Andrew Christie – Let The Fun Begin…
By Andrew Christie (Twitter @andydc90) Not exactly how I?d planned the first race with the new team to pan out but a few elementary errors on my behalf ended my race prematurely and left me watching by the road side as the Victorian 100 km Championships came to a close around the streets of Hamilton? What better way to spend the long car trip home from Hamilton than to pull out the laptop and get typing. Currently Susie (the sometimes faithful GPS) is predicting dead on 3 hours till we arrive home but I doubt I?ll be able to stretch this post out that far, and I?m sure no one would end up reading my endless waffling. The weekends long commute began yesterday as Dad and I set off on the 4.5 hour drive to Hamilton. You would think a long drive like that would warrant an equally long bicycle race, well on this occasion it didn?t. The Victorian 100km Championships were exactly as the name suggests, just 100km. It was to be 13 laps of an approximate 8km circuit on the outskirts of town. With Cavendish being a near by town it was appropriate to think that this circuit would suit the faster men, or would it? Light winds of 11km/hr were forecast so my initial thoughts tended to think the bunch might stay mostly intact. Oh how I was wrong. Getting out on the course for a warm up I soon discovered narrow roads and heftier winds than previously anticipated meant it wouldn?t take much for the race to bust up. For me this wasn?t a bad discovery, the legs were feeling good and the new Argon 18 was feeling fast. The usual last minute toilet stop followed and it was then time to line up officially as a Bikebug.com/Forza Capital rider. As most races end up starting it was on from the gun with riders immediately trying their luck off the front. Attacks were coming from both sides of the road as riders scrambled for position out of the wind. We were represented in the initial move by strong man Ben Johnson while Murchie, Stu, Aaron and myself tried to follow any counter moves to ensure bikebug was well represented in the moves. With the wind blowing across the bunch the gutters were the route of choice as we made our way across the top part of the 8km loop. The third straight in the rectangle kept the group riding mostly in the gutter with a slight tailwind which kept the pace high as riders tried to catch their breath after the tough cross wind section. The final straight was again battered by the North-North Easterly winds and with a slight drag up to the line the race was proving to be far from easy. BJ in the Moves After about three laps I found myself fourth wheel rounding the corner into the final straight. With a break up the road and a group in no mans land I decided to make the jump and try my luck getting across to the leaders so we had two riders in the break. I probably took on more than I could chew on this occasion and found myself back within the confines of the main group. Trying to Bridge the Gap From attempting to get ahead of the race it was half a lap later I found myself rolling through a corner and discovering the two riders in front of me had let the wheel go ? now to the back of the race. This was less than ideal timing as we rolled into the tailwind section. However I cannot complain too much as I was the one sitting too far back in the group. Suddenly a gap of 100 meters had opened up and I was stranded. An attempt to get across to the bunch was unsuccessful and my race had reached a premature end. Not what I was hoping for. It?s not a great feeling rolling through the start/finish area one lap off the front and then the next off the back. I guess this is the nature of bike racing. I made a mistake and I paid for it. Not content with pulling off early I unpinned the numbers, rugged up and went for a light roll around the streets of Hamilton to at least get a few hours total for the day. What a long way to drive for a few hours on the bike? That?s bike racing! Congrats to BJ for making the race winning move and Stu for getting on the Masters Podium (I?m not sure of official results as yet). Thanks to CV and all the volunteers for a well run event on a nice little course ? pity it?s so far away. It?s time for me to get back into some training as I?ve been taking it a little easier since the Northern Combine 3 Day Tour. To be honest I?m itching to get going again. Ciao Stu ? Masters Podium Murch Looking Calm