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      Born to spin
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  <p id="description">                        Cycling adventures
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     <h2 class="date-header">Tuesday, 13 February 2007</h2>
      
   <div class="post"><a name=43></a>
    <h3 class="post-title">Only 180 days till cross season! </h3>
    <div class="post-body">
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<P>Our intrepid local cyclocross reporter asked me to post 
this here, since he doens't have a blog and, at his advanced age, is unlikely to 
get one.</P>
<P>BC</P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: center" 
align=center><SPAN 
style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt; FONT-FAMILY: Verdana; mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt">The Magic of Cross<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: center" 
align=center><B><SPAN 
style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Verdana; mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt">By 
Buck Walters<o:p></O:P></SPAN></B></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: center" 
align=center><SPAN style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </SPAN>Every 
December, the Portland, Maine Symphony Orchestra gives a series of concerts 
called "The Magic of Christmas." The seaport city is decked in holiday lights, 
the air is crisp, and Portland's Merrill Auditorium is an inspiring venue, with 
it's huge columns, and classic Greek architecture. The music is powerful, mostly 
traditional Christmas carols performed in high symphonic fashion, with vocals, 
guided by the steady hypnotic wave of the conductor's baton. The whole 
experience makes you feel warm and happy inside, like all is right with the 
world. In other words, it's like a cyclocross race.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">About 175 mile due south, the 2006 California Giant 
Berry Farm Cyclocross Nationals are taking place in Providence, Rhode 
Island.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>It's the elite men's race 
on Saturday afternoon, a sunny and an unseasonably warm day. Spectators pack the 
area around the double barriers behind the beer tent, five or six deep on both 
sides of the track. The crowd cheers enthusiastically as eventual winner Ryan 
Trebon smoothly dismounts, crosses the barriers with his oh-so-long legs, then 
effortlessly re-mounts and is gone.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; 
</SPAN>Maybe 25 seconds later, the chase group appears, with almost all the big 
dogs: Wells, Johnson, Powers, Wicks and Page.<SPAN style="mso-tab-count: 1"> 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">The approach is slightly downhill and fast, and the 
chasers are tightly bunched as they swing their legs over their bikes and 
dismount at what looks like breakneck speed.<SPAN 
style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>I'm reminded of the adorable observation 
made by four year old Madeleine "Maddy" Labance at a race earlier in the year as 
she watched the riders crossing a set of double barriers.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Mommy, they look like ballerinas," she exclaimed 
to mom Heather, a Cat 1 roadie with Team Advil-Chapstick, dabbling in cross for 
the first time in 2006. <o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">But no choreographer could have designed the finely 
tuned footwork of these five elite racers as they shift their hips, legs, 
shoulders, bikes and centers-of-gravity in perfect synchrony and zoom over the 
barriers. With the main chase group gone, the crowd remains tightly pressed 
against the red poly tape, many craning their necks and looking intently 
up-track to the point where the course appears from behind the beer tent. 
<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Here he comes," somebody says, as the bright red 
Fiordifrutta colors of Matt White hurtle into view. Approaching the barriers, 
White doesn't swing his leg over the top tube, like the others who had come 
before. Instead, he levels his pedals at the nine and three o'clock position, 
rises from the saddle with his knees slightly bent and <I>bunny-hops</I> the 
barriers, passing over the sixteen inch high wooden planks without ever getting 
off his bike. The crowd responds with a deafening roar. White touches down a 
little off-line, and probably a tad too close to the tape, the result, no doubt, 
of his back wheel grazing the second barrier. The normally pokerfaced rider 
grins as he rides away. Some girls dressed in strange-looking clothes wave 
hand-lettered signs bearing Matt's name as they hurry off to their next vantage 
point.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>Even as White speeds away, 
the noise persists.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">It's been a good year for Matt White, with a couple 
of UCI wins and second place overall in the highly competitive Verge New England 
Cyclocross Series behind Mark McCormick. On the right day, the podium is well 
within reach for the talented 23 year old. But today is not that day. More than 
a minute down, and working alone, it's a gap that White will not cross. He's out 
of contention, but he's smiling, having fun at the nationals. 
<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">As I watch the race, I'm standing next to Mark 
Salazar, 42 year old first year cross racer from Succasunna, New Jersey. Mark, a 
carpenter who speaks fluent Spanish, had a few top ten finishes in the local C 
races, and he came to Providence to try his hand at the nationals. He entered 
the 40-44 masters, but missed his start. The officials were kind enough to let 
him ride in the 35-39, where he finished 129th in a field of 135, riding an old 
FUJI on loan from his club, Skylands Cycling. Too much coffee, not enough food, 
was Mark's analysis. And a hundred twenty eight guys who were faster than you, I 
remind him, with a gentle slap on the back.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Standing in Roger Williams Park with hands in 
pockets as the rest of the field stream by, Mark is all 
smiles.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"I can't believe how much fun this is," he tells 
me.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Mark needs some fun in his life. His two-year-old 
daughter, Lila, is suffering from inoperable brain cancer, and his days have 
been consumed with doctor visits, hospitals, driving, chemo and worry. He barely 
has time to work, let alone train. His wife Liz OK'd Mark's trip to the 
nationals on the grounds that it would help preserve his much needed sanity. 
Talking to Mark on this sunny fifty degree December day, I'd say the plan is 
working.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"This might sound stupid," Mark offers, "but I'd 
kind of like to concentrate on cyclocross."<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">I tell him he's not alone. One of the Skylands 
U19s, a strapping varsity swimmer with size fifteen feet, told his father after 
his first cross race that he wanted to give up swimming and specialize in 
cyclocross. Cross-is like that. It consumes people, and consumes them 
quickly.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Ask just about any cross racer, and she'll tell you 
that cross is the most fun of all the bike racing disciplines. And the fastest 
growing, and probably the most brutal. So what is it that brings 1900+ people to 
the nationals, makes kids want<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>to 
throw away college scholarships, and makes the troubles of the world disappear, 
at least for a few hours? Not to mention makes you drive ten hours each weekend 
from September through December so you can experience maybe an hour and a half 
of muddy suffering.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">On a technical level, cross combines the adventure 
of off-road riding with the higher speeds of road racing, truly the best of both 
worlds. It's also the fairest of all cycling disciplines--the strongest rider is 
almost always most likely to win. Luck is usually not much of a factor. And it's 
low stress, at least mentally. Unlike road racing, where you spend an hour or 
more watching like a hawk for what might be the winning move, jostling for 
position and trying to find the right wheel, the cyclocross pecking order is 
usually established early on. There's not a lot of thinking: just ride hard and 
hope the other guys get tired before you do. <o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">But the magic of cross goes a lot deeper than that. 
To be sure, there's a childlike joy in all of cycling. Almost everybody rode a 
bike as a kid, and who among us doesn't relish the simplicity of life on a 
bike--no social classes, no economic classes, no political parties. It's 
uncomplicated, unlike our lives. It's simple, and it's joyful and it's fun, like 
being a kid again. And cyclocross is the most child-like form of 
cycling.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">On the day after Christmas, it seems obvious as I 
look out the window and see kids riding their bikes around my neighborhood, a 
working class area where every home doesn't have an Xbox 360 and a giant flat 
panel TV. The kids ride bikes. They don't ride in an organized paceline and they 
don't disappear into the woods for an hour.<SPAN 
style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>Riding mostly BMX bikes, they cruise 
along the street for a while, and then head off through someone's backyard, onto 
the sidewalk, and maybe do some figure eights in a parking lot. They're always 
changing up, never doing one thing for very long. Cyclocross, like riding in the 
'hood, is a sport of transitions, and the child in us loves 
it.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">And you should see the kids on my block dismount. 
They ride full blast across the yard. As they approach the porch, they swing 
that leg over the top tube like little tree-farms, hop off and tear up the steps 
without missing a beat.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>It comes 
naturally.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Last spring, Team Bulldog organized the state 
scholastic mountain bike championships.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; 
</SPAN>There was an event for little kids, around five and six years old. The 
finish line was at the top of a short but steep hill, which slowed the riders 
down and made scoring easier.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>The 
hill was too steep for most of the littlest kids to ride. They had to get off 
and push their bikes each lap. The uphill dismounts were a little ragged, but 
the remounts were awesome—five year old girls with pink bikes and streamers 
executing near perfect cyclocorss remounts. About half the kids did it as well 
as the average recreational cross racer. And nobody's teaching them. It comes 
naturally.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Two weeks after the nationals, Skylands Park in 
Augusta, New Jersey was decorated for New Year's Day, 2007, with about 10,000 
feet of yellow caution tape for the first of a series of three January 
"Wintercross" races. About ten or twelve hardy riders were racing through steady 
rain in the combined B/C event.<SPAN style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>The 
course looked interesting, going through an extensive double maze in the hard 
packed gravel parking lot, before heading up some stairs and into the baseball 
stadium that's home to the Sussex County Skyhawks. In the distance, I could see 
riders exiting the stadium and struggling up a steep incline to a grassy hilltop 
where they disappeared from view.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Race organizer Bob Cary stood on a small deck at 
the door of a white trailer adjacent to the finish line. He waved me in. The 
trackside trailer was warm and brightly lit, in contrast to the dim gray January 
afternoon outside. Chief Judge Debbie Schiff sat at a desk in front of a laptop, 
looking out a window onto the course. As riders passed by, she entered their 
numbers into the computer. In the next room were another laptop and a small 
printer on a counter, along with some papers, pens and safety pins. 
<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Pretty fancy set up for 10 riders, isn't it?" Bob 
asked. "Like the nationals."<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">I was standing between Cary and the entrance, so 
unless he wanted to jump over the counter and leave by the other door, he was 
trapped. A good time, I thought, to ask him a few questions, since he rarely 
stands still for more than a few seconds.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Why would you put on a race on New Year's Day," I 
asked. <o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Some of the riders asked for January races. We 
figured if the weather was good, we'd see maybe thirty to forty entries. With 
the rain, it'll be half that, probably. But who cares?" He 
shrugged.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </SPAN>"Who 
cares?" I repeated, knowing that race promoters live and die by rider 
turnout.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </SPAN>"You 
have to understand what we do here," he says in an almost fatherly way. "We 
create this big playground for bicycles, and the kids pay us $20 to play on our 
playground." It's a low budget operation, he tells me, with only one paid 
official and no prize money, the distant and opposite end of the spectrum from 
Rhode Island's nationals. <o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </SPAN>Bob 
squeezes past me and out the sliding door at the end of the trailer, and I 
follow. The leaders of the combined B/C race are approaching.<SPAN 
style="mso-spacerun: yes">&nbsp; </SPAN>They are 16 year old David Devine and 47 
year old Dusan "Dan" Strika, both regulars at the local races. Thoroughly wet 
and mildly muddy, they are smiling and exchanging words which, to us, are 
inaudible as they pass the finish line. <o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">A handful of spectators huddle under a tent and 
cheer as the leaders go by. A tall guy wearing a hat with stuffed faux-viking 
horns writes numbers on a clipboard. He's Bruce Kristiansen, local welder and 
father of two teenaged cross racers, although neither is racing today. Bruce is 
also the recent recipient of the Skylands club's Volunteer of the Year Award. 
You can see why.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </SPAN>Cary 
runs down three steps and about ten feet up the course where the laps cards 
are.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN>"Three to go, right?" He says to nobody in particular. Satisfied that the 
lap cards are correct, he turns and points a finger at me. "One of those guys is 
going to win his first cyclocross race."<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">Cary, a locally successful racer in the 55+ age 
group, is sidelined with a rotator cuff tear—like Page, he says—and hasn't raced 
in four weeks, but he's plainly enjoying himself.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"I don't know how to explain it," he says "but 
cyclocross just makes me happy. I like organizing the races as much as I like 
racing. It's a huge mood elevator"<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Like being a kid again?" I 
ask.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><SPAN 
style="mso-tab-count: 1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</SPAN><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana">"Totally." And that's the magic of 
cyclocross.<o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
<P class=MsoNormal 
style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; TEXT-INDENT: 0.5in; TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
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style="FONT-SIZE: 8pt; FONT-FAMILY: Verdana; mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt">Copyright 
Buck Walters, January 5, 2007</SPAN><SPAN 
style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana"><o:p></O:P></SPAN></P>
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      <em>Bob Cary @ 15:16 PM</em>
        	      
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     <h2 class="date-header">Monday, 21 November 2005</h2>
      
   <div class="post"><a name=41></a>
    <h3 class="post-title">The Bob Beal</h3>
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<P><FONT face=Arial>Hurricane Ivan plowed directly into Grenada, damaging 75% of 
the tiny island's buildings. It punched the underside of Jamaica, then shot the 
gap between western Cuba and the Yucatan Peninsula. From there, Ivan swung north 
and took aim on the US Gulf Coast. Ivan was a Category 5 storm, with winds in 
excess of 170 miles per hour, one of the six biggest hurricanes ever recorded. 
It came ashore just east of Mobile, Alabama on Wednesday, ripping the faces off 
beachfront apartment buildings. By Saturday, Hurricane Ivan's remnants were over 
Rhode Island.</P>
<P align=justify>I was in Charlestown, Rhode Island for the Bob Beal Masters 
only stage race, a two-day, three-event bike race that attracts top masters 
racers from all over the northeast for competition in 5 year age groups. 
Charlestown is a small, rural town on the Rhode Island coast, about halfway 
between Narragansett Bay and the Connecticut line. There's a twisting, turning, 
rolling 14 mile loop for the road races and a smooth, straight, 
almost-but-not-quite flat stretch for the individual time trial. Three miles 
long, it's more pursuit than time trial. Those two races take place on Saturday. 
On Sunday, the criteriums are held at Ninagret Park, right on the ocean, on a 
course specially constructed for criterium racing on the site of an old 
airfield. The course is perfectly flat, about 8/10 of a mile long, with 8 turns, 
and it’s perpetually windy.</P>
<P align=justify>When I arrived at my hotel on Friday night, just outside of 
Mystic, Connecticut, the sky was overcast, but it was warm and humid. A few 
raindrops had splattered on my window on the drive up, but the rain, although 
forecast, so far had held off. Earlier that day, I received an email from 
Heather Labance, the only other member of the Skylands Cycling team entering the 
race, wondering if I would be bringing the club canopy to shelter us while we 
warmed up. She referred to it as the "tent/tarp thing." The pop-up canopy was 
packed in the back of my Jeep, along with a large golf umbrella, rain poncho, 
extra shoes, spare helmet, lots of extra clothes, spare sneakers, towels, extra 
hats, as well as all the other stuff you normally bring to a bike race. </P>
<P align=justify>I also had a clear plastic rain cape for Heather to borrow, the 
kind the pros wear on rainy days. I never wear the thing. It's bulky, makes you 
sweat a lot, and it interferes with my primary strategy for dealing with riding 
or racing in the rain, which is denial. I usually just ignore the rain, 
pretending it doesn't exist, which works well for me, except when the water 
shooting off all of the wheels in the pack starts trying to pressure-clean your 
eyeballs. If you wear clear glasses, they just get covered with water drops, or 
fogged up, which makes it hard to see. So, sometimes, I just keep one eye open 
at a time, giving one a rest, getting the other one pelted with water, which 
usually contains a fair amount of road grit. According to the forecast, it was 
going to be that kind of race tomorrow.</P>
<P align=justify>I got a wake up call at the Econolodge at 5:00 a.m. Before I 
even picked up the phone, I listened. I could hear no rain. Maybe we'd get 
lucky, I thought. Maybe the storm would swing away to the west and we'd be 
spared. I got dressed and stuck my head out the door. It was warm, more than 70 
degrees, unusual for a mid September morning on the New England coast. No rain. 
I drank some orange juice, had a bowl of cereal and made a couple of turkey 
sandwiches for later. At about 5:30 a.m., I tossed back a can of Red Bull and 
headed up Interstate 95. Although my race did not start until around 8:00 a.m., 
I wanted to get to the start/finish at the Charlestown school early, to get a 
good spot to park and put up the canopy. </P>
<P align=justify>I pulled into the school at a little past 6:00 a.m. It was 
still cloudy, still warm, and still not raining. There were only a couple of 
cars in the lot. In another hour it would be full, and racers would be parking 
on the road. I hopped out of the Jeep and briskly opened the lift gate, pulling 
the EZ Up Canopy out and tossing it on the ground. For me, bike racing is a lot 
of fantasy, since I never win anything. I often dream of being Eddie Merckx, 
piling up a nine minute lead on his hopelessly outclassed rivals, or Greg 
Lemond, time trialing poor Fignon into tears in the last day of the '89 Tour. On 
this day, I imagine I am the set-up man for Heather, the undisputed star of the 
Skylands Cycling team, who will arrive later for her 10:45 start, and that we 
are in Europe, probably Belgium, racing the spring classics, the Tour of 
Flanders or Fl</FONT><FONT face="WP MultinationalA Helve">P</FONT><FONT 
face=Arial>che Wallonne, say.</P>
<P align=justify>Heather Labance has taken the New Jersey women's bike racing 
scene by storm in her first year of racing. She rode her first race, a Tuesday 
night training race, in April. In May, she was second woman overall in the 40k 
state time trial championship, beaten only by many-time national champion Betty 
Tyrell. In June, she won her first Category 4 race, almost lapping the field in 
a solo breakaway. And by Labor Day weekend, she won the women's open at the 
prestigious and challenging Tour of Basking Ridge criterium in a furious solo 
attack at the start of the last lap. When she crossed the finish line, the pack 
hadn't even rounded the last turn, 300 meters away. Talk about putting the 
hammer down. </P>
<P align=justify>Her category at the Bob Beal Masters race will be 30-44 women. 
Heather is 32. This is a regional event, and there will be some high level women 
here, including a few pros. But Heather's husband Bill and I agree. She can win 
this thing.</P>
<P align=justify>A guy comes over as I wrestle with the tent. "I'll help you put 
up yours if you help me put up mine," he says. "Good deal," I reply. It is 
possible for one person to put one of these things up. I have seen it done, but 
it's a whole lot easier with two people. In less than three minutes, we have 
both canopies erected. "I hope they don't blow away," the other guy says. I tell 
him that you need the big nine-inch nails to hold down the legs. You've got to 
be prepared here in Belgium, I think. The other guy's tent is partially on 
blacktop, partially on grass, unsecured, and later, in fact, it does blow away. 
The Kelly-green Skylands canopy stays right where it is, through everything to 
come. There's no substitute for those huge nails.</P>
<P align=justify>The canopy is on the edge of the parking lot. I have the Jeep 
backed in so the opened lift gate just protrudes under the edge of the canopy, 
creating a kind of portico between truck and tent. On one side, I put the 
cooler. I position my rollers near the liftgate, so I'll have something stronger 
than the tent to hold onto when I try to mount these slippery things a little 
later. I hang my Trek road bike by the seat from the canopy frame, and put my 
time trial bike on the ground, resting on it's wheel-less fork. Later, when the 
wind picks up and catches the rear disc wheel, it blows over a few times before 
I finally put on the front wheel and lash it to one of the tent legs with a 
bungie cord. I take my wheel bag out of the truck and put it on the ground, get 
my helmet, gloves, shoes, water bottles all laid out in an orderly fashion, then 
select my clothing. I don't know what the other guys will be wearing, but for me 
it's just the normal bib, lightweight undershirt and jersey. If it rains, it 
rains, but I'm making no concessions to the probability of the impending 
Hurricane Ivan, other than to wear my training shoes, so if they get drenched, 
I'll still have dry shoes for the time trial and the crit tomrrow.</P>
<P align=justify>At 7:15 a.m., I put on the bib, shoes and undershirt and hop on 
the rollers to warm up. It's still warm, in the mid-seventies and humid, and I 
quickly work up a sweat. Later, it will be hard to believe that the temperature 
has dropped a full fifteen degrees. Just before 8:00 a.m., I slow-pedal over to 
the starting line in a total sweat. The 45-49 group is just rolling away, and my 
group is next. We stage in the parking lot, nodding to each other and saying 
good luck. The race will be three laps of the 14 mile loop, 42 miles, with 
plenty of rolling hills but no real climbs. A pretty good wind has developed and 
it coming out of the northeast as the hurricane approaches, so the finish will 
not only be uphill, but it will be into the wind. The sky has grown dark and 
rain is obviously imminent. I like these conditions. This is going to be 
fun.</P>
<P align=justify>We're less than a mile out of the parking lot and a guy 
attacks. I am not about to start chasing guys with 41 miles to go, and neither 
is anyone else. Joe Saling always says the best two times to attack are early in 
the race and late in the race—early because no one takes you seriously and late 
because everyone is usually too tired to chase. So I just cruise along, keeping 
an eye on a couple of the top guys, last years winner Glen Swan and Chip 
Berezny, Pennsylvania sprinter extraordinaire. If they're not chasing, I'm not 
chasing. After a couple of miles, we turn onto Route 1, and Glen goes to the 
front. I follow him. We can see the lone attacker ahead of us on a long 
straightaway. He has a pretty good gap—400 meters at least—and Glen must have 
decided to keep him a little closer. </P>
<P align=justify>When it's my turn to pull through, I accelerate a little and 
gradually my speedometer shows 27, then 28 miles per hour. I'm riding hard, but 
not all out by any means. The wind is at my back. This, to me, is chasing speed. 
In our New Jersey 45+ races, you have guys who can time trial forever at 27 mph, 
so you have to ride a little faster to reel them in, right? I cruise along at 
about 28 for around a minute or so and see I'm getting closer to the guy up the 
road. I swing to the left to let the next rider pull through, slow down a 
little, and nobody appears. This is not particularly surprising, because in most 
of amateur bike racing, it's very difficult to get a good chase organized. Guys 
just don't want to go to the front and pull. I look around in the hopes of 
getting some relief and am shocked to see that I am at least 200 meters off the 
front, maybe more. </P>
<P align=justify>A little confused as to how this happened, I figure I might as 
well keep chasing. The lone attacker is not going that fast, I've been gaining 
on him, and by now, it looks like I'm closer to him than the pack. All I really 
want to do at this point is catch him and bring him back, so to speak. I pick up 
the pace a little and make the right turn onto Kings Factory Road. I'm sure that 
250 years ago or so, the King of England actually had some kind of factory on 
this road. It's a cool road for bike racing, few cars, few houses and some 
hills. I don't doubt my ability to catch the breakaway rider. Although I'm no 
climber, I'm not as weak on hills as most of the guys because I climb them all 
the time.</P>
<P align=justify>Sure enough, after the first couple of hills on Kings Factory, 
I'm less than 100 meters behind this early leader, whoever he is. I look around. 
There's no sign of the pack, but a rider in yellow is bridging. I soft-pedal a 
little to let him catch up. "Come on," he says, as he passes. I don't know this 
rider, but he's clearly pretty good. He is lean, with long legs and a smooth 
fast-pedaling style. Do I get in a three man break, 40 miles from the finish of 
the first stage of a three stage race, with two guys I don't know? Not me, I 
decide, and let the yellow rider go. It's unlikely that a breakaway so far from 
the finish would succeed, and even if it did, the effort required to make it 
work would no doubt take it's toll in the time trial later that day, and the 
criterium tomorrow.</P>
<P align=justify>I sit up, downshift, and pedal easily at about 16 miles per 
hour, waiting for the pack to catch me. After what seems like a long time, I 
turn around. I can see the pack, but it's still a good 150 meters behind me, not 
exactly tearing up the road. It's raining now, a steady drizzle. I begin to 
realize what's happening—one of the guys ahead of me has some teammates in the 
pack, and they're blocking. Sure enough, when they finally catch me, there are 
two guys in red prancing along at the front of the group at 18 miles per hour. 
</P>
<P align=justify>I know who these guys are. They're Masters Velo Club, good 
riders, and highly organized. In last year's road race here, when everyone was 
noodling along watching and marking each other a quarter mile from the finish, 
these three Masters Velo guys took off in a train. I jumped on their wheel. I've 
got this knocked, I thought at the time. About 200 meters from the finish, as we 
pedaled furiously uphill, the guy in front of me simply stopped pedaling. He was 
what they call a sweeper, charged with the responsibility of keeping rivals off 
the wheel of the second guy in the train, who was obviously the designated 
sprinter. I stopped pedaling for a second to avoid hitting the sweeper, and when 
you stop pedaling on an uphill finish, you're done. You lose momentum and speed 
so fast, your head spins faster than your pedals. I went from 3rd to 22nd in 
about 50 meters. No points that day.</P>
<P align=justify>So these Masters Velo guys now had a team member off the front 
and were imposing a snail's pace on the peloton. I cruised up along side Glen 
Swan and said "We are not going to chase those guys?" He shook his head and said 
"if they can stay away for three laps…" I finished the sentence "God bless 'em." 
So off they went, while we idled away the time at 20 miles per hour, an 
excruciatingly slow pace, even for us old guys. A couple of times on Kings 
Factory, I went to the front and tried to pick up the pace a little, but just 
ended up going off the front, a place I did not care to be. If I'm going to 
attack, it's going to be in the last half of the last lap, I thought. </P>
<P align=justify>We chase haphazardly, occasionally, never getting organized. If 
there was a true effort by several riders to reel in the break, I'd go up and 
get in the rotation, but this is the kind of chase where they seem to expect one 
guy to pull 'till he cracks, and then hope some other fool does the same thing. 
As we head past the start finish line at the beginning of the last lap, I am at 
the front, having pulled the pack up the quarter mile hill. I'm not quite sure 
what I'm doing there, other than wasting energy, but I like riding uphill, and 
someone has to do pull, so I figure I'll pitch in. Just as we crest the hill, 
and my legs are starting to burn pretty good, Glen Swan streaks by on my left, a 
perfect move. </P>
<P align=justify>I get out of the saddle and pump the pedals a few times, but 
realize I can't respond. I need to recover a little, then I'll try to bridge. 
But Glen was going so much faster than us when he hit the front of the peloton, 
and still accelerating to boot, that he quickly opened up a nice gap. This guy 
can really ride--he later wins the time trial decisively, as well as the whole 
GC enchilada—and he's flying now. A lone rider passes on my right, and I try to 
jump on his wheel. Glen is disappearing into the gray drizzle, and I realize 
that there is no catching him. I sit up and get absorbed by the pack, as does 
the other chaser on my right.</P>
<P align=justify>The race seems to have lost it's heart, as we cruise 
lackadaisically up Kings Factory Road. Chip works at the front now and then, but 
he can't do it himself. The two Jaeger Wheelmen take the front once in a while, 
but it's like a club ride now. Honestly, most of our club rides are a lot more 
vigorous than this last lap. We turn the corner onto Rt. 91, flat and wide, the 
time trial course, and face the brisk headwind. Everybody knows the TT is going 
to be brutal: three miles directly into the wind. Maybe that's why we roll along 
at 18 miles per hour for the last couple of miles. We are resting, resting for 
the time trial later that day, resting for the sprint for 4th place that will 
shortly be upon us.</P>
<P align=justify>Finally, we reach the last turn. After that, it's a quarter of 
a mile uphill to the finish. Just before we start the turn, the skies open up 
and it begins to rain heavily and steadily. Perfect, I think. Big Chip Berezny 
is in second position. He has a teammate in front of him. Chip wins most of the 
field sprints in our neck of the woods, and he'll go on to win this one and the 
next one, in tomorrow's criterium. His wheel is, obviously, the wheel of choice, 
and a few of us are jockeying for it. I swing wide in the turn, then dive toward 
the back of Chip's bike in the pouring rain. Water is spraying up from the road, 
falling down from the sky. I have one eye closed to minimize the 
pressure-washing of my eyeballs. Two of the riders behind Chip flinch and back 
off a little. I'm in, solidly on his wheel coming out of the last corner with 
400 meters to go. Sweet.</P>
<P align=justify>Sometimes, in sporting events, I suffer from an inability to 
think clearly. On this day, sitting on the wheel of one of the best masters 
sprinters in the country, who was behind his leadout man, with the finish line 
just about in site, I somehow, for some reason, decline to accept a rapid tow up 
to the finish line. Instead, after fighting for the wheel, and getting it, I 
almost immediately hop out of the saddle and jump, going around Chip, out into 
the wind, uphill, in a downpour which is quickly reaching torrential 
proportions. Probably, I later tell several people, the dumbest thing I've ever 
done in bike racing. Like I said, I don't always think clearly at crunch time. 
About fifty meters from the line, ten riders pass me. I am 11th in the sprint, 
and 14th overall. Probably should have gone with the break, I think.</P>
<P align=justify>I turn around in the road as soon as I slow down and head back 
to my truck and the shelter of the canopy. There is a hard rain falling, blowing 
sideways now and then in the gusty wind. Heather is on her trainer warming up, 
skinsuit half on, wearing a fleece top. Bill is fiddling with a pump. As I come 
in out of the deluge, Heather and Bill both look at me. "How'd you do?" one of 
them asks. I've come to hate that question, because I hardly ever have a good 
answer but it's a standard query at road races, almost a sign of friendship, or 
closeness, or some kind of bond. I feel compelled to confess that I had been 
third in line coming out of the last corner, on Chips wheel, and then jumped 
like a fool, only to be passed by nearly half the pack 50 meters from the line. 
Feeling the momentum of the confessional, I continue to blabber about on about 
giving up the opportunity to be in the winning break. One of the common answers 
to "how'd you do?" is "I missed the break." Well, I didn't miss the break, I 
made the break, then let it go. </P>
<P align=justify>Heather and Bill don't say much, they just smile and seem to be 
shaking their heads a little. They're probably thinking what an idiot I am. 
Heather is in her first year of racing, but she's blessed with good racing sense 
and doesn't do these things. But, all in all, I'm in good spirits as I stand 
under the canopy, being pelted by the lateral rain, and start to remove some of 
my wet clothing. The road race was a lot of fun, and that's what I'm here 
for.</P>
<P align=justify>I ask Heather if she's glad we rode in the rain two Thursday 
ago on one of our weekly club rides. It had been cloudy all day, and the 
forecast was for rain, so only 12 riders showed up. Sure enough, about fifteen 
minutes into the ride, the skies opened up and it started pouring. I just 
started riding harder, went to the front, attacked, trying to keep busy and 
forget about the rain. You have to train in the rain because sooner or later you 
are going to have to race in the rain, I commented at the time. Riding in the 
rain is just like riding when it it's not raining, only wetter. But you have to 
get used to it.</P>
<P align=justify>Heather continues to ride her trainer, smiling and wide-eyed, 
seemingly unperturbed by the nasty weather, the driving rain and gusty wind. 
I've changed into jeans, long sleeve top, fleece vest and a rain jacket, along 
with dry socks and sneakers. Standing under the tent, the back of my jeans and 
my sneakers become soaked within minutes. Bill and I joke about being in Belgium 
next spring as Heather's support team. We can see the start line from the tent, 
and the women are staging in the parking lot. As Heather takes her bike from the 
trainer, she notices that the rear tire has gone soft. Bill frantically runs and 
gets another wheel, quickly pops it in place, and Heather is off for the start 
line, wearing the clear plastic rain cape.</P>
<P align=justify>Bill heads off to his Explorer, to keep little Madeline 
company. I get in the front seat of my Jeep, recline the seat back and check the 
clock. Heather's race should be coming through in about 35 minutes or so—11:20 
a.m. I turn on the public radio station coming from New London, Connecticut. 
They are playing a set of Buddy Miller, because it's his 52nd birthday. Buddy 
Miller and the Sacred Cows, good music, good guitar and Buddy can really sing. 
It's country music the way it would be without Nashville's commercialization and 
glitter. I slowly drift off to sleep.</P>
<P align=justify>I wake up to the sound of a siren giving a couple of short 
wails. My immediate thought is that there has been an accident. I look at the 
clock and see that it is a little after 11:20. The siren was the lead police car 
signaling that a pack of riders was coming through. I grab my umbrella and run 
over to the start line just as a group passes by. It looks like the women, and I 
think I see Heather, in her plastic cape, in third position, half a bike from 
the front. But it's raining and I just woke up and I'm not sure. "Was that the 
30+ women?" I ask a guy standing on the side of the road. "Yeah," he says. "They 
only did one lap because of the rain."</P>
<P align=justify>Heather and Bill go back to Heather's aunt's house in 
Barrington where they are staying, after we jump start their Explorer in the 
rain with jumper cables Bill borrowed from a cop. I contemplate returning to my 
room at the Econolodge, but it's a half hour away, and I have an early time 
trial start. I tell Heather that if I go back to my room, they'll not see me 
again until tomorrow. I settle into my front seat, feeling a little wet, and eat 
two turkey sandwiches. It's 12 noon. Under the canopy are my rollers, Heather's 
trainer, my two bikes, and some towels, getting soaked. Later, I doze off to the 
sound of rain pelting the Jeep, hardly noticing the wet jeans and sneakers.</P>
<P align=justify>I wake up, doze off again, then awake again. The rain, still 
falling, has a different character, not as frantic, more straight down, less 
sideways. And the sky is lighter. I feel a hundred per cent confident that the 
rain will stop before my time trial starts. I listen to more music, watch people 
run from their cars into the school and back, drink some Gatorade, and the time 
passes. I'm finally warm and I don't relish the thought of getting into a damp 
skinsuit and going out in the cold to warm up. The temperature is sixty degrees. 
I have considered blowing off the time trial but deep inside, I know I'll do it, 
no matter what. </P>
<P align=justify>I gather my time trial clothes, my dry shoes, my shoe covers, 
gloves and helmet and lay them all on the front seat next to me. Exactly at 2 
p.m., I put all this stuff on, except the helmet, and get out of the Jeep, and 
walk around to the back to get on the rollers. It's still raining steadily, but 
at nowhere near the downpour level of the past couple hours. I know it's going 
to stop. A few minutes earlier, I had actually seen a patch of blue in the sky, 
high above the trees off to my left. I stared at this little patch intently, 
watching it slowly drift from left to right, hoping to see it get bigger. It 
didn't grow, but vanished into the clouds in front of me. Then another little 
patch of blue appeared in the sky to the south. I know the rain is going to 
stop.</P>
<P align=justify>The rollers are, of course, drenched. So is my time trial bike, 
although I had a baggie over the seat which has blown away and is probably 
halfway to Nova Scotia by now. I have 200 pounds of pressure in my Tufo tubular 
tires—they are hard as rocks, smooth and wet. I throw my leg over the bike, clip 
into my right pedal, and delicately try to lift the wheels onto the rollers. 
Once on the rollers, the bike is leaning to the left, and I still have my left 
foot on the ground, so I have to grab the lift gate on the Jeep and pull the 
bike upright while I on settle on the saddle and clip in my left foot. It's not 
difficult, normally, but with the wetness and the slick hard tires, I sense the 
strong possibility of a rollers disaster here. At home, when I get on the 
rollers in the comfort of my den, I have a soft leather couch next to me, 
perfect for a bailout should the need arise. Here, there's nothing to my left 
but Heather's trainer and some wet towels, and to the right is the back of the 
jeep.</P>
<P align=justify>With some caution, I get myself in position and start pedaling 
while still holding onto the lift gate with my right hand. The bike is leaning a 
little to the right now, with the rollers humming, so I push off to straighten 
up the bike and release my hand from the lift gate. There, I think, free at 
last. After a couple of wobbles, I settle down and begin to spin smoothly in a 
low gear. I breathe deeply and feel water dripping on my right hand. Rain is 
apparently hitting the open lift gate and being channeled to the edge which is 
protruding under the canopy, then cascading directly onto my right hand, which 
is on the top of the bars, a little behind the brake hoods. I move my hand 
forward, onto the hood. I still feel the dripping. I move my hand back, and 
position it directly next to the arm pad for the aero bars. More dripping, right 
on my hand. This is Chinese water torture, plain and simple, and it is starting 
to drive me crazy.</P>
<P align=justify>I study the falling water and continue to change the position 
of my hand. Sometimes, when I move my hand, there is a brief respite from the 
dripping, but it invariably resumes because the wind is blowing the drips 
around, somehow, remarkably, always finding the back of my hand. I resolve to 
ignore the water, as I will shortly have to ignore searing pain and unrelenting 
breathlessness in the short, pursuit-like time trial. I fix my eyes on a spot on 
the ground about two feet in front of the bike and continue to pedal.</P>
<P align=justify>After a time, I become aware that there is no longer water 
dripping on my hand. I steal a glance at my hand and realize that the dripping 
has stopped entirely. Looking out from under the canopy, to the surface of the 
parking lot, I see no rain splatters. The rain has stopped. It's 2:30 as I put 
on my new aerodynamic time trial helmet and head down to the time trial start, a 
little more than three miles away, for my 2:58 departure.</P>
<P align=justify>To get to the start, I have to ride the time trial course 
backwards. I get low on the aero bars and spin in the small chainring. Pretty 
soon, without effort, I am spun out and need to go to the big chainring. There 
is a huge tailwind here. Although the rain has stopped, the northeast wind is 
still going strong, and we are going to see some slow time trial times today. 
Time trialing into a headwind isn't, in my opinion, really any more difficult. 
You are always riding at the highest pain level you can tolerate for the time it 
takes to complete the ride. But I think in a headwind, riders tend to get 
discouraged at their slow speeds and maybe let up a little. So I am in favor of 
headwinds, as I am in favor of anything that slows down the competition. Going 
slow doesn't discourage me; I am used to it.</P>
<P align=justify>I get down to the start and roll around for a few minutes, 
chatting idly with the other riders in my group. When I roll up to the start to 
get in line, my back tire pops. These really are track tires that I'm using, and 
they don't belong on the road with all the post-hurricane debris. I guess I 
should have driven to the course, because my Jeep, and my spare wheels, are over 
three miles away. "How much time do we have?" I ask the guys standing in line. 
"They're about four minutes behind," somebody says. I ask whether they think I 
have enough time to go back to the school to get another wheel. That would be a 
six mile ride, half on a flat tire. No chance. One of the guys at the line turns 
his bike around and motions for me to follow. "Come on," he says. "We'll go over 
to my car and get you a wheel." A couple of minutes later, I'm back with a nice 
nine speed Ksyrium on the rear. It's not a disc, but I notice that a lot of guys 
aren't riding discs: the wind is not a straight headwind, it will be coming from 
off our right shoulders, partially a crosswind. It is possible that a disc could 
slow you down in that kind of wind. </P>
<P align=justify>There's no announcer and no holder today, as there usually is. 
The driving rain has driven away a few volunteers, obviously. I clip into my 
pedals and start thrusting my pelvis forward toward the bike's stem as I stomp 
on the pedals to accelerate up the slight grade away from the line. When the 
road flattens out and the speedometer hits 29, I know I have to slow down to 
avoid the most common error in time trialing: going out too fast. Too much 
effort in the excitement of the start will cause a buildup of crippling lactic 
acid that your body will never clear until after the time trial is over. So I 
back off a little, settle onto my aero bars, and plow into the headwind. </P>
<P align=justify>I had worked out a plan during my training for this time 
trial—how many RPMs in what gear would give me a high enough average speed to 
finish in the top ten. I knew I couldn't win it, but top ten would be a big 
accomplishment and a huge improvement for me. I can feel the wind pushing my 
deep dish front wheel to the side a little, and I can't remember what gear I had 
decided I wanted to be in. It makes no difference anyway, because with this 
wind, all bets are off. I remember the cadence, though. I want to ride in the 
high 90s. And I want my heart rate to be in the low to mid 160s, slightly above 
my lactic threshold, although I figure I can ride the last mile or so a few 
beats above that.</P>
<P align=justify>As I try to spin the pedals and not grind too much, I keep the 
cadence at 98, according to my computer. The heart rate, though, is another 
matter. No matter how hard I try, I can't seem to get my heart rate above 156. 
In fact, it seems to be stuck there. Maybe it's the wind, maybe it's the 720 
pounds I had on the angled leg press three days ago, or maybe it's the 42 mile 
road race that morning. Who cares, I conclude, and keep plowing away. I am 
pleasantly surprised to see that I am keeping the speed around 25 mph, not bad 
in a 20 mph headwind, but gradually I start to slow down. The course is not 
completely flat, and I'm on a slight upgrade. I shift gears to keep my cadence 
up. On my road bike, the computer tells you what gear you're in. On this time 
trial bike, I'd have to look back at the cassette to find out, but I don't want 
to know. I just try to keep low, pedal smoothly and hope I can nudge my heart 
rate up a little. Finally, the road turns from smooth tarmac to this blacker, 
new stuff that is quite rough, like they used cheap asphalt. I know we are not 
far from the finish. The road turns slightly uphill, the only visible upgrade on 
the course. I try to pedal harder, and finally, my heart rate reaches 160. Up 
ahead, I see a small white tent on the right side of the road.</P>
<P align=justify>In a road race, when your legs are burning and you are gasping 
for breath, there's almost always a possibility that relief is just around the 
corner. The pack might slow down, you might catch a draft and the suffering will 
be over. In a time trial, there's no hope of relief. Maybe that's why you accept 
your lot in life for whatever the duration of the race: pain, pain and more 
pain, unrelenting burning and suffering. Eddie B. says if it really hurts, 
almost more than you can stand, you know you are doing it right. I imagine I am 
Ekimov or Padrnos setting tempo on a flat stage of the Tour de France. With the 
wind or against it, that's their job, just keep cranking along. Today, on Rt. 91 
in Rhode Island, it's my job and frankly, I don't mind doing it. Nobody's going 
to come around me, nobody's going to box me in. It's just me and the course for 
somewhere around seven minutes. The race of truth.</P>
<P align=justify>Well, actually, it was 7:42, to be exact, I learn the next 
morning. Not a particlarly good time for three miles, only an average of 23.4 
mph, but good enough for 7th place. I finished ahead of a few pretty good guys, 
including the guy who started the break in the road race that morning. He was 
15th, a tad fried, I would say. Rolling back to the school, I catch up with 
Chip. "Pretty nasty wind, eh?" I ask. I'm not sure exactly what he said in 
response, because the wind kind of drowned him out, and my time trial helmet 
covers my ears, but it was plainly venomous, and may have contained some 
explicit language. He was not happy. Later, I find out that he finished 8th, 
behind me, so it was not a good time trial for a rider of his caliber.</P>
<P align=justify>"Did you win the field sprint this morning," I ask, to change 
the subject. He looks down, and says that he did, in a kind of humble, almost 
bashful way. </P>
<P align=justify>"There were a couple of guys up the road," he says. "One guy 
attacked right out of the parking lot. I was fourth." I tell him that he did a 
lot of work in the race and he thanks me for cranking up the pace in the end. 
"My guy was kind of slowing down," Chip says. </P>
<P align=justify>"Probably the dumbest thing I ever did," I reply. </P>
<P align=justify>"Well," he says, smiling, "I was surprised when you came around 
me." I think back to the week before, when I was also right behind him out of 
the last corner in the Philipsburg Criterium. When he really started to wind it 
up, I couldn't hang on his wheel. Art McHugh passed me, with Joe Saling glued to 
his wheel, and I ended up 4th. "I thought I'd give it a try," I said, 
laughing.</P>
<P align=justify>When I roll up to the tent, Bill and Heather are trying to 
decide whether she should use her brand new Zipp 909 wheels, as Heather rides 
her trainer. It’s still well over an hour to her race. The issue is whether it 
might be difficult for Heather to handle the disc in a diagonal headwind, having 
never ridden one before. Bill asks what I think. "Use 'em," I say. You bought 
the wheels, for big bucks, no sense leaving them in the car. Plus, this is no 
ordinary rider we are talking about. Her strength is so great, that any 
buffeting effect will be minimal compared to her forward drive. Heather decides 
to take the wheels for a spin before deciding. Good idea.</P>
<P align=justify>Bill and I discuss time trial aerodynamics as I change into 
another set of dry clothes. I point out to Bill that I brought a set of dry 
clothes for after the road race, and another set for after the time trial, 
correctly anticipating that the first set of clothes would get wet between the 
races. "I'm ready for this," I proudly tell him. "That's 'cause you know how to 
plan," he replies. I tell him that I'd be good in Belgium next spring, perhaps 
as one of Heather's <I>soigneurs</I>. "You're in," he says.</P>
<P align=justify>Heather is gone for what seems like a long time, and Bill is 
starting to worry. I think I know what she's doing. She's riding the course to 
try out the wheels. That's Heather. She's not only gifted, she's obsessive, a 
powerful combination. Pretty soon she rolls in and gives a thumbs up, smiling. 
She likes the wheels. It's her first experience with tubular tires, they're 
pumped up to 160 pounds, and you've got to love that feeling. Add the deep dish 
front and dimpled disc rear, and the reduction in rolling resistance is 
palpable.</P>
<P align=justify>There is an issue with Heather's long blond hair. It seems you 
just can't have it flowing along behind your head in a time trial, as you 
normally might—it's not aerodynamic. Bill helps Heather put it in a bun, under 
the helmet. I suggest that we have spare wheels at the start so Heather does not 
have to beg for a wheel, as I did, in the event of a flat. Bill says he'd like 
to be at the finish. I suggest we go to the start, then drive to the finish. 
It's a plan. Heather takes off on the bike; Bill and I take separate vehicles. 
It's only a little over three miles away. </P>
<P align=justify>As we stand across the road from the start, watching the line 
of 30+ women, Bill points out that the only riders with disc wheels are the 
three women from our area. I wonder why that is. Bill thinks all the other girls 
are making a mistake. "At Sandy Hook," he says, "everybody rode a disc. "</P>
<P align=justify>Sandy Hook is a narrow strip of land at the New Jersey shore 
that separates Raritan Bay from the Atlantic Ocean. It is a national recreation 
area that is the site of the first time trial in New Jersey each April. The 
course is flat, seven miles out-and-back, and always windy. Two years ago, there 
were snow flurries. This year, the wind conditions were very similar to today's: 
a strong headwind coming off the left shoulder going out. Because of the wind, I 
made the decision not to use a disc, opting instead for my carbon road-racing 
wheels. It was a big mistake. There were a couple of guys who beat me in that 
time trial by twenty to thirty seconds who haven't beaten me in a time trial 
since.</P>
<P align=justify>At the Bob Beal, they are using an automated starting system 
with a recorded voice telling you when there are fifteen seconds to go, then ten 
seconds. At five seconds, it beeps every second until the final beep, louder and 
more high-pitched that the others. Pretty cool. But there's no holder. Without a 
holder, Heather has to clip herself in after the starting beep. It is not 
surprising that she has some trouble. It's her first year of racing, really her 
first year of cycling. She had a bike last year, but only rode it a few times. 
And the pedals she is using are somewhat notorious for being hard to get into. 
"There's five seconds," I observe, as Heather finally clips in and takes off, 
and Bill and I head for our vehicles, parked about 50 meters away. Bill breaks 
into a run. I follow.</P>
<P align=justify>We are both parked head on in the same row of cars, and we 
quickly back out in tandem. Bill noses the red Explorer onto Rt. 91 first. I 
have to wait for a couple of cars to pass. I'm expecting to come upon Heather 
pretty quickly, because we hustled away from the start, but I overtake a couple 
of riders and neither is Heather. As I continue to drive on, I wonder whether I 
could have passed her without knowing it. Finally, I see a rider ahead, no more 
than a dot at first, who as I get closer appears to be wearing blue, one of our 
club colors. It's Heather.</P>
<P align=justify>Bill and I discussed following her in the car, riding along 
side shouting "venga" and "allez." I didn't think there was a rule against it, 
but no one else is doing it, and we decide not to. But as I approach Heather, I 
slow down and roll down my passenger side window. "Great job, Heather," I 
scream. " You're killing it !" And she was. </P>
<P align=justify>I've ridden a lot with Heather, and watched her race plenty. 
She has that ability the pros have: to ride at her limit and maintain a totally 
placid, expressionless, closed-mouth face. She really makes it look easy, never 
looks like she's struggling or tired. On this day, her mouth was open, her face 
sweaty and twisted, almost contorted, as she titled her head in my direction, 
her long lean legs smoothly turning at just the right cadence. Heather has a 
time trialist's natural ability to know how much torture she can endure for the 
length of the required effort—on this day, about seven minutes—and you could 
easily see she had it at the absolute max. I continue up the road to the finish, 
park on the grass, and stroll over to the line where Bill is standing. It isn't 
long before Heather comes into site. She's flying. "Do you have the time," I ask 
Bill. "No," he says, "I accidentally stopped the watch when I got in the 
car."</P>
<P align=justify>Heather won the time trial in 7:22, reportedly setting a 
women's course record. She moved into first place in the General Classification. 
Her time was twenty seconds better than mine, and I'm proud of her. There was a 
time, earlier in the season, when my time trials were a little better than 
Heather's. Those days are gone.</P>
<P align=justify>The next day, the weather has cleared, but the criterium at 
Ninagret Park is a disaster for me. At the start, I charge to the front, 
determined to spend the race in the top six. As we spin around the serpentine 
course the first time, I find it increasingly difficult to stay near the front. 
It seems like a hugely fast pace. After a couple of laps, I look down at my back 
wheel to see what gear I'm in because my computer wasn't turned on. It's a 
52x19, and I can't turn the gear over. I've done the Bob Beal twice before, and 
each time, my strongest race was the criterium on the second day, so I am 
baffled by this turn of events. After a few laps of struggling to hang on, we 
pass my jeep parked on the side of the course and I just ride on the grass and 
stop. I started the day 10th in GC, but there will be no points today.</P>
<P align=justify>As I slowly ride around the parking lot to warm down my burning 
legs, I hear a slight sound coming from what seems like the front wheel. I stop 
to check if a brake is rubbing. No dice. When I continue to ride, I hear the 
noise again. I stop and spin the wheel, but can't hear anything. I release the 
skewer, then close it and spin the wheel. Nothing. I then take the front wheel 
out of the dropouts and put it back in. When I do this, I notice that the wheel 
is not settling evenly into the dropouts but is in fact a little cockeyed. How 
could I have missed something like this, I wonder, bitterly. I take the wheel 
off, turn the bike upside down and examine the dropouts closely. One of them has 
some mud stuck to the inside. I flick the mud away with my finger, put the wheel 
back on and it settles squarely in place. I had been riding with an 
out-of-kilter-wheel. That will increase the rolling resistance, I would say. I 
think I must have set the front fork down in the grass or dirt sometime after 
yesterdays race. A little later I tell a couple of guys what happened. They look 
at me skeptically. Hey, I couldn't believe myself at first.</P>
<P align=justify>I fill up my water bottles, put my seat bag on, and head out of 
Ninagret Park and up Rt. I. It's a gorgeous day, although a little chilly, about 
60 degrees, and I have decided to ride for a few hours. Heather's race isn't 
until 3:00 p.m. so I'll get in some easy miles, burn some calories, cruise 
around Rhode Island and do some sightseeing. I have a turkey sandwich and a 
power bar in my jersey pockets. Some people call this kind of riding junk 
mileage, reasoning that the low pace doesn't do anything for your fitness, and 
the long distances create unnecessary fatigue. I disagree. A lot of mileage 
toughens your body; I'll be riding at an easy recovery pace, and it will be 
relaxing and enjoyable. I don't know of any rule that says you can't be a racer 
and a tourist.</P>
<P align=justify>I ride up to the road race loop and head up Kings Factory Road. 
It seems hillier today than it did yesterday, and longer. I do the 14 mile loop 
twice, along with a couple of out-and-back legs on Rt. 1 and Rt. 112, then head 
back down to the crit course, completing 55 miles in 4 hours. As I pull into the 
park, the 40-44 race is just finishing. There's a guy a couple of hundred meters 
off the front, it's the last lap, and the CTS/Cranford Bike guys are chasing 
hard. With about a half lap to go, one of the CTS guys, Bernie McGarry, who is 
leading the MCRA season-long competition in this group, charges off the front 
and starts to bridge. It seems like too little too late, and the announcer 
observes that it will likely be impossible for Bernie to catch the solo break. 
The two riders disappear behind some trees, and emerge to our left about three 
hundred meters from the line, at the end of what once was a runway on this 
former airfield. McGarry has made up an incredible amount of distance in a short 
time. The two are charging hard into the headwind, and McGarry just passes the 
other guy at the line for the win.</P>
<P align=justify>The women's crit is the last race of the day. It's cold, a lot 
more cloudy than sunny, and the wind is blowing harder than ever. The 45+ women 
will be on the course at the same time as the 30+ women, with a staggered start. 
The 30+ women stay together for the first half of the race. There are a couple 
of attacks that are chased and easily caught. Eventually, one of the Verizon 
girls gets away and opens up a 400 meter gap. Nobody is chasing, and you can see 
Heather looking around impatiently. She wants to take off. After a time, Lisa 
Jellette, Heather's friend and rival from New Jersey gets away and starts to 
bridge up to Brenda, the leader.</P>
<P align=justify>The criterium course at Ninagret park is a sort of rounded dog 
bone. The homestretch and the backstretch pass within about 20 meters of each 
other near the start/finish line. You can almost see the whole course from the 
start, where Bill and I and Heather's aunt and uncle were watching, except for 
the extreme right end of the dogbone, which is kind of far away, and the extreme 
left, which is blocked by some trees. As the pack passed directly in front of us 
one the back stretch, Heather rose from her saddle and started cranking some 
serious wattage with her long legs. In what seemed like seconds, she was off the 
front and well on her way to catching Lisa. Brenda disappeared behind the trees 
to our right, then Lisa, then the charging Heather, who was clearly riding much 
faster than the other two. When they emerged from behind the trees about fifteen 
seconds later, the three were together.</P>
<P align=justify>Lisa won the sprint and Heather was second, earning enough 
points to seal the GC win. They talked excitedly about the race, while the other 
women gathered around these two Jersey girls to offer their congratulations. You 
wouldn’t see the guys acting like this. It was nice. After marveling with Bill 
about Heather’s bridge for a while, I said good-bye and jumped in my car and 
headed for home.</P>
<P align=justify></P>
<P>Bob Cary October 2004</P></FONT>
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      <em>Bob Cary @ 18:59 PM</em>
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		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_41.htm">
		       The Bob Beal 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_29.htm">
		       The Jersey Classics--Racing in Branch Brook Park 		    </a>
		  </li>
        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_28.htm">
		       Diario de Argentina Part 1 		    </a>
		  </li>
        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_27.htm">
		       Diario de Argentina Part 2 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_26.htm">
		       Diario de Argentina Part 3 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_24.htm">
		       'Cross Rain 		    </a>
		  </li>
        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_22.htm">
		       Down the slippery S-curves 		    </a>
		  </li>
        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_20.htm">
		       A wet-footed run-up 		    </a>
		  </li>
        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_19.htm">
		       'Cross Rain Part 2 		    </a>
		  </li>
        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_17.htm">
		       Navigating the off-camber mud 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_16.htm">
		       'Cross Rain Part 3 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_14.htm">
		       Changing course in mid-race 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_13.htm">
		       'Cross Rain Part 4 		    </a>
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        		  <li>
		    <a href="http://blogs.tellurian.com/blogs/bobcary/item_12.htm">
		       'Cross Rain Part 5 		    </a>
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