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Category: Cycling Page 29 of 34

Shenandoah Mountain 100

And these are the top five spots in the 2007 edition of the Shenandoah Mountain 100 – (L to R) Chris Beck, Harlan Price, Jeff Schalk, Floyd Landis, and Gerry Pflug. For the details on the race, check out Sue George’s report at Cycling News. For a better handle on the vibe of the weekend, check out Joel Gwadz (whom you should be reading anyway).  For my view . . . well, you’re going to have to wait for that. The bitterness of someone who didn’t finish takes a while to subside, I’m discovering. A few of my pre and post race photos here.



Floyd Landis (3rd place) congratulates Shenandoah Mountain 100 winner Jeff Schalk (who won by such a wide margin that yes, he did have time to change his shirt . . .).

Photo by MJ. (I couldn’t have possibly taken this, as I was still suffering somewhere waay back on the course . . . ).

Update: don’t miss Harlan Price’s account of his day long battle at the SM100.

Off to the Shenandoah Mountains

To try something I really have no business doing.  Enjoy the Labor Day weekend.

Another of life’s ambitions accomplished . . .

Guess what I got?

WABA’s 50 States Ride this Saturday

The Washington Area Bicyclist Association is running it’s annual (well, it tries to be annual . . .) 50 States Ride this Saturday.  This ride will help me accomplish a goal I’ve had since I moved here 10 (!) years ago: it covers all 50 state streets in all 8 wards of the District.  According to WABA, it’s a 60+ mile ride.   Meet at the WABA offices (see below) at 7:30 am with the ride leaving at 8:00 am.

If that seems a bit much for you, but the idea sounds cool, consider WABA’s alternative offering:

[T]ry our shorter 15 mile 13 Original Colonies Tour. 13 Original Colonies Tour goes on each of the avenues named for one of the 13 original states.

Both rides will begin across the street from the WABA offices at 1753 Connecticut Avenue NW (the corner of S street and Connecticut Avenue NW).   I’ll be the guy in the Bibendum jersey on the Gary Fisher Sugar (which will look pretty silly with it’s Conti T&C’s, but it’s for a higher purpose, I keep telling myself . . .).

Friday Notes: Reviewing the Basics

Josh Marshall asks an obvious question about the validity of a bill that was signed by the President, but not passed by the House or Senate. Is there really a question here? And if so – was I’m Just a Bill on Capitol Hill all a pack of lies?

Speaking of having to concern ourselves with things that ought not to have occurred in the first place, you’ve probably heard about the problem with Pearl Jam’s webcast performance this past Sunday. One of AT&T’s webcast editors apparently cut out parts of the performance that were critical of Bush (a few lines, it seems). AT&T is blaming an overzealous editor, and is claiming no nefarious intentions. Which I’m perfectly willing to believe. But it still leaves me asking: what kind of culture do we have where it makes sense to you – an editor covering a Lollapalooza concert, for godsake – to dump a few mildly critical lines about the President? Are you that afraid? That bitter? It makes no sense to me.

And in the category of things that make no sense, you might have seen the amusing video of CNBC financial show host Jim Cramer’s on-air meltdown. Actually, it was only amusing if you didn’t listen to the details of what he was going on about. If you actually listened to him, it was really sort of nauseating. Short version: my free-market titans got too greedy trying to make money off of loans that never should have been made, so now we need the Fed to bail us out. Funny how that works, no? And even funnier is this annotated video of his meltdown, which details the sheer ridiculousness of it all.

~

And the Discovery Channel cycling team is dead.  Despite their having the most recent Tour de France winner, 8 TdF wins, and a solid roster of riders, they couldn’t come up with a sponsor.   Huh.

Le Tour est mort. Vive Le Tour!

Something was missing, this morning. It started off in the usual routine – grab a Diet Coke, sit down at my desk, check messages. Start the Slingbox client to have today’s stage on in the backgrou . . . oh.  Le Tour is over. And I miss it already.

I’m not sure how this happened, me becoming someone who values watching a sports event. I’ve never been much of a spectator – you couldn’t drag me to a football game, baseball games are only enjoyable for the lazing in the sun, and in any event, I’d much rather spend my time doing something than watching it. But something is different, with the Tour.

I ascribe much of it to an ability to identify with the riders. Not that we’ve anything actually in common, of course. Alejandro Pettachi can bump against 50mph on a flat sprint – I’ll be lucky to get much past 30mph.  I’m ready to take a day or three off after a hard century ride, but the entire Tour peloton does it for three straight weeks. But there is something there – some familiarity.  I do know the fear of high speed mountain descents.  The desperate efforts to hang on to the back of the peloton in a race.  But there’s something more.  And I think Ursula captured it pretty well, over at PodiumCafe:

Sports are so popular because they are a distillation of this courage/suffering struggle.  With sports we can sometimes catch a glimpse of this struggle and the attempts to overcome it. But where sports comes up short to often is that we spectators usually only see the final sprint, so to speak.  The games of most sports are too short to see  the full struggle, the full futility of what the athletes are attempting to do.  We only see the glory.  True, we see “losers” but these athletes don’t really lose, because coming in second is not a loss.  They still finished with style.  Sure its disappointing to come in second but really is oh, Zidane really suffering for coming in 2nd last year?  How about the Chicago Bears?  The silver medalists at the Olympics?  Not really.

Of all the sports and the sporting events the Tour de France (and the other two Grand Tours) comes closest to life.  The TdF goes way beyond a marathon to where its hard to even see the beginning of the race when we are at the end.  In the TdF everybody loses, even [Tour winner Alberto Contador].   Everyone suffers humiliation, a million humiliations for three weeks.  The Tour is too stupidly hard for any of the racers to do otherwise.

We don’t watch the Tour because we want to see the humiliations.  We watch because we can identify with the struggle against them.  We watch because the riders don’t give up.  The keep at it, trying to overcome those humiliations again and again.  Mile after mile.  Stage after stage.  Year after year.

Le Tour est mort.  Vive Le Tour.

What Would Vino Do?

That’s the thought that ran through my head as I was shelled off the back of the peloton and considering bailing on the Giro di Coppi this past Saturday. While the answer to the question is probably “He’d blow past the peloton and finish five minutes ahead of everyone else”, I had to settle for not quitting. But it worked.

Really, I think I need to gather a few folks and set up a run of WWVD? jerseys.

(For those who are wondering what in the hell I’m talking about.)

Update: Figures I’d hit the road and be unable to update when the news hit. So now I’ll just share this perfectly appropriate link: IBelieveVino.com. Go ahead, follow it.

How Doping Works, Courtesy of Joerg Jaksche

The Drunk Cyclist does non-German-speaking fans of cycling an excellent service.

Le Tour – It Starts Today!

The 2007 Tour de France kicks off with a 7.9 km prologue time trial through the streets of London.  Tune into Versus to see it, or join my friends at Podium Cafe to talk about it.

Allez!

New Virginia Century Ride: The Battle of North Valley’s Hills ’07

A friend recently brought inaugural The Battle of North Valley’s Hills charity ride to my attention, and it looks interesting:

[The ride] will take you from Town Park in Strasburg, VA down one of Virginia’s most enchanting Scenic Byways, through all of Shenandoah County’s charming and historical small towns, past the famous battlefields of Fisher’s Hill, Toms Brook, and New Market [full century option only] and on to Shenandoah Caverns for lunch.

After leaving Shenandoah Caverns, the real workout begins as you traverse the foothills of the Massanutten and Blue Ridge Mountains.  Steep climbs and rolling hills take you past beautiful vintage farmlands while enjoying breathtaking mountain views. This is some of the most beautiful countryside Virginia has to offer.

Much like Bike New York offers you a unique perspective on the city, long rides through the countryside will give you a chance to experience Virginia in a way that a drive just can’t replicate.   So I, along with my regular ride partner D., have decided to sign up.

There’s much to recommend the ride.  After the excellent (if challenging) route, you’ve got very enticing rest stop options, including Radner beer and Route 11 chips from the source.   Further, $25 of your registration will go to One Step Closer, a local foundation that modifies the homes of special needs families free of charge (in checking these folks out, I discovered that Virginia isn’t all that impressive, when it comes to servicing those needs).   And on top of all that, everyone who signs up this year gets half off of next year’s registration fees.  I don’t know the organizers, so I can’t vouch for them, but between the obvious enthusiasm and low cost, it seems a pretty safe bet.  Check it out.

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