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In the (Feed)Zone
w/Mark Swartzendruber
Memorial
Day Weekend
Debutante Hausfrau And The Legends of the Flail
Flyover
country features a number of tradition rich Memorial Day Weekend
races. Chief among them is The Greatest Spectacle In racing
The
Rock Island Criterium. There are also a couple of smaller less significant
races called the Indy 500 and the Loews 600, but the Rock Island
Criterium features more carnage, human debris and spectacular crashes
than either of the two combined. The race has human drama, gut wrenching
accidents, a fully fenced in race course completely absent of hay
bales or padding for the garbage cans and street light poles. The
latter promises at least a dozen Category 3's and a handful of other
racers spread out among the categories from 10 year old juniors
to 50+ year old huffenpuffs will be carted off in meat wagons. It's
the worst race in the country on one of the worst courses, but that
doesn't keep the fields from filling to overflowing with dreamers
in search of a big paycheck or masters hoping to rekindle the flickering
light of their glory days.
The
Hooterville contingent of Team Estridge/Delta Faucet found the lure
of large fields, big money and new faces to races against too strong
to resist. Legend has it that when Hooterville residents apply for
racing licenses, they are fitted with collars that deliver low voltage,
but painful jolts of electricity should they dare cross the state
line to race a bike. Last year, Johnnie the Mole and Der Hausfrau
through great effort and permission from their wives, actually took
the dare of a drunken former bike racer from Hooterville, claiming
he actually raced outside of Hooterville. The drunk with a yellow
campy cycling cap claimed the shock collars were simply a fear tactic,
not actual working devices. Huasfrau and The Mole found the drunk
-a former little 500 winner named Dave - to have been telling the
truth and ended up racing in TN, MO, IL, OH and many other exotic
venues. This year, Nooner and Wun Tun left Hooterville at great
personal risk to join in the Memorial Day Weekend merriment as well.
As
with most major races, there are warm up events. The Iowa Memorial
Day Weekend races typically lead off with a dead flat 80 mile hammer
along the Mississippi River from Burlington Iowa to Wapello Iowa
and back. It starts at 4:00 on Friday afternoon and generally ends
before 7:00 pm in a bunch gallop. It's a race in which the promoter
allows up to 200 entrants, professional through category 3 and on
a flat, wide open course, you can imagine the mess it makes of the
highway. The fabled Snake Alley Criterium follows on Saturday. Lenny
Kravitz won the 40+ race this year and ancient mariner Steve Tilford
won the Pro 1,2 event. Team Estridge opted to do defy tradition.
This served a two-fold purpose. It eased the Hooterviallian's transition
west of the Wabash River and the ABD cycling club was putting up
big money for old people to play around an office park on their
bikes in the West Chicago suburb of Lombard. The course was a 1.1
mile flat 4 corner crit. The fabled Snake Alley Criterium features
a cobbled 20% climb of 300 meters 12 times per race for the old
guys. Snake Alley pays a purse of $350 over 8 places and the new
Lombard Criterium offered One Thousand Seven Hundred and Fifty ($1750)
over 15 places to the 40+ field. You guess which the better attended
was.
Lombard
Criterium
91
racers stage, ranging from former Olympic team member Tom Doughty
of the Discovery Team Masters to some fat clubber with a tool kit
on his seat post and a mirror on his helmet. During the warm up,
Team Delta was riding trainers. I offered some strategy to Nooner,
Wun Tun, Johnnie the Mole and Der Hausfrau, "Listen up. Since
you guys have never been seen at Stoopid Weak, or any other race
of consequence outside of Hooterville, no one knows how good you
are. These guys also don't know what poor condition I'm in. I'm
willing to be the Huckleberry. I'll make a bunch of attacks early
and these knuckleheads will turn themselves inside out to get on
my wheel, because I'm known to tow wheel leeches to the finish line
in big races. Anyway, once the peckerheads are tuckered out, one
of you unknown Hoosiers should sneak off while everyone is waiting
for me to attack again. We all agreed that if nothing else, it was
a plan.
During
the race, I slogged around the course luring the nims to chase while
Der Hausfrau embarrassed everybody in the field who fancied themselves
a sprinter by taking every cash prime by at least 3 bike lengths
and Johnnie the Mole snuck off unimpeded into a break. Nooner and
Wun Tun immediately moved forward with Druber and Hausfrau to frustrate
bridge attempts. Since the sMACKs had one guy in the break and 27
guys in the field, they did what they do best - moving forward and
going slow to help the break stay away. The break was pegged at
20 second or so for a half hour. Nooner, Wun Tun and I were unable
to do a proper lead out for fear of driving the field into the break
so we simply let the field bunch up for the last two laps. Hausfrau
of course won the field sprint, Johnnie the Mole finished second
and the weekend was off to a lucrative start.
Sunday
is my favorite day of the weekend. The Melon City Crit is hosted
by Greg Harpers's bike shop in Muscatine, IA. Greg has the best
venue of the weekend, in a beautiful city park on a bluff overlooking
the Mississippi River. It's a smooth one mile course a sweeping
downhill and a nice little ¼ mile climb of 6%. This year,
the 40+ field was fast, strong and deep. Despite racing in a steady
rain, the course was fast and safe. Several break attempts were
made but were short lived. The pace was high. With 3 to go Flick-n-sMACK
moved to the front to drive the field but it was bunching up. I
moved up to second wheel followed by Der Hausfrau
"Patient
Patient
Patient!"
Hausfrau was giving me instructions. Feeling the swarm coming with
2 to go, I went to the front on the downhill and drove it. Stone
Pony, representing the C-U racing club made a strong move up the
hill and took the bell with a 50 meter gap. "I'm right here,
Drive! I'm right behind you, keep it going. Haufrau was there every
time I checked under my arm. With Stone Pony burying himself up
the road, I drove the train all the way down the hill at 40 per
to the base of the climb in pursuit. At the base of the climb we
caught Stone Pony and Der Hausfrau busted up the hill. I feared
he had gone too early. Exhausted, I looked up the hill and I was
limping in and saw Der Hausfrua make the left hand turn at the top
of the hill with a 2 bike length gap and knew he had it locked up.
The weekend continued to roll.
Melon
Ball 30+ race: Immediate attacks from several riders made the start
painful and when the attackers were caught, the pace would slow
momentarily and another attack would launch. I don't know why it
is, but whenever a course has a hill, everyone fancies themselves
to be Marco Pantani and attacks up the hill, only to peter out at
the top. The pace up the hill was relentless only to relax momentarily
on the downhill section. Within 10 minutes an attack went up the
road. Hausfrau bridged up and I sat at front. A rider from Florida
attacked up the hill toward the break on the next lap. I jumped
to his wheel on the hill. At the top of the climb, he looked at
me and said "C'mon!" Looking back and noting the clear
gap, I drove around the park to the base of the climb. With the
break 5 seconds ahead of us up the hill, the Peckerhead attacked
me to get to the break. It was a low class move but he would debase
himself further later on. I struggled alone for another half lap
before catching on to the back of the break.
The
break worked up to a 1:30 lead as Johnnie the Mole kept the hounds
at bay back in the pel. One rider who kept attacking eventually
got a 5 second gap over the break and held it for a half lap. Hausfrau,
decided that he'd best get there but quick and exploded toward the
String Bean. The break chased and I got popped. After struggling
for 2 laps to bridge the gap to the move, I was blown. No excuses.
I'm not in shape. With the gap at 1:30 I was safe for not getting
caught before the finish. Up the hill on bell lap The FL Peckerhead
chopped Der Hausfrau off his bike. He had fully displayed his lack
of class, but he went on to win the race. Hausfrau had a dislocated
pinky finger but he got back on his bike in time to finish ahead
of the pel in 7th. I limped in for 6th.
The
Greatest Spectacle in Racing: Legends of the Flail
The
pre race call ups were down right embarrassing. Despite his dominance
of the previous days, Der Hausfrau was completely ignored as the
announcers fawned over hazbin masters who - because the Quad Cities
Criterium having such a storied past - make it the one race they
do for the season. While the ambulances were cleaning up the Cat
3 race, the announcers had plenty of time to kill while staging
the masters' field, so they used it to gush over the past heroes
of the sport who were toeing the line for the masters' race.
No
disrespect. Honestly. Tom Schuler - US Pro Champ and director of
Saturn, Timex and now Endeavor has been brilliant for cycling for
both men and women in developing and sustaining his program. Dan
King and Fabio Orlandi were truly great bike racers of the 70's
and early 80's. Jeff Bradley rode as a field sprinter in the Tour
de France, before anyone knew Americans could bike race. The announcers
in an effort to tout the field of old huffnpuffs to the crowd even
invoked the name of The Boering One further propagating the Olympian
myth. Der Hausfrau just took it all in stride. He's been racing
a long time as well, but a man without an ego never takes offense.
Let the Legends have their moment in the sun. God knows they labored
in obscurity back when they were in their prime. The sports writers
in the US didn't even know bike racing was a sport back in the pre
Armstrong Days.
The
Rock Island Crit is a favorite for Midwest Masters. As evidenced
by the riders who come out of the woodwork to make this their one
appearance of the year, one need not be fit to stay in the race.
One only needs a set of testes the size of oranges to endure the
danger. Squeezing 8 corners into a little over 1 kilometer necessitates
short straights and tight corners that serve to limit top end speeds.
The Lovely Kathy inquired of one of the volunteer corner marshals
why the concrete buttresses and wrought iron fencing lining the
streets weren't fronted with hay bales. The answer was, the straw
comes loose and makes the course "too slick for the riders.
It's dangerous." Lovely Kathy turned Jersey on this poor sap
at that point. Sounding like Mona Lisa Vito in "My Cousin Vinny"
the retort was "Oh, and the 2 painted faux brick cross walks
and 5 manhole covers per corner don't make the course dangerous
ya dickhead?"
The
race started, I went to the front at lap two and stayed there for
a couple of laps. The field was single file, which is how it's best
on this course. Every once in a while some guys would attack and
guys would chase and it would get back together and the sMACKs would
send a flailer off the front. The field would line up, the sMACK
would get caught another would go off the front and sit 20 meters
up the road for a while ad infinitum. I've been fighting femoral
tendonitis for a few weeks and the pain flared up. I withdrew about
halfway through the race, much to Kathy's relief and so help me,
as I pulled up lame between turn 7 and 8 I had 5 guys on my wheel!
I kid you not. "Uh, guys
I'm withdrawing, you may want
to go rejoin the field." Habits are hard things to break.
Anyway,
Hausfrau patiently stayed 2nd or 3rd wheel the entire rest of the
race. With 2 to go, I looked over to The Lovely Kathy and said,
"Hausfrau is going to win this race". At that same point
the announcers were still fawning over the once a year hazbins.
I quote:
Announcer #1: "Who do you think will win this race? Schuler?
Bradley?"
Announcer #2: "I have two words for you. Dan King"
Seeing
the race bunch up, with only one lap to go big track sprinter Wun
Tun, bolted forward and got the field strung out through turns 2-6.
Schuler and Bradley were probably working an old school co-op because
Shuler busted down the back stretch way too early to be thinking
of a win of his own but he had Bradley on his wheel. Hausfrau jumped
off of Wun Tun onto Bradley's wheel. Bradley overcooked turn 7 and
careened out of control over one of the afore mentioned manhole
covers leaving Der Hausfrau clear to churn through turn 8 and the
final 150 meters to the finish line for the V with enough room to
give a two arm salute. The weekend was complete.
Glory
Days,
They'll pass you by
Glory Days,
In the flash of
Der Hausfrau's thigh
Post
race interview:
Announcer
#1: "Hausfrau, how did you ever manage to overcome the incredible
odds and win a bike race against these poorly conditioned former
professional bike racers, who have long since seen their best
days?
Hausfrau:
"Well, I think you answered your own question. "
Announcer
#1: "I'm serious. I mean these guys used to be REALLY, REALLY
good, and you have those veal cutlet legs; you'd have to admit
this is the upset of the century. We didn't even give you a call
up for crying out loud!"
Hausfrau:
Well, I don't know about my legs and why they don't have any muscular
definition, but I do train hard. Anyone know how Bradley's doing?
He hit the pavement pretty hard back there. It didn't look pretty."
Anyway, I suppose I only won because he crashed.
Announcer
#1: "But these guys are legends! I mean just yesterday I
heard The Boering One tell a blue coat that he had over 4000 races
under his belt!"
Hausfrau:
"That's like 100 races a year for 40 years. Or 200 races
a year for 20 years. However you add it up, it's more likely that
Wilt Chamberlain actually did sleep with over 20,000 women."
Anyway, I gotta get out of here. I left my kids with the in-laws
and I'd imagine that after 3 days, they need a break. The in-laws,
not the kids. See ya, and thanks."
Announcer
#1: "One more question. Weren't you intimidated to be on
the same course with the aforementioned legends?"
Hausfrau:
"I respect the heck out of those guys, but take away the
20 year old resume that gets dusted off once a year for this race
and each of those guys are just another gray haired dough boy
stuffed into a hot pink and chartreuse skin suit. This sport is
all about how hard you work at it right now, not 20 years ago."
With
that, the Hausfrau got his wheels from the pit and rode off. He
could be heard singing
The
best thing
About bein' a Hausfrau
Is bein' able to kick some
Legendary ass
Woah, Oh Oh
Makin' me crazy
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