November 29, 2009

ULTRAMAN STAGE 2 (171 MILE BIKE RACE) FROM VOLCANO TO HAWI



It was still anybodies game after day one, with today’s 171 mile bike and tomorrow’s double marathon still to come. The day started with a 20 mile descent which the athletes appreciate as a great chance to warm up their legs- how much warming up actually happened is still up for debate as the temperature was in the 50’s and the clouds gathered around the volcano were drizzling cold rain.
From the start the main contenders found their way to the front. A group of seven or eight riders were still close together by the bottom of the first decent with the pack only being dwindled by two or three riders in the next two hours. It was not until the race hit the hills that any serious damage was dealt to the field. On a deceivingly large climb, taking the riders from sea level to 1500 feet, Alejandro Rebeiro made his move and would give an incredible performance staying ahead of the all other riders for the rest of the day. This meant that the day for Peter was about limiting any time losses without over taxing himself for tomorrow.
There was quite a bit of jockeying for position between riders with Peter staying in either second or third position all day with only the names of the riders immediately in front of him changing throughout the day. Where yesterday there was some question at times about how Peter was feeling as he cranked into the wind, today he stayed steady, smooth and strong and aerobic all day.
Once again, for Dean and I, the day was about rushing back and forth in the car, providing Peter with constant nutrition and hydration and informing Peter of splits or anything he might require. Early on this task was made difficult by the group of close riders and all of the traffic of their accompanying support cars, media cars and officials made getting in front of Peter more difficult than usual. At one crucial point the road got so busy and the opportunities to pull over became so few that we missed Peter’s feed before a fifteen mile feed zone; after half an hour of worrying if we just got Peter dangerously behind on his nutrition, we made sure to stock him up at the end of the no feed zone.
The race was very fast with the group clocking 100 miles in 4-hrs. and we spent much of the day riding with Dembeck (Germany), Kregar (Slovenia), Oldmeadow (USA), Cokan (Slovenia), and LeRoux (Australia). However, as the heavy climbing began, the groups continued to get split. Peter ended up with Kregar and Dembeck for quite awhile, until Kregar took a spill and fell off the pace. Peter pulled away from Dembeck, caught LeRoux and headed for the last brutal ascent 6.5 miles up to Hawi starting at mile 150.
Despite a dog trying to commit “hairy” kari in front of us –unsuccessfully thanks to my expert evasive maneuvers- the most interesting part of our day did not come until the final 6.5 mile climb starting 20 miles from the finish. We had just gave Peter a feed off going up this beast of a final climb when a pleasant gentlemen pulled up, stopping in the middle of the lane, and proceeding to berate Dean about what is going on with all the bikers. When Dean calmly explains that it is a race, the man informs us that these roads are the worst place on the entire island to have a bike race- despite that road being the calmest most beautiful road we had been on yet. Then as a racer who had been chasing Peter up the mountain started getting close, the man still parked in the middle of the road says, “This is dangerous, someone is going to get creamed.” Annoyed and worrying about the rider who is about to run into the back of the car I yell back, “Yeah, you’re about to get creamed.” After watching the racer get forced into the other lane as he passed, the man finally drove off allowing Dean to get back in the car and ask, “Why are you mouthing off to a cop?” I missed the introduction where the man told us he was with the Hawaii Police Department.
Peter danced on the pedals, and was feeling very good starting the climb. However, Dembeck showed some real grit and climbed very quickly on the final ascent, catching Peter and securing his second place finish for the day.
We followed Peter down the fast and winding 13 mile descent to the finish- where thankfully no handcuffs were waiting for me. Alejandro Ribeiro had gotten there 17 minutes earlier putting us 38 minutes behind the leader going into the double marathon tomorrow- a lot of time to make up. But 52 miles is a long way to run.
At the end of the day, Peter finished in 7hr47min, and is well positioned for a great day tomorrow. Peter’s heart rate averaged only 139 BPM @ 22mph average for the day. He stayed aerobic, and he managed the day very well! He is full of energy, recovering well, and looking forward to a nice little run in the morning.

1 comment:

Brad Fraedrich said...

Make them hurt today Peter!!