Well an expensive day out, but more of that later.
Last year I had sworn that I would never ride a 12-hour again having finished in a completely wrecked state. It was a week before I could eat anything other than soup
So why was I doing it? A very good question which I still haven't worked out the answer to. Well 3 of us were down on the startsheet (Paul T, Tamar and me) and we all needed to finish to defend last year's team victory.
Riding a 12-hour is more a logistical challenge than a race. I'd left it to the last minute to enter and was thus a bit behind on the preparation. Managed to blackmail a brother into getting up at 4.00am in the morning to come and drive my support team (aka Joyce) around the course.
Tuesday was bike preparation day. 5 minutes to raise the bars and put on some better gearing (for some reason Joyce was adamant that 56x11 was not the right gear to ride a 12-hour on
). Come friday evening having finally changed the gear cables (too short) the bike was ready to go, or at least I hoped it was.
That left saturday for food shopping. For a 100 it's a case of a few bottles of Go and some gels. For 12 hours that diet is not an option. Part of the art of riding a 12 hour is to get the calories in as quickly as you are using them. If you don't you bonk. Too many sugary drinks have an unwelcome effect on my stomach, and vomiting isn't an effective way of absorbing your calories
So bread, jam, ham, fig rolls, milk (skimmed), that really artificial stuff you can put in milk to make it taste like milkshake
, complan ... all needed to be purchased.
Then sort out the plates, cups, tea towels, stove, etc.
Then pack the car.
8.30pm on Saturday and everything sorted. Oops one thing missing, the training. The longest ride I had managed this year was 105 miles (the ECCA 100 and then 5 miles back from the finish to the HQ the b*****ds). I was also suffering after effectively having 3 weeks off the bike whilst I was on holiday, then ill. Since then results had not been good including a DNF at 40 miles in the SCCU 100.
Well given that plan was to go off steady and see what happened. At least the weather couldn't be any worse than last year
Sunday morning, collect Joyce, get to HQ put bike together, apply plenty of nappy cream to chamois then all set. Weather looked a bit grim, but it was dry and not too chilly. Decided to start without arm warmers and see how it went.
Off I toddle to the start (bonus point about 12-hours, no need to warm up
). Set off on the first leg which took us down the A11/14 past Newmarket. Settle into a nice steady rhythm, aiming to ride at about 225 watts. Everything fine with the world. The Newmarket weather forecast I'd been looking at predicting heavy rain all morning was obviously wrong
Get to Newmarket and it starts pouring
I can't really remember quite how much it rained (blanked out of my memory) and I do remember at one point I thought we were drying out only to get soaked again, but my abiding memory is thinking about whether to stop to get a waterproof and deciding it was pretty pointless as my kit (including my shoes
) were as saturated as it was possible to get.
Only good thing was that the wind was pretty light and I was bowling along nicely. Had told Joyce that my plan was to ride 4.5 hours for the first 100, 5 hours for the second and then either hang on or blow and die in the last couple of hours. Was well up on Schedule catching Joyce and Andrew napping at one of the feeds where they were still fast asleep in the car as I bowled by
Caught Tamar who had started 8 minutes in front of me at some point on this section which was good to know. Last thing my confidence needed was Tamar beating me and she was now safely behind me so I could relax a bit as long as she didn't come back past.
After 85 miles it was onto the morning circuit, as 12.5 mile loop around Six Mile Bottom. There is a horrible drag from Six Mile Bottom up to Newmarket which you go up every lap without ever seeming to get the benefit of going down
The rain continued to come and go but things were improving a bit. Warm sugary tea was the order of the day doing a sterling job as a carb-drink replacement in the wet and went down nicely with a couple of fig rolls and choccy biscuits at 11.00am.
Hit 100 miles in 4.13.00, so somewhat ahead of schedule. I think Joyce was having kittens about me going off too fast. I was fairly interested to see if and when I'd blow as everything was feeling nice and comfortable.
Caught Tamar again just after 100 miles and had a quick chat she pointed out Paul was just up the road (I suspected she may have been trying to catch him from the way she said it
) and sure enough shortly afterwards caught Paul. Quick chat, the obligatory Paul pulling alonside and half-wheeling me
and then he slowed for his feed as I tootled on.
An hour or so later and we were off the morning circuit and sent down to Royston to link to the afternoon circuit. Was expecting the wind to have got up a bit as it had just about dried out by now but wasn't too bad. The last bit of this link is one of the worst bits of the course with a climb coming at 7hours. I only have one chainring on the TT bike so heaved it up the climb in 53x29 and then had a strawberry milkshake and biscuits to celebrate kindly provided by Joyce and Andrew
After that it was onto the afternoon circuit and things were still going well. Power had dropped off slightly but average was still 222 watts and legs were a bit sore but nothing too bad.
Got to 200 miles in 8.56, so 4.43 for the second hundred and well up on schedule. I did the calculations in my head - 20 mph average to the end would make 261 miles, club record was 262 miles, I needed 265+ miles on my speedo as it was overreading slightly. I was averaging slightly better than 20 mph so as long as I kept it up it would be close. Downside was that I knew sooner or later it was going to hurt
Then comes one of the moments which makes you want to laugh or crying. Going along nicely, just passed one of the sponge/water points (who needs a sponge or water when you've spent 6+ hours in a shower
) mind not really on what I was doing and I crash into a water-filled pothole. No idea what's going on but know bike is not working. Off bike and quick check. Bike looks structurally sound, rear wheel seems fine and inflated, front wheel flat, but why all the noise? On the phone to the support car tell them I need a new wheel asap in meantime I will roll round circuit towards them on the flat. Back onto bike and start to roll on but bike does not like it. Slightly surprised as you can normally manage 10 or 15mph on a flat tub without too much problem. Just about to get off bike and stop when see Ruth Tunnell who is out supporting Paul. Quick negotiation about one of Paul's front wheels (thank you Ruth/Paul) some delay whilst we get an allen key to do wheel skewer, faffing around with wheel and then back on the bike.
Carry on round circuit and get to point where I have to break for traffic on main road and everything goes a bit pete tong. My carbon-specific brake pads appear to have no grip on Paul's metal rims and I always set the rear brake very light (normally there's no need for it and is you have big gap it's not going to drag if you bash the wheel out of true
). Somehow manage to avoid flying out in front of car, including putting bike a bit sideways and carry on. Shout for a new wheel as I go past Joyce/Andrew for the last time on the afternoon circuit and we then go onto the finishing circuit where I stop for the new wheel and normal braking is resumed.
I'd lost about 11 minutes on these 2 stops so all thought of any record had gone. That was a relief as I don't really like pain, and trying to pull out that extra bit to make up a few miles after you've already ridden for 10 hours didn't really appeal. So nice and steady round the finishing circuit, aiming to average 20mph. Sticky patch at about 1.5 hours to go but manage to ride through it and then perked up by coffee and choccy biscuits with half an hour to go - if you want a realy good caffeine/chocolate rush cycle for 11.5 hours before
Off on the last circuit and the aim was to make sure I'd got over 250 miles, if I had 255 on my speedo then I would be pretty sure. Hit 255 miles with about 4 minutes left. The last bit was into the headwind and I was pretty sure I would hit the timekeeper at the turn just as my time expired.
The killer about 12-hour races is that they are not 12 hours. Timekeepers are situated round the finishing circuit every couple of miles and when your 12 hours expire you have to keep going to the next timekeeper. It is a cruel and unusual punishment to tell your body that you only have to keep going for 12 hours to then add on another 5 minutes
Well I was pretty pleased with myself having timed it to arrive at the timekeeper just after 12 hours. I was looking at the watch and it ticked over to 6.02pm just as I got to the roundabout and there she was standing on the other side of the roundabout. The sppedo had clicked to 257 miles so the correct distance would be well over 250 miles. As I cruised round the roundabout people were shouting at me to keep it going. Bonkers I thought as I'd only got another 20 yards to go. And then the penny dropped. The woman at the side of the road wasn't a timekeeper but simply a checker to note people as they came round the turn, I had to still keep going
Fortunately the wind was now behind me and having done a deal with my legs that they could stop working as soon as I got to the next timekeeper I managed a bit of a spurt. Finishing with 258.8 miles on the speedo in 11h53 recorded time, about 12hrs 4 mins racing time.
Back at the HQ I felt a lot better than last year, I may even do it again next year. Provisional distance up on the result board was 254.5 miles. About 13 miles on my pb.
Unfortunately the team went to API who had 3 riders finish with 250+ miles.