Imperial Winter Series 2009/10: 4th Cat, 23 January 2010

Imperial Winter Series 4th Cats, 23 January 2010 by Lucy Collins

(Photo by Lucy @ Imperial RT who organises the Winter Series)

There I am, another futile attack, this time trying to go after the mid-race prime. Went too early in pursuit of my friend James Curry (on the right of shot), both of us reaching our limits well before the line and were swamped by the field.

So I’ve no idea what the prize was. I’m now determined to find out before the end of the series. It seems like a reasonable alternative to trying to score points. Priorities? Yes, I know.

The rest of the race consisted of throwing a couple of digs in and trying to work on keeping myself positioned in the middle to front third of the bunch which always feels like the least safe place to be in a 4th Cat race.

The back third is of course where the real trouble and on the last lap someone had “a moment” in the middle of the bunch and squirted off across the U-bend at the start of the lap. Cue scattering riders heading onto the grass and hauling on brakes in desperation.

Yes I was behind it, no it didn’t affect the likelihood of me scoring points. I rolled across the line in the stragglers. Next week, there is always next week.

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Signing Pereiro is Contador’s smartest move

A lot of people have seen the signing of Oscar Pereiro Sio as simply an attempt to bolster the Astana squad with an experienced rider who can be there when it matters in the high mountains.

His ability to sacrifice his own interests in working for Alejandro Valverde over the last few years will have been a characteristic that appealed greatly to Contador. This isn’t a guy who is going to give him grief or take off in search of a stage win while the real battle is happening behind.

That’s pretty vital to a guy who has lost his trusty domestique Sergio Paulinho to Radioshack. Contador still faces having to ride on someone else’s team with the return of Alexandre Vinokourov to “his” Astana team.

What is so brilliant about signing Pereiro is that it’s a very astute political move given the situation.

We can assume that ASO are going to be asking questions about Astana’s inclusion on the basis of Vinokourov’s presence. They’ve not forgiven him for his actions in 2007 which essentially amounted to kicking them in the balls while they were out cold after the Floyd Landis debacle.

Now name the only team in cycling with two Tour de France winners on their roster.

The answer is Astana with Alberto Contador and Oscar Pereiro.

The former is the defending champion who was unable to defend his title in 2008 because of the repercussions for Astana of Vinokourov’s ban.

The latter is the rider robbed of his moment of glory on the podium in Paris as a result of Floyd Landis’ ban.

In pure political terms the weight of their achievements/history combined may be the necessary counter to Vinokourov’s disgrace, which still drags like ten tonnes of shit behind Astana.

We know that being defending champion in 2008 wasn’t enough on its own to swing the balance in Contador’s favour, albeit the politics then included Johan Bruyneel on the scales.

Given the passing of time and their record, the two riders may be enough to convince ASO not to exclude Astana this year.

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Imperial Winter Series 2009/10: 4th Cat, 17 January 2010

Imperial Winter Series 4th Cats, 17 January 2010

(Photo by Lucy @ Imperial RT who organises the Winter Series)

See that rain? I’ve not ridden in anything quite so torrential in ages. Or so cold.

On the plus side my white Mavic Razors are not as muddy as they were and look almost white. It’s not that I’m too lazy to clean them at home, it’s just I’ve not found a way of doing it without making the sort of mess that gets small children sent to bed without their supper.

The conditions presented an attire question: Wear a rain jacket, gilet or no waterproof? In the end I went with none of the above and stuck with a baselayer and midweight jersey.

I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m the sort of rider who heats up a lot and sweats it out so when racing in winter I need to find a balance so I don’t end up soggy and cold. But mainly the issue is ending up cold.

The baselayer is one of the best I have found anywhere. It’s by Falke and has been good enough to keep me feeling comfortable down to -20 in at Kicking Horse. I think it’s their Athletic Warm long sleeve.

Men, ask your most trusted female friends and they’ll probably roll their eyes in despair that you’ve only just discovered Falke. I got mine in TK Maxx (Hammersmith and High Street Kensington) ridiculously cheap. Good fortune as I’ve found them harder to track down elsewhere.

I’ve never felt damp or overheated in the baselayer and the fit is such that I barely notice it. Not feeling the garment when you’re wearing it is always a hallmark of good quality gear for me.

Back to the race.

On the right day I quite like racing in the rain. I can handle my bike pretty well by my reckoning and so cornering in the wet doesn’t terrify me. Plus there’s a bit more respite when it’s wet.

The key tip for riding well in the wet is tyre pressure. I ran my Vittoria Open Pav´e; s at between 85 and 95 PSI which sounds low but gives a very smooth and predictable ride, the latter being key in the wet. The Open Pav´e; just looks right on a bike in the wet which is equally important.

I’ve been riding my Ridley Crossbow all winter and I’ve been using it for everything. It copes pretty well with racing as it does cyclocross and commuting. I like that in a winter bike. Biggest gear is 46/12 and at no point at Hillingdon did I feel undergeared for the level.

I spent most of the race trying to sit in the middle of the bunch and I think I did so better than my previous race. Still need to concentrate on not drifting backwards too easily.

There were a few digs but nothing that ever looked like sticking, so it was more a case of staying out of trouble and avoiding the splits that occur in the wet when riders aren’t confident through corners.

I stayed up near the front when it started to get a bit lively in the final few laps. Still a few places too far back to be useful and wasted too much energy trying to move up for the sprint.

When it came I was about 15 back but already on my limit so sat up down the back straight. There’s no point in burying yourself when you’re badly positioned and in no danger of getting a point.

For a different perspective on the race try James Curry or The Cycling Lawyer, Martin Porter, both of whom I race with fairly regularly at the moment and who were in the bunch as well.

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