David Conroy

David Conroy

Wednesday 25 November 2015

Koksijde Cyclocross World Cup

This weekend I was in Belgium for the infamous Koksijde World Cup, I flew out Friday morning to Brussels and spent Friday in Ghent watching the 6 day track cycling event.  Combining a 166 meter track with 24 riders (including many world tour riders and ex World champs) is something that everyone should see.  I would have loved to see the remaining two days but I was here for some racing of my own.

We arrived at the track around 3 p.m. so I only had less than an hour to practice as the gates to the military base where the race was being held were being shut at 4.  The first lap was.... interesting, I think I rode 100 meters of sand out of the whole lap.  Every time I hit a sandy section I fell off.  It is impossible to describe in words what sand riding feels like.   Imagine trying to pedal uphill in your biggest gear while the hill keeps getting steeper and steeper, also the surface keeps changing, not even each lap but each minute and there's only one safe-ish route up,  and to stay on this route you have to be loose on the bike while making sure none of you movement gets transferred to the steering, somewhere in all this you also have to find traction.

After about 45 minutes of practice I still wasn't confident in the sand, it was a 50/50 chance if I could make it through the section, but I had to leave and hope everyone else was also struggling.  Off to the town hall then for sign-on, managers meeting and dinner then back to the hotel for an early night.
  
Sunday was an early start and a quick breakfast as we were staying in Brugge, so had to drive about an hour  to the track.  Despite all the added security and marshals we still ended up in V.I.P. parking close to the track so that suited us.  There was no pressure for results so I wasn't as nervous as I normally am.  I got a good warm-up and lined up with all the other juniors in the holding pen.  Because of UCI points and rankings I wasn't gridded last which was a welcome change. We got a 3 minute warning, one minute warning, then lights, green light and all hell broke loose.  I was completely unprepared for the spray off the wet tarmac, the crunch of gears and the sheer speed of the start.  We reached the end of the straight and the speed turned into 1,000 screeching babies as everyone grabbed a handful of brake.




The speed didn't slow at all for the first lap, I made up some places in one running section and a few more in the sandy descent, shortly after I rolled my rear tub going round a relatively easy corner.  That was my race over and watching everyone ride away from you as you pick up the bike and start running is the most disappointing thing that has ever happened to me.  I ran for over a kilometer to the pits where I jumped on my spare bike and set off in an already lost battle to try and regain some time.  I struggled round for another 3 laps before being pulled with one lap to go.  On my own over the course of the race I got better at riding the sand, even though the spare bike had mud tires that kept catching the sand and trying to throw me over the front of the bike.  I came to the race looking for an experience and I can't say I didn't get that, so overall a disappointing but enjoyable trip.  Sand is definitely now one of my favorite riding conditions.

Huge thanks to all involved in this trip, my pit crew for looking after me all weekend, David Vaughan for lending me his file tread tyres which made the sand and speed easier to deal with, Daniel Brickenden for the loan of his bike as a spare and to the team and all the sponsors for the ongoing support.  Check out all the action here.







Thursday 19 November 2015

Update Part 2 (CX edition)

So Cyclocross season is well and truly underway. My prayers for mud have been answered and so its time to do another update.  So far I have competed in two rounds of the Fixx Supercross cup, one round of the North Dublin CX league, one Ulster CX race, two British National Trophy rounds, one north east England round and the Pi cyclocross race held in Mallow.


The first Fixx race was held in Grange Castle on a flat, fast and super dry course.  It isn't a course that suits me and I'm only building form, so to get 5th after a hard battle right to the line for 3rd was a great start to the season.  Results: Here



Next up was the second round of the Ulster CX league. It was held in Lady Dixon park on the 11th of October.   I have a Love/Hate relationship with this course and turning up with a perished semi slick was never going to work.  I had a decent start but already a group was forming off the front, trying to bridge across on a techy section I had an off and was quickly engulfed by the main bunch. I proceeded to fall off a lot more over the next few laps as my determination to make up places made me push too hard.  Still a good day out in proper cylocross conditions. Results: here


The next event was the PunchesCross race run by NDCX. It was run in Punchestown race course with lots of fun quirky features.  Overall the course did not suit me, however the last 500 metres did, so if it came down to a sprint I felt I could make it work.  The race went well. I was riding with Anthony "Zippy" Doyle and my team-mate Sean for the first few laps until Robin came through and we never saw him again.  In the end it came down to a sprint and I took a slightly different line and surprised the others and got a gap, Sean closed it near the line but I held out for second.


The following weekend I went to Derby in the UK for the second round of the National Trophy races.  I had bought a new set of carbon tubular wheels and my dad picked them up Saturday night.  I rode one lap practice on Sunday fine and done my warm-up no problems.  1:30 race start, 1 lap fine, 2 laps,  nope.  I made it one and a half laps then my chain went into the spokes just as I stood on the gears so it was well jammed in.  I lost a lot of time and never got back within sniffing distance of the top 10. Result: here


Moving on, it was back to Ireland for the PI cyclocross race in Mallow town park.  It was an excellent course, excellently run and a good turn-out for a first event especially in the kids races(the most important ones) I won the A race after a solo ride which was good training for the following weekend. Results: here


The next race was the third round of the British National Trophy series.  It was held in Durham on a cricket grounds.  I traveled over with Sean O Tuathail and his mechanic Gareth. We had entered the local North East league race on the Saturday as a bit of warm-up/practice for Sunday.  I won my race and Sean was 11th.  Sunday came and I was nervous as to how I would ride, my last experience not giving much hope yet I had had a good race on Saturday. The start was the usual affair of elbows out and bottlenecks, I managed to move up into the top 10 by running around one of the bottlenecks.  I rode well for the rest of the race riding slightly faster in the corners than the guy in front and losing out slightly on the flat straights.  Mistakenly thinking I had another lap I swapped bikes on the last lap and in a sprint to the line snapped the rear mech. I ended up 9th which was a brilliant improvement on Derby but I felt like I could have rode better and more tactically and gotten two or three places higher.


And the race to bring you up to date.  The third round of the Fixx Supercross cup. This was held on the 15th of November in Tymon Park, Tallaght.  This course is defined by a stream the first half of the course is fast, flat and suits the road/power rider, the only part that suits me is the boards where I can save a bit of energy in the approach and the exit as I hop the boards. But once we go over the bridge its my kind of course.  There are sweeping off-camber turns, a spiral of awesomeness, a steep drop and some techy woods section.  As cyclocross gains in popularity the starts become more important, I got an alright start, not great but I wasn't engulfed either.  I held onto 10th or thereabouts for most of the first lap until the spiral of awesomeness where I rode right up to third place behind Robin and Squeak who had put in an early attack.  After another lap we were joined by Glenn Kinning who then put in an attack of his own with 4 laps to go, Robin chased leaving me and Squeak alone.  The next lap squeak had to pull into the pits leaving me alone chasing Glenn and Robin. With two laps to go I passed Glenn who had broken his hanger and was running for the pits leaving me in second with squeak chasing hard. On the last lap me and Squeak were together until he put in an attack and got a gap, he held it for half a lap to claim second, I came home 3rd.  Results:here