Only a few minutes into the 50 mile race and I was already pushing my physical limits. From the gun a
group of ten riders had immediately broken away from the pack and I was trying
desperately to go with them. It was madness I had no hope of maintaining this
kind of pace for another 4-5 hours, so gradually I made the decision to let
them slip away. I had to hope that they had misjudged their pace and would come
back to me as the day unfolded.
Such had been the frenetic pace over the opening miles, that there was nobody insight behind. I
found myself isolated. Judging the distribution of effort in a marathon race is
hard - especially without a reference. It would be all too easy to lose
concentration and slip pack towards the chasing pack, who were undoubtedly
somewhere in the forest behind me!
Despite the sunny weather there was a surprising amount of standing water to be navigated.
I rode several sections with feet unclipped, raised high to prevent soggy
socks! Grip was also very poor. Having ridden around Deepcut twice in the past
three weeks I was familiar with the trails, but wasn’t able to attack them as
we had a fortnight ago. The hours ticked past and the passage of riders moved
the water aside, so conditions did improve significantly, leaving a nicely
consistent flowing course. On the first lap I waited for the hill which never
came, instead the course undulated backwards and forwards. Frequently just the
other side of the trees riders would be streaming in the opposite direction on
a totally different part of the lap.
Blindly following the
tape and arrows I began to wonder if I was the only person in the race! After a
couple of laps it was a relief to finally catch some back markers, but it is so
hard to get past on tired legs. All too easily you slot in behind them and find
yourself moving at their pace instead of yours. You need to repeatedly find the
energy to push past when the opportunity arises. A friendly shout works on some
who peal to the side, others intent on their own race are not so generous.
I’d paced myself well and was able to push for
the line on the final lap in the hope that there was somebody ahead whose legs
were more tired than mine. After 4 hours those undulations began to feel like
proper inclines!
As it happens one
rider ahead had punctured so I was pleased to finish in the top ten, minutes
clear of the nearest rider behind. The self motivation to keep pushing and my pacing
were positives to take forward for next week.
Unfortunately the mud was probably
good practice too for Scotland, however I severely doubt that there will be the
same lack of hills on Saturday!
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