Chequamegon of firsts…

Instead of a picture of the start, take the five minutes and see just what 1,900 riders coming down Hayward’s main street looks like.

The 29th Chequamegon Fat Tire race has been filed away in the history books…but what a race it was.  This race brought many first for me that made for an awesome weekend of racing and spending time with my family.

First first…

For the first time Ayden put on a number plate and participated in the kids race/parade.  he kept talking about how he was like and dad, riding really really fast.  He really didn’t follow the directions and basically rode where he wanted to ride.  He had a blast and talked about his race all day…It was a blast to watch.

Second first…

FYI....I'm the rider in the lower left corner of the pic

I was lucky enough to grab a “preferred” start for the race this year.  It made for a relaxing warm-up for the race, to say the least.  Being able to show up an hour before the race, warm-up on the bike that you are racing, and roll up to the start line fifteen minutes before the cannon goes off is a routine that I sure could get used to.

The hwy 77 rollout was a blast and was pretty laid back because of a pretty stiff head-wind.  5 wheels back sure gave me a new perspective to racing.  I tried to take in every second of the experience….hoping to learn a thing or two about racing at that level.

By the time we hit Rosie’s Field the game us off and the chase was one.  Note to self….when you it the Birkie trail, position is all that matters.  Meaning, don’t get caught in the back.

Picture by Kelly Rudolph

I came through OO in no man’s land because I had a horrible position in the chase group that I was in.  By the time I came through OO and got my hand-up from my wife I was all alone on some pretty fast sections of the course.  I latched on to a group of about ten riders (one being a teammate of mine, Mike Johnson) that came through and this time I didn’t make the mistake again.  I sat second wheel for the most part of the second half and took a pull here and there to try to break the group up.  By the time we hit the last Birkie section the group was down to four as we began our climb up the high point.  I got dropped, along with two other riders right before the Birkie food station.  The three off us took turns pulling on the two-mile downhill gravel road and when we hit the final Telemark ski trails I put one final effort in to put some distance between us.  But when I looked back I saw a train of riders come up on us fast.  So much for that…

Third first…

The group caught me on the descent into Telemark.  I kept them to a about a three-second gap knowing that I had enough in the legs to out sprint them on the final climb to the finish. I picked my way through the group and rolled across the finish line for my first top 100 finish (80th).

It was one of those races that you put the “perfect” stamp on it.  Everything worked together perfectly on Saturday and the legs felt great throughout the race.  But It wouldn’t have happened if it were not for the support from my wife and made it a point to let me get out on the bike, my son and all his “good tuck daddy” speeches, my parents for their continued support, my extended family for their entertaining gambling on my races, and Twin Six for making me look fast with the clothing and the kit.

Nothing beats a post race tailgate party with family and friends

The little man who brings the perspective to my races

Here’s to another great Cheq 40 race…cheers.

Single Swizzle

Sturgie

When its all in…

…you have a let down.  It happens every year.  I put everything on the Fat Tire.  My season revolves around it.  I race to get ready for it.  And when you put all your eggs into that one basket, your bound to have a let down.

I have been on my bike exactly zero times since the race.  But I have also been able to catch up on many things that were put aside because of the training.  Yard work, reading, class time, work, hikes, Alpaca farms, apple orchards, and lying in bed watching movies with Ayden.  So…what let down?

Getting Big

Alpaca Buddy

Chicken Buddies

Farmer Ayden

Single Swizzle

Sturgie

Just missed…

The weeks leading up to the Fat Tire were not how I would have scripted it.  Two weeks ago I was battling the same cold that Ayden had to battle first.  Then last Thursday I had a bout with an allergy attack.  I was feeling fatigued and I was mentally playing tricks on how I was really physically feeling.

Thursday evening Ayden and I loaded up the car and drove north to my parents place.  When we left EC it was 56 degrees and when we pulled up to my parents place on the lake it was 44 degrees.  That was the first reminder that it was go time, ready or not.

Friday was a very relaxing day.  Grandma watched Ayden so that I could get out and meet up with O’Meara for a pre-ride.  it was exactly what I needed to shake the funk that I was in and to start feeling ready for Sat.  The legs felt good and the tires (Bontrager XR1 / Stan’s NoTube Raven) were a good choice.  We registered after the ride and then met up with Nikole at the lake for some pasta and family time.

4:30 a.m. came early.  If you get a preferred start you don’t have to worry about 4:30. I’m not a preferred starter (yet) so I had to be at the start line at 4:30 A.M. just so I could get a good spot to start the race.  Well, I ended up with a front row start.  And even though it was butt early, it made all the hassle to get there worth it.

3 bikes to the left from the center line...that's what 4:30 am means

The start was fairly mellow and intense at the same time.  By the time the cannon smoke cleared I was up and mixed in with the preferred riders.  Things went smoothly down 77 and by the time we hit Rosie’s Field I was still hanging on with the lead riders (I mean top 100 riders).

1800 Riders...

The race was fast, wet, muddy, dry, slow, easy, painful, upsetting, and exciting all at once.  I rode with a group of riders for the most part who were exchanging pulls, sometimes working together but always losing and adding riders throughout.

Eyeing up the H2O exchange with the wife...

The muddy/wet part that I was talking about

Hurting

I didn’t feel like I was conserving anything and I really didn’t know how the race was going (time/place).  I kept plugging away and pushing the envelope.  The group I was in blew up on Fire Tower and as I crested the top I was alone and felling the cramping pings coming on.

I wanted to be strong on the last Birkie section.  Instead of getting caught, like in previous years, I wanted to do the catching.  I was able to catch, drop, and latch on to a couple of riders.  Coming off of the Birkie section I knew the hardest part was done and now was the time to pin it a bit.

I dropped some more riders on Telemark road and after the last climb there was only one rider about 15 seconds in front of me.  By the time I came into the bowl at the finish I had narrowed the gap to about 5 seconds and was able to sneak by him by the time we hit the finish line.  Hey you never know, that rider could be the difference between being able to say top 200 or top 150.  Just sayin…

Finish...and cashed

You know my story when it comes to racing.  If you can’t be the fastest you should at least try to look fast.  Well, I will set my humility aside for a second and say that I was fast on Saturday.  My time was 4 minutes slower but I placed a very respectable 112 th.  I enjoy telling stories from the middle of the race pack but on Saturday that is not the case…this is the story from someone a bit further up.

I enjoyed the race for about 30 minutes.  After that I started to think about the places where I could have gone faster, what I can do for next year to go faster, and I started to think, if only I could have gone faster.  So is the life of racing.  I can’t hide the competitive nature that is a part of me.

But helping to keep it in perspective are these two…

Maybe a future biker...

Mini mechanic

Single Swizzle

Sturgie

Walmart Group Ride

1st collector for Walmart Group Ride
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It seems like it is a tradition to gather one day on Labor Day weekend and ride THIS course so that we know what to expect for THIS race.  Eight of us met at the Walmart Parking lot and by the time we hit Mosquito Brook our group swelled to fifteen.  Fifteen pretty fast riders and great athletes.

My take on what the course will be like for this years race – wet, dry, muddy, sandy, rocky, damp, grassy, hard pack, rooty, smooth and for sure bumpy.  You can expect anything and everything in this one….just sayin.

Single Swizzle

Sturgie