculously slow 33km/h or whatever we were going at the time, a pretty decent jump for me. 1:47 for the last lap, which works out to about 43km/h average. Last lap was something like 40 seconds faster than the penultimate and a personal record on the course for me in any situation. New max heart rate of 196.</p>
<p>Realizations: Winning hurts. Granted, a 2 minute max effort is always going to suck, but that was undoubtedly the sharpest pain I&#8217;ve ever felt on a bike. I was seriously concerned shortly after the line that I might not be able to stay on the bike. As it was, I did a &#8216;lift one fist 6 inches above the handle bar&#8217; victory salute, then was too scared to take the hands off again for a solid two minutes.</p>
<p>It was awesome. Taking a week off due to work concerns, but with a mountain bike race this weekend and one or two crits next week, I&#8217;m pretty excited.</p>
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