Long Ride, Fat Rider: 2005 Leadville 100 Race Report

08.15.2005 | 2:40 pm

Nine times. I have raced the Leadville 100 Mountain Bike Race nine times. Why do I keep going back?

Well, this time the main reason was to have fun and show that I can do better than my 2004 time (10:57, I think). Here’s what my day was like.

 

Look Down, Stupid.

I love seeing how bundled up some racers get for the start of this race. Shorts, tights, shoe covers, jersey, second long sleeve jersey, jacket, ear warmers. I, on the other hand, wore shorts, my Racers Cycle Service short sleeve jersey (which, alas, fits about fifteen pounds too snugly. Nothing says, "I won’t be killing anyone in the climbs today" like a red, white, and orange bullseye stretched across your belly, showing exactly what you’ve got, spare-tire-wise), and arm warmers. I was plenty warm. Fat has its uses, I guess.

From what I hear, there were at least two nasty crashes within the first two miles of the race – on downhill pavement, yet. One of those crashes was from a pair of riders tangling handlebars, another was from someone dropping his glasses and stopping to retrieve them, unaware that this might pose a problem to the 200 racers immediately behind him. 

The first climb is up St. Kevins, a moderate hill compared to what we had in front of us. Initially I felt good, and was easily staying with the group around me. Then my legs started hurting. I tried shifting to my granny gear. No good, I was already there. I was suffering on the first climb. How could that be?

By the time I was two-thirds of the way I was up the hill, I knew I was in big trouble for the race: redlined in my granny on the first climb. How could I possibly finish this race if I was already blown?

Then I looked down. I was in my middle ring.

Oops.

A shift to my little ring up front and about halfway down the cassette in back brought immediate relief – as much mental as physical. I’ve said it before, but it bears repeating: the Fat Cyclist has plenty of fat on his body and in his head.

 

I Do Not Interview Everyone

While riding, I was talking with people for a Cyclingnews article. I’m not going to talk much about these chats – that’s a different story. I will say, though, that people were very cool about talking to me, slowing down a bit with me so we’d have enough breath to talk for a minute. There were a few people, however, I intentionally did not interview, for various reasons.

  • "Cowbell Guy:" Riding up St. Kevins, I started talking with a guy on a bike when I heard an obnoxious cowbell close by. It turns out he had a cowbell hanging from his saddle. That’s when I remembered him – he and I rode within hearing distance more often than not last year. I promise you, "More cowbell" holds up as a comedy concept for a short time only. I turned off the recorder (the only time I intentionally cut off an interview), shifted up a gear, stood up and rode away. I am happy to announce that I was not troubled by the persistent clanking of cowbell again.
  • "Impressive Stunt Guy:" As I was riding down Sugarloaf – a rutted, sandy descent about 3.5 miles long, I heard a guy yell "On your right!" I yelled back acknowledgment. He passed, immediately hit a woop-de-doo, and got a good amount of air. I could see even before he landed though that it wasn’t going to work out well. He was way forward, and his front wheel landed first. It twisted sideways and he flipped over the front. I grabbed brake with both hands, swerved, and managed to miss him. "You OK?" I asked. "Yeah," he replied," and I continued. Ten seconds later it occurred to me I should stop and talk to him about his crash. Then I thought about how much I would like it if someone stuck a recorder in my face after one of my numerous crashes and decided to leave him alone. Besides, I would have had to walk uphill to get back to him, and that was not going to happen.
  • Guy who was changing a tube: Actually, I came across 5 or 6 people during the day who were changing tubes, and I thought each time I should stop and talk to them about the frustration of having a mechanical during a race. But since I know that frustration firsthand and didn’t really want to be sworn at or smacked with a pump, I just kept on going. I’m a pansy.

I Make an Empty Offer of Assistance

A couple of years ago, I got nasty chainsuck on this race, when I shifted under torque because I had come across an unexpected, steep uphill. It took me five minutes to get the chain worked free, and the whole time I was wishing somebody who was better with fixing bikes than I am (practically anybody) would help me.

In last Saturday’s race, I came across a guy in the exact same spot, with the exact same problem. So I asked if he needed help, fully knowing that I was setting myself up to demonstrate how inept I am with fixing bikes. He said "No, I’ve just got to work it free," and thus saved me from embarrassment. Thanks, anonymous "I can fix it myself" guy.

 

I am Strong in the Flats, Weak in Forecasting

As I rode the relatively flat 15 mile stretch between the first and second aid station, I noticed something: I was passing people. This has never happened to me. I guess all the road bike riding on the rolling roads of King County was good for something.

As I rode by people, looking for a group to form a train with, people would engage in the standard Leadville conversation:

Them: "You done this race before?"

Me: "Yup. Ninth time."

Them: "Are we on track for a 9:30?"

Me: "No way. Try 10:30."

Them: "&*%#!"

The thing is, they very well may have been on track for a 9:30. Maybe even better. I just wasn’t equipped to tell them, because I tend to race hot at the beginning, then blow up into smithereens for the second half of the race. Yes, I’m aware it’s not a winning strategy, and I was actually trying to correct it this time. Still, I wonder how many people I completely demoralized that day. Sorry, demoralized people!

 

I Vow to Make Bob Wrong

Bob, a riding buddy, posted a comment in my blog late last week, predicting I would finish in 10:12. So when I crossed the turnaround point at Columbine Mine — famous for being a halfway point not just in distance but in actual time — at 5:06, I was thunderstruck. It looked like Bob might be right, down to the minute. I simply couldn’t allow this. I shifted my plan from being "finish whenever" to "finish in under ten hours."

It was time to see if playing it cool for the first half of the race had left me with some power I could use in the second half.

 

Serena and I Have an Argument

Mark and Serena are the proud holders of what I call "The Warner Dynasty" – they have won (including Saturday) the Tandem division of the Leadville 100 four times straight. And coming down the rocky, nasty part of Columbine mine, I was apparently putting the dynasty in jeapordy. They were right on my tail, and I was downhilling too slow; the second-place tandem was hot on their tail. Serena started yelling at me: "Ease up on the brakes, Fatty!" (My friends call me Fatty. No, just kidding. Please don’t call me Fatty.) And then: "You’re losing the race for us, Fatty!"

But there was no way I could yield – we were on doubletrack, and the other track was chockablock with cyclists hiking up to the top. And, strictly speaking, it wasn’t me holding them up. I was behind four other cyclists. Still, I yelled, "Shaddup, Serena!"

Mark, Serena’s domestique – I mean husband – sounded dumbfounded. "Did you just tell Serena to shut up?"

"Yes!"

Amazingly, that ended the discussion. As soon as they found an opening, Mark and Serena flew by, protecting their dynasty for another year, and finishing five minutes ahead of me. On a tandem…a fully rigid tandem, that is. On technical downhill. Clearly, downhilling is not my strength.

Telling Serena to shut up, however, may have been the bravest thing I have ever done (she could easily take me in a fight).

 

When is Encouragement Just Mean?

One of the things I love about the Leadville 100 is the encouragement riders shout to each other on Columbine Mine. The people plodding up shout encouragement to those flying down. Racers on their way down cheer to those struggling on their way up: "You’re almost there! Looking strong! Looking good!"

So here’s an interesting hypothetical question: You’ve just about completed the descent from Columbine Mine when you see someone just starting to push his bike up the eight miles to the turnaround — walking, ashen-faced, in what should be a middle-ring part of the climb, at a rate that will surely see him swept from the field before day’s end. Do you cheer him on, or do you explain the reality of the situation?

I yelled, "You can make it! Get to the top!" I figured he’s done the math. If he’s decided to keep going anyway, that’s worth cheering for. I know I sure don’t want everyone telling me the reality of my racing situation ("Uh, dude? You’re fat and middle-aged. Shouldn’t you be at home watching Larry King or something?").

 

Best. Breeze. Ever.

On paper, miles 60-75 of the Leadville 100 look pretty tame. It’s a rolling section, a nice little break between the massive Columbine Mine climb and the brutally steep Powerline climb. But it’s this flat section that I dread every year. There’s always a mean headwind. And I’m always out of juice.

Except this year.

This year, there was a healthy tailwind instead of the rain and headwind I had anticipated (although I’m told it did in fact rain and hail on Columbine Mine about a half hour after I got down, soaking and freezing the hundreds of people still up there). And it turns out that by reining myself in for the first half of the race, I felt great for the second half. I met up with a guy named Chris and we talked and worked together almost the entire 15 miles. It went by in what felt like a flash. 

Bugaboo vanquished. At least for now.

 

Big Finish

One of the things that really defines the Leadville 100 is that two of its nastiest climbs are saved for the final 25 miles. The Powerline climb is so steep and loose that you’ve got to march almost a mile of its 3.3 mile distance (I had measured on the way in, to help ward off the false hope the many false summits bring). And then there’s St. Kevins, which is on pavement, but it just feels like the race organizers were being mean-spirited to put such a grind just 12 miles from the finish. And of course, there’s the boulevard, a short but evil climb just 2.5 miles from the finish.

I say all this because it serves my vanity. I believe not a single person passed me in that final 25 miles, at least not without me passing them back. I, on the other hand, passed lots. I rode sections people walked. I middle-ringed where people grannied. I, in short, ruled. I thought of the much leaner people looking in consternation at the fat guy passing them in the climbs, and my heart sang.

In fact, for the second half of the race, I did pretty close to a nine-hour pace. I did all this simply to defy Bob. Meanwhile, hundreds of miles away, Bob entirely failed to care.

At the finish line, I raised both hands in triumph, as if I had won, instead of placing 162nd of 471 finishers (not sure how many starters there were, but 750 were registered to race; I’d guess 600 actually made it to the starting line). This was a bad idea, because I was addle-brained and barely able to balance with my hands on the handlebars. I swerved dangerously, causing an audible gasp from the finish line crowd. I – barely — managed to grab my handlebars, straighten my bike and cross the finish line – my dignity nearly intact. 9:41. Four minutes faster than my goal. Huzzah.

If I had been in good shape (spent time working on climbing), and if I weighed less, this could have been the year I got that sub-9. The course and weather were perfect for it. Next year, I tell you. Next year the sub-9 is mine. For now, I’ll kick myself. Just a little bit.

 

My Stomach Defies Physics

When the race is over, the hunger begins. In the 24 hours following the race, I ate the following:

  • Cream cheese-stuffed pretzel
  • Lasagna, with two salads
  • Half a burrito (a person with a normal appetite could eat only half; I was able to eat half in addition to the lasagna)
  • A pint of Ben and Jerry’s ice cream
  • Four more Kudos bars.
  • Two omelets
  • Two blueberry muffins
  • Yogurt and granola
  • Untold glasses of orange juice
  • Giant cookie
  • Chicken burrito with sour cream and guacamole…and a Diet Coke (I’m watching my weight, after all)

And the hunger hasn’t subsided yet. Maybe it never will.

 

Today’s Weight: I dare not step on a scale. I will begin the daily weigh-in again tomorrow.

 

Bonus Fat Cyclist Food Plan for Endurance Athletes

I’ve genuinely lost count of how many epic rides and endurance races I’ve done in the eleven or so years I’ve been riding. Throughout all that time, I’ve experimented with different sports drinks, energy bars, powders and pills. All with two simple aims:

  • I want to have energy
  • I don’t want to be sick

This year, I’ve finally done it. And – ironically, I suppose – the answer is a very simple mix of foods:

  • 1 Gu  for every 20 minutes of riding (I’ve settled on Gu brand because I like the way it tastes and my energy level doesn’t spike with it quite as badly as it does with PowerGel, and it doesn’t give me gas, the way Clif Shot does), excepting the first two hours, when I’m still powered by the morning meal. For a 10-hour ride, that means 24 Gus. I squeeze them all into a water bottle(which means I have $24 worth of gel in one water bottle), then dilute with water, so I can squirt them into my mouth and swallow easily.
  • Water – no sports drink. I know, I know, the sports drinks have minerals and calories and all that. But when I drink sports drink for a couple hours, I get sick to my stomach, and I get sick of so much sweet stuff, after which I stop drinking, after which I get dehydrated, after which I bonk. I can drink water happily all day, and get my salt and calories elsewhere (like from a whole lot of Gu).
  • Chicken and Stars soup. This now comes in single-serving, pop-top containers. I drank one each time I stopped at an aid station. It’s got lots of salt, it’s not sweet, and you can slurp it down in a matter of moments. I have not had a single leg cramp since I’ve started drinking soup on my big rides.
  • Kudos "granola" bars. I put "granola" in quotes because I don’t think there’s any granola in them. Truth in packaging should require the makers of these to admit these are just little candy bars. My favorite flavor is the chocolate and peanut butter ones. I eat these because they taste great (like Reeses Peanut Butter Cups, essentially), have lots of calories, and they’re small enough that I can stuff one in my mouth in two bites. And it’s easy to rip the package open, even when you’re on the bike.

So, would I encourage you to adopt my eating strategy on endurance rides? No way. Almost certainly, there’s something in my plan that wouldn’t work for you. But maybe there’s something here that will work for you, too. And in any case, now you know how to eat like a Fat Cyclist. Lucky you.

 

I’m. So. Cooked.

08.14.2005 | 4:00 am

I raced the Leadville 100 today. A few factoids from my day:

 

  • Number of Gu’s consumed: 24 – representing 2400 calories
  • Servings of Campbell’s Chicken and Stars Soup consumed: 2
  • Amount of water drunk: 1 gallon
  • Number of granola bars consumed: 6
  • Number of brief interviews conducted for my cyclingnews.com story: 24
  • Number of Advil consumed: 3
  • Amount of time spent in the rain: none
  • Most beneficial surprise: a tailwind – rather than the expected headwind – from mile 60 to mile 75, leaving me feeling good at the end of what is usually the part of the course that totally demoralizes me.
  • Fast friends:
  • Mark and Serena Warner won the Tandem category for the fourth time in a row
  • Chucky Gibson took fourth overall with a time of 7:28. I can’t even imagine those kinds of times.
  • Kenny Jones finished with a time of 8:08. Kenny and I used to ride together all the time before I moved; now he’s at a completely different level.
  • Bry Christensen finished with a time of 8:48, getting that sub-9 time I’ve wanted so bad for so long.
  • Most frightening moment of the day: a person passed me on a technical downhill, then immediately hit a little jump, landed too far forward, and stacked himself up spectacularly. I missed crashing into him by inches.
  • Goal finish time: 9:45
  • Actual finish time: 9:41
  • Finish place overall: 162nd
  • Most sore parts of my body:
    • My behind
    • My shoulders
    • My neck
    • My legs

     

    Today’s weight: Right after the race, I probably weighed around 150. After a big ol’ dinner, I’m confident I’m back to being the fat cyclist. Considering how much I ate, maybe fatter than ever before.

    Leadville Countdown: 2 Days to Go

    08.11.2005 | 11:08 am

    I couldn’t sleep last night. I was thinking about the Leadville race. I swear, I went through the whole race in my head. St. Kevins. Powerline. Rest stop. Flat stretch. Columbine. Now do it again, but in the other direction.
     
    It’s like this every year. For two days before the actual race, I can’t sleep. Can’t think about anything else. Can’t wipe the big grin off my face. The Leadville 100 is just like Christmas for me.
     
    Now, anyone who hasn’t been to Leadville won’t get what I’m talking about, but if you’ve got an annual tradition that you absolutely love — something you want to be exactly the same every year — then at some level you know what I mean.
     
    Here’s what I’m looking forward to over the next couple days.
    • Meeting all my biking buddies again. Over the past eight years, I’ve got to know a lot of people who are a part of this race. Going to Leadville is like a big family reunion, assuming your family is made up of guys with shaved legs and $4000 bikes.
    • The drive over to Leadville. Usually, the thought of 7 hours in the car sounds awful, but with Kenny, it’s a highlight of the trip. Note to fast guys: Watch out for Kenny; he’s going to clean your clock this year.
    • Wandering around Leadville with nothing much to do. I live my whole life at a fast pace. But the day before the race in Leadville, I just hang around the town. Talking with people. Looking in shop windows. Loitering. Napping. It’s heaven, I tell you.
    • The Pre-race ride: Hooking up with Mark, Serena, and Bry to do a little ride the day before the race has become one of my favorite parts of the whole trip. Lots of stories, trashtalking, and wacky hyjinx. (Mark and Serena have won the tandem division every year they’ve raced it. They’re back to win a fourth. They say they haven’t trained, but they say that every year. I wouldn’t bet against them. And to hear people talk, Bry’s a lock for a sub-9 race this year. I wish I were in better shape and had a chance of finishing with him.)
    • The pre-race meeting / motivational speech. Generally I’m not one for meetings, and definitely not one for motivational speeches. But Ken — the chief promoter honcho — is a funny guy with serious endurance cred — he does the running version of this race each year, which I can’t even imagine. I love hearing him shout his catchphrase: "You’re better than you think you are." For that moment, I actually believe him.
    • Talking about the race at the pre-race dinner. Preferably with someone who’s never ridden it and is listening to your advice as if it’s actually helpful.
    • Looking out the window at 4:30am on the day of the race to see what the weather’s like.
    • Talking to people at the start line, as well as during the ride.
    • My dad crewing for me. There’s nothing like seeing a member of the family to boost your morale on a big race like this.
    • Dodging erosion trenches while coming down Powerline.
    • The sweet agony of seeing the Columbine turnaround point — from three miles away, and knowing I’ll have to hike most of it.
    • Crossing over from the Boulevard onto the pavement, knowing that I’ve made my last turn.
    • Laying down on the grass after I finish the race.

    I won’t be online tomorrow, but I’ll definitely have my wife post my finishing time this Saturday afternoon/evening.

    It’s 4:00AM. I’ve got a plane to catch.

     

    Today’s weight: Dunno. Too late to worry about it now. Time to think about racing.

    10+ Hours in the Rain? Bring it On.

    08.10.2005 | 7:10 pm

    I just checked the weather forecast for the Leadville 100 this weekend.
     
    Thunderstorms.
     
    Perfect.
     
    The last time we had serious rain for this race was back in 2000 — and that was just for the final 25 miles of the race. Here’s what I had to say about that (excerpted from an article I wrote for active.com):

    "Take your jacket," Susan said at the final aid station. "It looks like rain is coming."

    "Weighs too much," I said, and rode away.

    Soon it started raining. Hard. Then the lightning started. It was close, too; the flash and boom were essentially simultaneous, and the powerline above made an audible "zzzztttzzz" after each flash.

    I weighed my options.

    One: Take cover under a tree to at least try to avoid the downpour, as some riders were doing. Nah, that improves my chances of getting hit by lightning.

    Two: Turn around and head back down Sugarloaf. Nah, I had already done the brutal hike-a-bike. I didn’t want to bail out anymore.

    Three: Ride like crazy and try to get off the mountain as fast as I could. That sounded good. I must’ve got an adrenaline rush from the fear (oh yeah, I was big-time scared), because I started passing racers again. Some I passed as they were riding, but most I passed as they were donning their rain gear. Since I didn’t have rain gear to concern myself with, I continued on in my shorts and short-sleeved jersey.

    Released from any prayer of finishing under nine hours, and having a fine excuse (thanks to mother nature), I started having a blast. I stopped worrying about time and started enjoying the ride. I rode through puddles intentionally. I sang "Rain Drops Keep Falling on My Head" and "Here Comes the Rain Again" as I passed riders. I squinted and blinked as I downhilled, mud flying into my eyes.

    I laughed out loud at the volunteers who shouted, "Looking good!" as I rode by. I had a pretty good idea how I must’ve looked and it was not good.

    The singletrack section was a running river when I got to it. I aced it — except in one place where I slid out and gashed my left knee. The water, mud and blood combined for great dramatic effect and left the bottom of half of my leg looking grisly. I admired it greatly, and appreciated the fact that my leg was cold enough that I couldn’t feel the cut at all.

    Feeling amazingly good, completely fresh, and probably hypothermic, I noticed my hands were now so cold that I couldn’t feel them at all. I kept checking to see if they were really on the handlebars. When I needed to push the shift lever for my front derailleur, I found my thumb didn’t have the control to push that hard; I had to reach under the handlebar and push with my palm. All this, I thought, was hilarious.

    So. What if it rains the whole day this Saturday? I predict the following:

    • Massive DNFs: Most of the people who line up to start the race are prepared to suffer on a bike for 9-12 hours. Many are not prepared to suffer for that long while rain pounds them and they’re freezing cold.
    • Lots of people in the medical tents: You get really cold when you’re soaked for that long. Lots of riders will be pulled from the course with symptoms of hypothermia.
    • Lots of ruined wheels: The sandy, gritty Leadville course means that when the weather’s wet, you go through your brake pads unbelievably quickly. Many people will go through their brake pads, then gouge their rims.
    • I will be insufferable: One thing I know about myself. As things get increasingly nasty, I am capable of acting ridiculously cheerful. That is, in fact, my typical response to crisis. And since I’ll be shoving a digital voice recorder (got it yesterday) into people’s faces and asking them whether they’re enjoying themselves, I should probably plan on getting punched in the face at least once or twice.

    Today’s weight: I didn’t check. Not going to check again until I get back from Leadville.

    Bonus Excitement: Cyclingnews.com has published my second article, this time a fake news piece about a sport-class mountain biker who feels sorry for Jan Ullrich. I really, really hope everyone who reads it gets the irony.

    Bonus Potential Offline-ness: Tomorrow early AM I head out towards Leadville. Once there, I really don’t know what kind of connectivity I’ll have. I hope to keep posting, but if I can’t, I’ll at least have my wife post my finishing time on Saturday afternoon.

    How Not to Taper

    08.10.2005 | 12:07 am

    Endurance athletes do something called "tapering" before a big race / event. The idea is to decrease your activity for a week or so before the ride, so you’ll be fresh and rarin’ to go.
     
    There’s a proper way to taper, and I’m horrified with myself to announce that I don’t know what it is. I blame my trainer for never properly explaining it to me. It’s almost as if he’s never done more to learn about tapering than scan a couple of magazine articles. Moron.
     
    Still, though, I have slacked off on the riding, starting last Friday, and it seems to have had some effect: this morning as I was riding to work I felt really good — much stronger than usual. Climbs were easier, I was faster on the flats without really trying. Never one to waste an opportunity, I shifted up a couple gears and started seeing exactly what I had in me.
     
    It turns out I had a whole bunch in me. I rode the flats at 25-27 mph — I usually go around 22-24. I looked at the trees and grass to see if I had a tailwind, but no: it was me.
     
    Then I came to the climb that parallels Highway 520. It’s about a mile long and can be pretty steep in some parts. It starts right after a street crossing, where you have to wait for a light. By the time the light turned, there were four other cyclists gathered with me.
     
    So I decided to show them who’s boss.
     
    I gapped the first couple before we even got across the street. The third dropped off without a fight during the first steep pitch, but the last guy stuck with me. The race was on!
     
    In the first part of the climb, the pitch goes from moderately steep to very steep. It doesn’t last long, but most people downshift for it anyway. Today, though, I listened for his shift as we reached the steep part, then I upshifted two gears, stood up, and attacked off the front.
     
    I gapped him by 20 feet almost instantly.
     
    "This is a good time for me to see whether I’m still any good at riding just below the red zone," I thought, and kept exactly the amount of pressure on myself I could sustain without blowing up. Before long, my nameless archrival was vanquished.
     
    I was the victor. I was the hero.
     
    Also, I’m a complete idiot. The whole point of the taper is to get me rested. And since it was working, I decided to do a personal time trial and VO2-max hill interval.
     
    But this brings up a question: am I the only one who consistently fails to rest on rest day rides? I mean, when you’re just tooling along and some guy passes you at a speed you know you can counter, are you really able to just let him go?
     
    I’m telling you, it’s a lot harder to rein yourself in than to go all out.
     
    Today’s weight: 164.8
     
    Bonus Delicious Cookie Alert: An important part of tapering is to eat more, right? This isn’t the week for me to lose weight. And that’s why Keebler Fudge Shop: White Fudge Stripes Cookies-and-Creme cookies were an important part of my diet yesterday. I mean, these things give White-Fudge-Covered Oreos a run for their money, and that’s saying something. I mean, it says something besides that I know way too much about really-bad-for-you cookies.
     
    I bet my weight goes up to 280 pounds by tomorrow.

    « Previous Page« Previous Entries     Next Entries »Next Page »