26-27 April 2013: The Tour of the South West.
Word of advice from last year’s competitors – it’s windy. And it certainly was,
in fact, way windier than I’d thought.
Surfing the wind in the TT (Photo by Jo Upton) |
Stage 1 – 68km Road Race –
Brekkie up my throat, trust your instincts
It
was a mad scramble to make it to the 8am race start – and the howling wind had
already swallowed my number plate off the roof rack before we started. A
smaller field of 15 women in B grade took the start line and from the gun, we
were already battling the wind. The dominant HCC crew were leading out as we
approached the first QOM
– a 700m 3.8% climb. Both the known climbers – Verita (Total Rush) and Liz Douel
(WCC) pushed the pace, but were taken aback by the unexpected head wind up the
climb. Instinctively, I clicked into the big dog and did a seated effort,
leaving the sprint to the very last minute. I had just managed to take the
first QOM
points – and boy, I could feel my breakfast already halfway up my throat!! The
next section was a block head wind, followed by a strong cross-wind. Coming
into the first sprint points, Maartje (SKCC) pulled out a monster sprint, and
convincingly took out the first sprint points.
The
next 3 laps – attack, attack, attack. Both Meg Marsh (HCC) and Caroline
Phillips (Southern Masters) put in some really strong attacks in the
cross-winds sections, nonetheless, the field was quick to react, and nothing
really stuck. I tried driving the pace in the gutter, same thing – nothing
strong enough to break the field. And it
was getting windier and windier too! Same strategy up the QOM , and managed to take out the polka dot
jersey – awesome! On each sprint point, Maartje seemed to be getting quicker
and quicker, with each winning gap growing convincingly bigger.
Last
lap. 5km to go. Meg was driving the pace up front. Finding shelter was almost
impossible, and trying to hold our bikes upright with the cross winds was half
the battle. A sudden gust of wind nearly took my front wheel out, and I’d just
managed to hold it up. 500m to go as we approached the slight uphill to the
finish line. 350m to go – it’s insane to go such a long way out – “trust your
instincts” - but this was the only way I
could beat a faster sprinter – now or never.
I kicked hard into the wind. Drove as hard as I could for the line. I
pumped my fist - I’d just won Stage 1!!
Meg driving the bunch on Stage 1 (Photo by Jo Upton) |
Pumped to win Stage 1 (Photo by Michael Mcritchie) |
Stage 2 – 12.7km ITT – Don’t fight the bike
Yellow.
I’ve let this slip away before – I wanted this bad. But this was all going to
come down to the time trial. I’ve always seemed to hit a rut in races against
the clock – pursuits, prologue, time trials – just couldn’t seem to get it.
Further, I was up against some very well-known TT riders in the field.
I’d
spent ages the night before messing around with the new bike. Getting the
brakes to work, making sure the gears worked, trying to fit the wheel in,
tightening up the lose headset. No mechanical support unfortunately. Lucky
Kosdown TT gurus Shane Miller and Stephen
Lane were in the room to offer advice! In my haste
to get to the start line, I’d forgotten my TT helmet. Haven’t quite mastered
the art of perfection yet. Bugger.
Luckily James Pane came to the rescue and offered me his.
Warm-up
done. From the gun, it was a block cross-wind. I quickly revved up to speed.
“Don’t go too hard at the start, don’t push too big a gear!” I focused on
getting into my TT HR zone and settled into a nice cadence. The cross wind was
strong, attempting to menacingly throw me off the bike. I tucked my head lower. I could see the
front-markers in the distance. “Don’t fight the bike!” And as I started to
‘relax’ the shoulders a little, going with the wind, focusing every bit of
energy into the legs – it started to fall into place. The speed on the Garmin kept increasing – I
was surfing the wind!!
Unlike
previous TT’s where I would be so consumed about trying to catch the riders in
front, today it didn’t matter. It was just me, and the bike, and the road
ahead. Nothing else. Every time I felt myself tensing, I’d loosen up and bring
the focus to just keeping the cadence up. I’d made a big mistake in the block
headwind section up the hill. The gear was way too big. I should have changed
into the small ring earlier on. Hill done, lucky I didn’t blow the legs, I was
nearly home.
The
results didn’t come out till the next morning. I wasn’t sure how I had gone.
19.57. I had pulled something out way beyond expectations – I had cracked the
TT rut! A win – and I was absolutely stoked!!
Focus.. (Photo by Michael McRitchie) |
Stage 3 – Hang on
Still
buzzing from the day before’s result, all I had to do was hold on to the time
lead. Racing a crit around a cemetery was kinda spooky. The wet roads from the
morning’s rain made for a very fast course, and a nasty 7.5% hill in the middle
was going to make for some interesting racing.
A
couple of mini attacks up the hill, though a block headwind up the top meant
nothing really stuck. I was content with holding on to GC position, and with
the fast descent, tried to stay near the front to avoid any mishaps.
Intermediate sprint #1 and Maartje won that easy. It was easy to settle into a
rhythm – exactly like the hill reps at training – and the 30mins flew by real
quick. Before I realised, it was bell lap!
Liz
Douel put in a very strong attack up the climb, with Maartje straight onto her
wheel. I followed suit, pulling Nina along with me. We managed to get a break
before the fast descend, and Liz was still on the front, determined to pull all
the way through. Maartje got the jump out of the last corner, and was way too
quick for any of us, taking the win with a convincing sprint! I rolled in 2nd
place, with Nina in 3rd.
I was
absolutely stoked to finally wear a Yellow jersey! And a Polka Dot jersey –
totally unexpected! After a long run of second places last year – I’ve been
training hard on both climbing and time-trialling – the two weaknesses that’s
now finally started to reap results at a tour. A great confidence booster to
keep training and improving – it’s still a long road ahead to continue
achieving my dreams.
GC podium with Carolyn and Liz. |
Yellow Jersey! |
Went with the 1 jersey I own, came back with 4 , and a whole heap of nail polish too! :) |
Huge
congratulations to the other podium winners Carolyn Phillips, Liz Doueal, Meg
Marsh and Manuela Marasco, and Sprint Jersey winner Maartje Munsterman, who all raced very strongly throughout the
weekend. And to the other women who each made it a great weekend of racing. I
was certainly impressed at the organisation of the tour – and to have the
sponsors themselves presenting to the winners. The success on the weekend
wouldn’t have been without the help of many who helped me focus on racing
namely – Gavin Bryant who drove me to and from the race, Ben Pascall and Emma
Pane for their support on the weekend, and James Pane for coming to the rescue
with his TT helmet. Thanks to Cycling Victoria and the volunteers for the
organisation, photographers Jo Upton and Michael McRitchie for capturing the
moments (check out Jo’s photo’s here and Michael's site here), and my coach, Simon Quick for all his
patience in training to get me here.
A
couple more weeks of training, and it’s back to Malaysia to race for the first
time! Can’t wait!!!
Congratulations Grace. You are doing great lately.
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