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Nate Phelps

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I'm in my third year of bicycle road racing and my second season with the Hudson-based Big Ring Flyers. We're racing just about every weekened from late April though the end of September.
Julie races most of the weekends too. She manged to beat me in a time trial in '07, keeping those bragging rights for the winter.
I plan on riding American Bicycle racing events and some U.S. Cycling events this year in addition to a full slate of WiSport events.
Nate's 2008 schedule and results (results are at bottom)
Leave a note, let me know who was here!

PorkchopWI

"Ain't it funny how they all fire the pistol at the wrong end of the race"
July 20

#10 Blue Mounds Classic

24.5-mile road race
Blue Mounds, Wisc.
7/19/08
 
Wow, was that tough, but much more fun than we expected.

Terrain-wise, the Blue Mounds Classic may be the hardest road race I’ve done with about 2,775 feet of climbing over 24.5 miles -- but I had a blast.

(Course profile)

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I was chucked off the back of the lead groups (plural) that formed on the first climb, but I was fine with that as my expectations on a super-hilly course like this didn’t including finishing anywhere near the leaders.

I spent part of the first lap riding by myself , picking off a few guys at the start of the second lap and shortly after that picking up a couple other guys in a small group (including teammate David Goetzinger) that I worked with during the second half of the race, doing a lot of tempo riding. 

I found the climbs challenging in spots, but they were surmountable and actually it was sort of fun to suffer on the long and steep sections. The longest climb of the day was to the finish and was about four miles long. The grade was pretty gradual so it was not at all like climbing Mounds Road at Alpe Bl’Buze (which is long and steep).

I finished with an average speed of about 18.3 mph (for comparison, at a flatter road race my average will hang between 23 and 25 mph) and noticed my descent speed topped out at 47.5 mph.

But the BIG news of the day was Julie winning her first race of the season. Blue Mounds features a women’s start and Julie and few others made the last-minuet switch from the men’s field to the women’s start.

While Julie got beat to the top of the first climb (and the $60 gift certificate that went with it), she was able to breakaway from the rest of the women’s field at the top of that climb and stayed away to win the race. Even at the end of the four mile climb to the finish line, she showed no signs of suffering.

I finished in 1:19:55 while Julie came home in 1:21:37. Hmm, that's getting too close for comfort in an RR.

PRELIMINARY results can be found here: http://www.wisport.org/BMC08Prelims.pdf 

Video can be found here. Thanks to Richard Alderman and Darryl Mataya who shot the race actrion, and Julie who did the montage at the end.

. 

The season rolls on next week to northwestern Wisconsin with the 47-mile road race at Mellen. This is probably my favorite event of the year and I’ve done pretty well there the last two years (tied for tenth in 2007), so I’m aiming for a repeat of that effort this year.

We’ll see what happens!

 
July 17

#9 Stanley Time Trial

16.4-mile Individual Time Trial
Stanley, Wisc.
7/13/08

After my early departure from the main pack Saturday, I was looking for a good ride Sunday at the 16.4 mile Stanley Time Trial and pulled off one I was happy with.

 

Organizers opted for a rolling alternate (out-and-back) course die to construction on the normal course. That was all fine and good, a few more hills no big deal. But the real fun was provided my mother nature in the form of a 21 mph quartering crosswind with gusts of 32 mph.

 

The outbound leg had a slight tail wind and I made the turn with an average speed of about 24.3 mph. Needless to say that meant some sort of headwind coming back.

I lost a lot of speed coming back and finished with an average just a tick or two under 22 mph, finishing in a time of 44:55. That was good enough for 24th, and third in my age group (by 1.5 seconds).

 

I rode with a reverse rabbit knowing that one of my teammates, David Goetzinger, was coming from behind and I just wanted to hold him off… which I did by a few seconds. He still finished well in front of me in 11th place, but that was another small victory of the day.

 

As usual Julie suffered in the wind and finished 4th overall in women (49:14). She didn’t spend much time riding in the aero position due to control issues caused by the extreme crosswind (a few other riders also said they were out of the aero position quite a bit to keep the bike upright).

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A photo slideshow of the event can be found here:

  

 

This weekend’s action takes back to the hills around Blue Mounds, Wisc. in what is described by many as a 27-mile sufferfest. We’ve missed this race the last two years, so this our first time riding it. Should be fun!

 

Advice given by David Vogt on the race at Blue Mounds:

Here's a good strategy:
Descend
Climb (OMG)
Descend
Climb (OMG)
Descend
Climb (OMFG)
Descend
Climb (This freakin' sucks)
Descend
Climb (I freakin' hate this sport)
Finish
That's about it in a nutshell...

July 16

#8 Greenwood Dairy Days RR

38-mile road race
Greenwood, Wisc.
7/12/08
 
What the heck?

I was hanging with the pack (but in a sharp quartering head/crosswind wind), and the next thing I know they’re gone and I’m off on my own. Wrong place at the wrong time, I guess.

The Greenwood race is one of those I really look forward to each year and managed to hold the main pack last year until the last turn. this year, however, I was chucked off the back after about 12 miles and surprised about it.

All I can figure is as I was letting up to get a better position out of the wind, the peleton put on a sustained surge and I was caught off guard. I can't tell if I was riding dumb or just in a bad spot.

Either way, I was off the back and spent the rest of the day working with smaller groups which was still pretty fun. I spent most of the day riding (in one form or another) with Brad Tennis, otherwise it was mainly people I didn't know.

I managed to finished 44th and have claimed this as my first sprint win, since I had to get out of the saddle for the position. Whoopee. A sprint victory for 44th (yes, I’m saying that tongue-in-cheek, but with a smile). Regardless of the result, I had fun.

Julie finished 4th overall in women after losing the main field somewhere around mile 10. She spent most of the day riding with Jamie Haag and David Vogt and is still talking about how much fun she had riding with those guys. Sounds like they attempted to coordinate a synchronized finish as a nod to efforts each made to finishing.

Video from the race can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIVGRuvewII

 

Twenty-four hours later we were again racing in Stanley, Wisc. Look for that blog in the next 24 hours.

July 06

#7 Omro Cycling Classic

35-mile road race
Omro, Wisc.
7/5/08
 
HA! The return of road racing. Time trials are fun and all, but racing against 117 other people is a heck of a lot more fun that racing against the clock.

It felt good to get back into a group for Saturday’s race and hearing the sounds of tires and riders around me and seeing the multitude of colors that make up the peleton.

OMRO

(photo from: http://www.flickr.com/photos/24340367@N08/)

The race 35-mile race in Omro got off to a brisk start and was punctuated throughout with attacks and riders going off the front that kept the tempo high and created a ton of surges (speeding up of the group). That, coupled with all the turns in the course, wore away at riders further back thanks to the “accordion effect” of riding in a big group.

The biggest surprise of the day was seeing Julie pull up next to me about 8 miles in and say “Oh, hi guy.” She managed to survive some pretty fast surges and the early tempo that was in the high 20s (mph) to low 30s range to hold on the to main pack. She was eventually spit out of the group and ended up working with other riders and finished third in the women’s race after being dropped on a descent (where she was dropped at the State RR as well).

She sure can climb, but going down hills is another matter. Maybe she needs to eat some red meat....

I continued to hang on to the lead group until about mile 26 or 27, when a sustained attack and crosswind finally popped me -- and a handful of other riders -- off the back. I ended up working with four other guys for the remainder of the race to finish 44th, about four minutes behind the winner. Sounds like most of the lead pack got pretty broken up over the last 10 miles or so.

Video of the race can be found here:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tPMvLf4H70U

  

All in all it was a fun day in the saddle and I was about five minutes faster than last year for total time. More importantly it’s the first road race in a month that is filled with them.

This weekend it’s three races in two days in central Wisconsin with a road race and an inaugural crit (think of Nascar on bikes) in Greenwood on Saturday and a time trial Sunday afternoon in Stanley. This is a weekend I always look forward too.

June 29

#6 Brice Prairie Time Trial

26-mile Two-man Time Trial (Nate)
26-mile Individual Time Trial (Julie)
Brice Prairie, Wisc.
6/28/08

Somewhere late in the first lap I knew I was going to be doing what I could just to hold on.

Three laps around the roads of Brice Prairie make up the Brice Prairie Time Trial, a flat course that’s about 26 miles in total length.

I was riding as a two-man team with Jeff Colbeth who has just exploded into a powerhouse this season in TTs and I knew he was going to keep the pace high for this event as we were going to try finishing in under an hour.

We set a pretty torrid pace out of the blocks, running around 28 mph for the early part of the course, byt the time were in the last section of the first lap the tempo was taking a toll and I knew it was going to be a matter of hanging on as best I could for the next two laps -- and that's pretty all I could do, pulling through to give Jeff a few breaks.

We estimate he did about 80 percent of the pulling on the course and really shouldered the burden of getting us to the finish line quickly. We finished 2nd in the two-man category with a time of 1:05:53 about 53 seconds behind the winners and seven seconds ahead of 3rd place. Our average speed was somewhere around 23.77 mph.

While all that was going on, Julie was putting up a heck of an effort in the women’s individual time trial where she finished second overall with a time of 1:12:56. Intially she was declared the overall winner, but a late -- and legitimate -- change to timing on another rider moved her to scond. She's fine with decision.

“It was fun,” Julie said. “I just wanted my average speed to be above 20 ... and according to my computer I was 21.4 I think that was about the fastest time trial I have done.

Considering there were no real hills, it should have been the fastest one I’ve done,” Julie said.

She and others were also impressed with the organization of the event.

Preliminary results are posted at: www.itiming.com

Video of the TT can be found here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2PtF0uqIcc

   

The season rolls on Saturday (7/5) with the road race in Omro, our “home event” and a welcomed return to road racing (for Nate).

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Updated 7/16/2008
Updated 1/5/2008
Updated 1/5/2008