So around 3:45, while we were on the road, Oscar picks up this piece of paper in the back seat, looks at it for a minute, looks up at us and goes, "You know the race starts at 4:45 right?" In the front seat, all Thomas and Joey could say was "uuuuuuuuuuuhhhhh." We looked at our directions and an atlas and figured we still had around 50 miles to go....and about an hour before the race starts, "Well, we're almost half way there, lets just try to make it." Instead of driving 60 mph and stopping to get coffee as Joey had requested, we started pushing the speed limit a bit and the only stop we made was when we pulled over for 30 seconds because Oscar swore he was about to pee all over the back seat.
We got to Ripon at exactly 4:45 expecting hear the starters gun unload, as soon as we pulled up, but luckily the women's race was still in progress. We've never been happier to see a race running late. Oscar decided to take the day off, so he ran over to registration to check in and pick up wrist bands for Thomas and Joey, as they whipped on their clothes, pumped tires, mixed drinks and made it to the start line in about 15 min. The course had hills on 3 of the 4 straightaways so it was terribly hard to start the race with no warm up. Actually, it was worse than terrible; I immediately started doing Oscars famously funny "pain cave dance," but this time it was no joke.
The first 45 min was the most Joey has ever struggled in the early going of a race. First of all, he started at the back of the group which meant there was a huge acceleration out of each corner and up the hills. His stomach cramped almost immediately simply because he'd just finished stuffing his face with waffles just 2 hours prior to the start, and in addition, his legs felt pretty stiff and not "opened up" from taking that rest day the day before. Totally out of breath and suffering, he started taking the corners really sloppily, and that only added to the pain inflicted by having to sprint out of the corners even harder. Other riders that he had been so much better than in previous stages were coming flying by him on the hills and he was doing all he could just to hold on to the back, sitting almost last wheel. Only 2 laps into the race he was ready to slam on the brakes, drop out, and head home. A thousand things started swarming through Joey's head "I'll probably feel better tomorrow, I don't have to finish today," "why am I doing this to myself?" "what's wrong with me!?!" He thought he couldn't finish the race, so now it was just a question of how long he wanted to torture himself.
It usually takes us a while into a race to warm up, but we never thought we'd pull out of this one. Then, between like 70 and 65 laps to go (it was a 100 lap race) we just started feeling better and better with every lap and our attitude changed. It came as somewhat of a surprise and relief to us when we finally got the feeling that we were going to be able to make it. Instead of dancing with pain, we started dancing with ease up the hills each lap. Then, with 20 laps to go, it started raining..... 3 of the 4 corners of the course were downhill and fast. The race had already blown apart with only about 30 riders remaining; as soon as it started raining, riders started dropping like flies. Not "getting dropped" but sliding out and falling almost every lap. Most of these guys got back in however, and by the finish it seemed like about half the field show cased bloody, skinned up hips. Joey is pleased to say that he went yet another day retaining all his skin.
While making sure to take the corners carefully was a good thing in the closing, rainy laps of the race, it hurt a little bit on the very last lap (by then the roads were nearly dry again). Joey was feeling decent and if he hadn't been a little too cautious around a couple of the last turns, he would have been able to jump past a few people on the hills, but didn't. He pretty much just held position on the last lap and was able to keep anyone from passing him in the sprint. He ended up placing around 15th in the bunch.
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