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Howell Mountain Challenge XC – 3rd Place Elite Cat 1
Posted on August 12th, 2009 No commentsHe’s a Category 3 by road, Cat 1 by dirt…Antonio Ricalde recaps his recent fight for 3rd place at the Howell Mt. Challenge XC race.
Date: 8/9/2009
Race: Howell Mountain Challenge XC
Class: Cat 1
Distance: 30 miles and 3,200+ feet of climbing
Place: 3rdWell, I was looking forward for this race since April after I finished “Napa Dirt Classic” which is held in the same location and similar course but shorter distance. When I raced Napa Dirt Classic I was just getting back on the bike after been away for almost 5 months, and the result was awful. I finished almost in last place. I suffered the whole course and even walk my bike in some climbs. That was why I was thirsty for revenge with myself and wanted so bad to do good at Howell Mountain Challenge.
The race started at 10:30 am at about 85 degrees Fahrenheit, was hot already; fortunately the course is 80% under shade so that makes it a bit easier. All Cat 1’s 19-34 and 35-45 started together. I had a bad start, I was on the front line but I couldn’t clip in fast and instantly my gears start to fail. Finally I got into a gear that was working right and I was able to pass about half of the field before a short single track. This was follow for half a mile of fire road before a really steep hike a bike. I pushed really hard in all that section and passed another quarter of the field. After I mount back my bike there was a long flat section on fire road, I was on my red line just trying to get back my breath and swallowing the dust that I ate at the start. A couple guys passed me at a good speed and immediately I jumped on their wheel until we got to a technical long single track. I stayed on these guys wheels for about 20 minutes, but I was really paying for the big effort I did at the start. I had to set up on my own rhythm and let them go. When I started the second lap I was in about 8th place, I was feeling better, I took a gel shot a big drink and thought that the race was far from getting over and that if I pushed harder I could get back on the fight. I was by myself for
about other 30 minutes trying to have a fast pace.Finally when I got to the monster climb, about 22% gradient, I saw a line of racers most of them walking their bikes up hill. I just down shifted to my small ring and focus on riding up my bike without stopping. With just staying on my bike I started to pass one by one even though I had to take the loose and rocky section of the climb. A couple guys that I know were surprise when I caught them back and just said “Antooonio”. I was super motivated, my heart rate was through the roof but I continue pushing hard and not looking back. The climb became less steep and I moved onto my big ring inspired (LOL). I started the last lap on 3rd position and I stay there until the end of the race, just suffering and hoping that any rider weren’t behind me. Was a looong last lap.
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Timpani Category 3 WIN!!
Posted on August 11th, 2009 No commentsGabriel Byrne pulls off a huge sprint to take the win at the Timpani Criterium in Santa Clara, CA.
Here’s his recap:
Friday and Saturday I was camping out and moumtain biking in Downieville, so much fun but came back early so I could race this crit. I almost didn’t make it, for some reason I had it in my head that my race was at 2pm. (Note from editor: Always prepare by knowing WHEN your race is!!!) I had a leisurely breakfast, hang out with the dog, around 10:30 I start thinking I better check where this race is… Oh Crap! It’s at 11:45! Threw my stuff in the car, dammit, need to change over to the cork pads real quick, hit every red light in the city between the Presidio and 101. C’mon, c’mon, c’mon, let’s go!
At 11:35 I was still a bit away and I was very close to saying screw it and just go to the beach. Got there at 11:45 and luckily they were running late. I had just enough time to throw on the kit, my girlfriend pins my number (all loose and
flappy) and I rolled up to the start just in time.After that the race itself was pretty uneventful. A non-technical course, which is not my favorite thing. At the gun I went straight through the field to get up to 3rd wheel by corner 1. My legs felt real funky for the first few laps, a few days of using different muscles downhilling on the mt. bike, plus absolutely no warmup. I just hung out in the top 10, no serious attacks went. There was one crash, but I didn’t see at all. With 3 to go one of those really ugly sounding pile-ups
happened right next to me. They were all gone the next time we came around, so thankfully there were no broken bones.At the bell lap I was sitting 3rd wheel and someone attacked hard. A surge came up
the right while the guys I was behind slowed a bit, I squeezed through a hole to get 4th wheel. On the backside two guys counter attacked, by then I was second wheel. The guy in front of me was loosing steam, so I came around him and closed in on one of the attackers. At the second to last corner I passed that guy, caught the final guy, upshifted and dove into the corner and out of the saddle. Looks like a looooong way to that blue tent, halfway there, chin in front of the stem, upshift one more time. Amazing, I’m going to get it. So stoked. Passed the line with a big smile. -
CO Mt. Bike Hill Climb
Posted on June 27th, 2009 No commentsMark Mastoras takes a trip to the Rockies and reports on a tough Mt. Bike Hill Climb.
Race: MTB race (hill climb)
Category: Expert (cat 1) 40+
Field: 16
Finish: 12th
Course: brutalWhile in Steamboat Springs I rented a MTB (an excellent Rocky Mt. Altitude) and entered the local town challenge MTB race. This race happened to be a serious hill climb starting at 7000′ and proceeding
up to 9000′ over 4.5 miles. I was nervous and as it turns out rightfully so, I went off with the 40+ experts and for a small town there was a serious amount of fit competition, old mountain men.At the start they drilled it, and I’m like WTF? Thankfully after about 1000 meters the pace settled down some so maybe the start was for show or adrenaline. I was just trying to stay with the group and
managed to make it about 1/2 way up when the double-tracked turned into single-track switch backs after that it was just finding my own pace.3/4 the way up a women on a single-speed went by me ! Don’t mess with the locals!
After a seeming eternity (49.21 minutes) it was over and I was treated to 2000′ feet of single-track downhill, yea!
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Dash for Cash: P/1/2/3
Posted on June 9th, 2009 No commentsP/1/2/3
Team: Aaron, Angelo, Carmi, Dan, Gabe, Geoff, Jan and Murat (and Dino on the radio)
Course: Office park crit…almost rectangle, with a pretty good wind.
Top Placing: 9th (Carmi)Being a 1/2/3 race, we had a very strong presence with 8 guys on the line. The Dash for Cash is a “prime-heavy” race…several $40 laps, a $500 gas card on the line and a $250 bonus for the person that could lap the field!
With 75 minutes of racing and all those primes this is typically a fast and competitive criterium. Well, it lived up to that. We played around a bit in some of the breakaway attempts, but nothing really stuck until late in the game. Once the race started to slow down a break of 9 formed and got 20 second on the field. Carmi ended up in a chase group 6 that wittled down to 2 (Carmi and a DBC Rider) bridged up to the break. Joel ended up attacking the break and won it solo and Carmi says, “I had nothing left in the tank and sprinted in for 9th.” Well done!
Jan mixed it up in the field sprint for a great placing as well…just outside of the top 10 due to the breakaway.
Good day of racing for sure. Everyone was working well together and sharing the workload at the front.
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Rohnert Park Crit – P/1/2: 6th Place
Posted on June 8th, 2009 No commentsP/1/2
Team: Aaron, Angelo & Jan
Place: 6th (Jan)
Course: Slightly undulating with gusty winds: 1.2 mile office parkThe race got under way slowly but ramped up quickly. We had to do 75
min. Because of the wind, length of course and number of turns/curves a breakaway was bound to happen (almost every race before us was won in a break). After several attempts by us and others, one finally stuck and I think it was around 20 min into the race. Prior to that, we were all near the front taking turns going in breaks, but just missed this one that went away. Angelo tried to bridge up but the break was working too well together (Joel, Rand Miller, 2 other guys, one of which eventually got dropped). Angelo recalls, “I tried to bridge and they were almost instantly out of sight, after 2 solo laps I was back in the pack for some recovery.” So we tried with others to try and bring them back but no one was working well together at all. Jan tried several times to bridge and have some people come with him but it all got chased down by the pack. Angelo and Aaron continued covering attacks/bridge attempts. Jan finally made a move that stuck, “Then I (Jan) found myself on the front of the pack and I was like WTF so I attacked ala sprint and took a huge flier. Two guys came with me. So we started rotating well and got a great gap.” The break away had 45sec-1 min on Jan’s chase group, which eventually picked up the guy that was originally in the main breakaway and the 4 of them worked great together. So 3 up the road and Jan’s group of 4 chasing hard. With 40 sec or more on the pack this chase group was looking great. Jan’s group did not catch the main break, so they were racing for 4th. One rider attacked hard, Jan reacted and took 3rd in his group (6th overall).We raced well today and we had fun. Granted, we should have been in that first group, but we are learning and getting better….
The (not-so) bad news of the day is that Jan’s placing earned us a box of Clif Bars, the winner got a case of beer. Personally, I (Angelo) think Jan should have rode harder and won us some beer.










