Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Couple Tours and Some Flowers

Getting along pretty nicely over here at the moment.  2 cheeky South African juniors have arrived for a 3 month stink at The Barn.  I have yet to take them to the canal or the local uphill pavĂ© section to rip them a new one, still have a few months crush the morale, ha. Bloody good vibes with a pretty much full barn, good yarns and good weather. Times like this I wish I wouldn’t get deported if I hopped the fence and joined the 8 year olds next door in their pool.  Bloody PC madness.

Been a fair amount of racing in the past month so it could be a lengthy read but I think its procrastination time of year for the scarfies so I’d be glad to aid you in your B-.

Overijse Kermesse was the first decent piece of meat I had bagged this year, making the break and taking out the 50euro intermediate sprint prime, like the hulking sprinter I am.  We were then caught by a few more riders and later in the race, 3 going off the front and me hesitating too much otherwise I could have had a podium there.  Pumped in a solid 5th at the end, coming away with a decent spend up at the Carrefour! 100euro in the pocket, good day out.

Next up was a tour I had targeted from the start of the year, Triptyque Ardennais, a three day tour with a pretty savage last day.  Was bloody good having a familiar face with old mate Hayden Mccormick singing the Snoop Dogg Wiggle song to me from across the other side of the pelo.  Etape 1 was a bit of a dog fight to be honest with no one in control of the race and no leader.  5 guys got a slight gap at the finish and that ended up being the deciding break of the tour.  Unfortunately I was caught behind a crash at 300m to go, so just rolled in with the same time.  After crushing some raw spuds and dodgy meatloaf for tea, it was time to tackled the next stage.  Etape 2 wasn’t hard enough to split the bunch so the leading team BMC had everything under control and ended up as a bunch kick where I was just outside a top 20 at 22nd.  Tea – Green beans this time.  The last etape was a pretty savage day with two decent burgs on the local laps.  I threw a bit of spice down over the top of the last climb to step clear with the swiss express, Kung, and some other joker but it was to no avail.  After that I only had a short time to muster what I had left in the seasoning draw for a wee gallop for the finish line, where I was just shy of the top 10 at 12th.  The final GC standings a the end of the tour were pretty tight and ended up 10th U23 and 16th overall, only 1 second off 5th place.

Tour de Gironde was next on the hit list, a 4 day, 5 stage, UCI 2.2 Tour down around the Bordeaux area in France.  Real nice place to have a wee pedal.
After our shocking TTT, all GC aspirations went out the window.  From then on I was just trying to make it as hard as possible.  I spent a lot of time off the front with no triumph at the end but it was good to go toe to toe with the pro feeder teams for Katusha and Euskadi, who were no stronger than I was, which was a good sign for the future!  Also who would have thought I would have got a kick arse curry for tea in Bordeaux! Unreal, morale was sky high.  

After the tour had finished, I experienced one of the weirdest evenings of my life.  Our team, the only one there, went to this random almost -you can't escape- kind of places for an after tour function and tea.  Greeted with a future French 4 man Mumford & Sons jazz band, who had not aged well at all, proceeded to try to pick up old French ladies with solo trumpet, sax and banjo performances that we prayed didn't come our way, ha!  In the next room I was half expecting dinner but there were other plans, which consisted of a congo type line and grab a few duck legs and spuds on the way past.  There was far too much Frenchness in the one place, like a different planet. The French, what are you going to do.

Last weekend I was getting it done at the Linden Kermesse.  Snapped up a solid podium only beaten by two BMC devo riders who put me to work chasing one and then the other. One of the harder ways to get beaten ha.  Still, pretty chuffed with another decent payout, a trophy to stamp my name in The Barn’s history of riders and some flowers that my big mouth had been promising my host mum, Christel, since last year! 

Other than pushing pedals, Eurosport has been pulling its weight on the Cycling and Tennis front: Giro d’Italia, Rolland Garros, Wimbledon, Tour de France, US Open and Vuelta Espana all showing over the summer! Good stuff.

Currently sitting in 31 degrees, UV’s are giving me a hiding.  Finally Belg is cranking up the heat! Next up is a series of one day races, 3 within the week.  Should be some more stories to be told after that! Tune in.

Cheers

Vess





The lads lapping around wine country in Bordeaux


Trying to get my gallop on for the last stage


Team Preso in Bordeaux


Could get used to this


Overijse Kermesse - 5th


Number was as big a the front page of the sport section


Maastricht goes real good


So much more room for activities



French Mumford & Sons + 50 years

Tuesday, 29 April 2014

Early Season Trials + A Subtle Plug

Gidday Team

Back by popular demand! Ha that one will cost you a few stubbies Tui.

Been a long time since the last write up so could be a little rusty.
Since arriving in Europe, I have hit three major races with a couple going a little wayward.

1.1 Pro GP Cerami

Cerami was the first race back on Euro soil and plunged straight into the deep end with a 200k pro race.  If you don’t make the break in these races and the break is less than 5 guys, it makes for a pretty leisurely day on the bike until you hit the local laps.  With around 40k to go the pelo started smoking along to pull in the EB and line up for a bunch kick.  Unfortunately for me I flatted out of the race with 10k from the finish.  A decent hit out for the first race back into the swing of things.

U23 Liege-Bastogne-Liege

This was a race I wanted to do well in, I knew it would be difficult but was keen to give it a crack anyway.  It’s a hilly race with 4 or so of the most famous Ardennes climbs and the u23 version of the pro classic.  At the start of the race it was full tap with every man and his dog trying to make the break, I decided it was best for me not to get involved in that and conserve a bit of gas for later in the deciding moments.  During the narrow roads and dangerous parts I had my brilliant reindeer teammates towing Santa’s spicy sleigh in an armchair ride at the front, avoiding the kamikaze Belgies behind.  Over the major climbs I made all the front select groups, however on the last major climb, the La Redoute I could quite make the front few riders and had to settle to finish in the second group watching the front ride away.  Little bit guttered on this but can’t really beat myself up too much.  Didn’t have the legs on the day, got a few years in u23 so will be on the hit list next year!

1.2 Paris-Mantes

From what I remembered of last years version of this was the 3 rooms with one double bed between 6 riders, so I was stoked to see two beds per room this year! No one was going to roll over and be the involuntary little spoon, phew.  Although when I decided to room with Van de Maale I wasn’t aware that he is bike rider by day and foghorn by night.  The best way I could describe it would be my old second hand Honda XL100 moto with the burnt out spark plug trying to kick start the bastard.  Accurate description I reckon, it’s for sale too, nice rig.  Anyway, onto the race.

180k of hills that really suited me.  We had and 8am start which was less than ideal to smash some tucker down at 6am then make my way to the start.  The first part of the race I went too early for the wrong move and missed the EB, however the jommes were feeling peppy and at the 120k mark me and one other dude bridged the 45sec gap to the leading 8 or so, putting myself in a good spot to start looking at a decent result.  However on that thought, another group of 15 or so made the junction across the gap with 25k to go.  A few greasy Frenchies slipped off front and we were left to fight it out for the remaining few places.  In the bunch kick I was tracking for a top 10 overall but I dropped my balls a little bit when a rouge back wheel came out in front of me and settled for 21st instead.  Not the result I thought the legs were capable of but not bad all the same.

In other non-racing news, could be getting a new barn mate in the next week or so.  Just waiting on the UCI License or something! Be a good change from running solo for a while.  The have a couple of junior SAFA’s coming at the end of May/start of June.  The barn will be buzzing.

Until then,

Stay classy you lot.


Vess.



 New Barn Resident, sans rent the cheeky thing
 First oops of the season
 Watched a bit of Fleche Wallone. HuyHuyHuy
 New Pony
Actual Pony