More interactive data coming soon … in the meantime here is what I up to…
Today’s 4 county commute to Samford – 76 miles, 7600 feet of climbing.
Selected heart rate and power data copied from my blog posts to this page!
2009-08-29 GCGP Summer Finale RR |
2009-08-16 Cuba Challenge Road Race |
2009-08-15 Meridian Criterium
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2009-08-02 Tour of Elk Grove Stage 3 criterium |
2009-08-01 Tour of Elk Grove Stage 2 road race |
2009-07-31 Tour of Elk Grove Stage 1 time trial |
2009-07-23 Cascade Cycling Classic Stage 3 – Skyliners Time Trial |
2009-07-22 Cascade Cycling Classic Stage 2 – Three Creeks Road Race |
2009-07-21 Cascade Cycling Classic Stage 1 – Smith Rock Road Race |
- Watching everything, letting Mike cover the early moves – note the mostly Zone 3 heart rate
- Initiating an attack myself, short-lived
- Covering an attack from Eric
- This was the decisive move started by Eric
- This is where Eric attacked our break and got away
- Attacking on the last lap to separate the Herring Gas riders
- The finishing sprint
2009-07-04 Plein Air Classic Circuit Race
- Covering attacks from Marx and Bensdorf
- Attacking
- Chasing
- Covering Eric’s cover of Clark’s attack
- The finishing sprint
2009-06-21 Tour de Winghaven Circuit Race
- Riding conservatively, staying towards the front but not going with any moves.
- Bridged to a good looking break here.
- This major drop in heartrate signifies the fact that our break wasn’t working well together so we sat up.
- The major split went at the beginning of this section. We were worked well together during the early part of the move.
- This increase in heart rate was from a series of attacks people started to launch from within the group. I made it into several of the moves but none of them worked.
- The drop in heartrate here is from missing the move that left our group. The rest of us that were left rode so easy that eventually the remnants of the pack caught up to us.
- Here is the final sprint, couldn’t even get back up to zone 5, completely exhausted.
2009-06-06 GCGP Low Country Challenge Criterium
- Went for the race’s only prime, and got pipped at the line
- Boxed out in a corner, note the scrubbed speed
2009-05-30 Dahlonega Omnium Time Trial
- Got caught here by Paul Tower who had started 30 seconds behind me
- Caught Brendan Sullivan, who had started 30 seconds ahead of me
- Repassed by Brendan, note how low my heart rate has dipped
- Almost repassed Brendan finishing 2 seconds behind him on the short, steep, curvy downhill finish
2009-05-30 Dahlonega Omnium Circuit Race
- End of 1st lap
- End of 2nd lap
- End of 3rd lap
- End of 4th lap
- End of 5th lap
- End of 6th lap (The Finish)
2009-05-31 Dahlonega Road Race (1st place!)
- LAP 1 – My 1st attack as soon as we left the neutral zone
- LAP 1 – The first time up the switchback climb
- LAP 1 – My 2nd attack, countered by a Pacesetter rider who got away solo
- LAP 1 – The first time up the finishing climb (i.e., the end of the 1st lap)
- LAP 2 – The second time up the switchback climb (fast pace)
- LAP 2 – The second time up the finishing climb
- LAP 3 – The switchback climb
- LAP 3 – The finishing climb
- LAP 4 – The switchback climb
- LAP 4 – The finishing climb
- LAP 5 – The switchback climb
- LAP 5 – The finishing climb (1st place!!!)
2009-05-22 Tour of Atlanta Stage I – Westside Time Trial (Raining, downpour)
- Erroneous reading (raining)
- The turnaround
- More erroneous readings
- The finish
2009-05-22 Tour of Atlanta Stage II – Westside Parkway Crit
- MAR #1 – Lap 1 prime, 2nd place
- MAR #2 – 2nd place, already in breakaway
- MAR #3 – 3rd place
- MAR #4 – 3rd place
- The finish
2009-05-23 Tour of Atlanta Stage III – Webb Bridge Crit
- Neutral after bad crash on the first lap. Three riders down and at least one not moving. Ambulances and rescue squads on the course
- MAR #1 – 3rd place, my only points for the MAR competition in the race
- MAR #2 – 4th place 🙁
- MAR #3 – 4th place 🙁
- MAR #4 – 4th place 🙁
- The finish
2009-05-23 Tour of Atlanta Stage IV – Webb Bridge Crit (Raining, downpour)
- MAR #1 – 4th on this early MAR prime
- MAR #2 – 3rd on this MAR prime
- MAR #3 – 4th again 🙁
- MAR #4 – 1st, proudest moment of the race! 🙂
- The finish
- The point at which the altimeter on my Garmin stopped working because of the rain
2009-05-24 Tour of Atlanta Stage V – Windward Crit
- MAR #1 – guttered, couldn’t contest
- MAR #2 – 4th, nipped at the line 🙁
- MAR #3 – 4th again 🙁
- MAR #4 – 3rd, nipped at the line for 2nd
- The finish
2009-05-24 Tour of Atlanta Stage VI – Windward Crit
- MAR #1 – 3rd place
- MAR #2 – 1st place, woohoo! 🙂
- MAR #3 – 4th place 🙁
- MAR #4 – 3rd place
- The finish
2009-05-25 Tour of Atlanta Stage VII – Epic Road Race
- Neutral roll out – extremely low heart rate, which persisted throughout the entire race. I never even made it into Zone 5 for the finishing climb and sprint.
- KOM #1 – end of the first lap, I sprinted for some of the minor points only to find out later that only the first 3 places were scored
- KOM #2 – no sprint for me this time, but the pace was fast with somebody attacking halfway up the climb establishing a split in the field — the field mostly came back together
- KOM #3 – I led the entire way up this climb during one of the sections where I was helping to chase the break and keep our tempo higher. I tried to maintain a pace that was fast enough to discourage attacks, but slow enough that I still had a little something left in case there was an attack.
- The finishing climb and sprint. The pace eased a bit — I am second guessing a bit wondering if I should have attacked the sprinters — not confident enough to think I could drop them on that short of a climb, though
2009-05-17 Bull’s Gap Time Trial (Alabama State Championships) Sylacauga, Alabama
- Low initial heart rate … cold and rainy and trying not to overcook the first climbs
- Very low heart rate for how hard it felt like I was working my legs!
- Ummm… not sure what happened here – I definitely tried to push it hard over the top of the climb, but I think the spikes are bad readings from the heart rate monitor
- Good, high, gradually increasing heart rate all the way to the top of the climb
- I was very happy with how I was able to push it all the way up the long false flat, gradual climb … little chain ring spinning 22mph all the way up the climb
- I decided to attack the bottom of each of these hills on the way back to take advantage of downward momentum from the preceding downhill
2009-05-02 Sunny King Criterium, Anniston Alabama
- Crazy fast first few laps, mid-pack
- Attacking hard to close gap opened by another rider and then move up to near the front through the Start/Finish area
- Steadiest part of the race with fast tempo set by Kelly Benefits as they worked to bring back the break. I stayed positioned towards the front of the field
- Lots of variation here because of surges in the group, reshuffling at the front, and having to attack to regain position
- The insanely fast final two laps
2009-05-03 Sandy Springs Cycling Challenge
- Low initial heart-rate … not surprising for me after the previous night’s hard race.
- Steadily rising heart-rate as I work harder each lap to move farther up in the pack.
- Settling in nicely near the front (top 15-20 of the pack)
- Attacking through the Start/Finish area to move up to the front of the pack
- Attacking to attempt to bridge to Frank Travieso.
- Fighting hard for position as the pace gets fast for the final laps with a surprisingly high max heart rate for a “Day 2” race
2009-04-25 Athens Twilight Pro Race
- Lap 1 crash in Turn 2 – accelerate from 9mph to 25mph by the top of Washington Hill
- Altitude – each peak on this orange line is the top of Washington Hill and so you can use it to count the laps in the race. You’ll see that there are 80 of them!!! The reason for the gradual decline is that the barometric pressure must have been rising during the early part of the race (which would make my Garmin think that the elevation was getting lower and lower)
- Notice the gradual decline in my heart rate — direct evidence of how the race is easier the closer you get to the front of the field
- Here is the late race breakaway that I made it into.
2009-04-17 Mississippi Gran Prix Friday Night Criterium
- Covering a break
- Flat tire near the start/finish line
- Moving into position for the final sprint
2009-04-18 Mississippi Gran Prix Road Race
- Covering a break on the 4k to go hill at the end of the first lap
- Solo bridge attempt on the 4k to go hill at the end of the second lap
- Making it into the final breakaway which launched on the 4k to go hill
2009-04-18 Mississippi Gran Prix Time Trial
- Going out too hard?
- The gradual dip in the heartrate through the middle of the course means that my legs were giving out before my aerobic system
2009-04-19 Mississippi Gran Prix Circuit Race
- Covering a break
- Making it into the four-man breakaway right after the halfway sprint
- Solo attack (I was hoping somebody else would join me)
- Getting run off the road
2009-04-11 Barbers Ride to Live P/1/2/3 Heartrate Data
- I attacked here to bridge to a break with Ty Stanfield (Kenda Pro Cycling)
- Here is my attack on the last hill, look at the spike in my heart rate. Amazing what adrenaline of the moment will do!!!
2009-03-29 Tour de Tuscaloosa Road Race (See number explanation below)
- I did lots of attacking here to try to get away to bridge to a break
- The break wasn’t working well together so everything came back together. Here is the start of lap 5 where I attacked to bridge to a two-man break. Note how my heart rate stays high for the rest of the race as I was trying to drive the break to keep it away from the chasers
- Following Mike’s wheel to bridge up to Darryl and Travis
- Working with Mike to bridge up to Wes Douglas and Mike Lanham
- Watching the sprint for first unfold and then our own sprint for third
- Warm-up through Mountain Brook
- Ruffner Road, bridging to back of main group
- Ruffner Road, bridging to the fast group that was off the front
- Fast up the John Rogers climb
- The highway 78 climb
- Old Leeds Road sprint
- 6’38” up Smyer Road all the way to the top of Smyer Circle (avg speed 16.0mph, avg power 372 watts)
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