This weekend was by far the best weather this year and possibly the history of the Snake Creek Gap Time Trial series. The course was dry and hardpack, beyond immaculate, as nearly all riders set a new personal record at the 3rd Snake Creek Gap of 2009. Luckily, Jafer's new training plan is working, as he has learned to pace himself better. He started on the first wave of the 34 miler, with Thomas Turner, Sam Koerber, Marshall Hance, and Timothy Carson, who were all in the open money category. Sam attacked literally off the line and separated himself from the chase group. About 20 minutes in Jafer lost contact with Thomas, Marshall, and Timothy, but was able to keep them within eye sight for a few more miles. He knew that he was riding above his limit and needed to back off or else he was going to blow up. Even though he lost contact, his hope remained that he would be able to reel them back in even though he hadn't seen them in about 20 minutes. At the halfway point, Jafer passed Marshall, but was quickly passed back on the long climb and lost sight of him once more. A little mad but not discouraged, Jafer kept his steady pace, eventually closing the gap and passing Marshall at the next pit stop area with about 6 miles to go.

It was a tough battle as Marshall would get close then fall out of sight which spurred Jafer further. Then, literally out of nowhere, Jafer rode up on Tim with a few miles to go. Both riders were pretty tired and nearly all finesse was gone as they plowed through the rockiest sections of the course. Gone were the smooth lines and light riding from earlier, as both riders made mistakes through the rocks. Meanwhile, Marshall was still charging and caught them with about 1 mile to go. Shortly after Jafer and Marshall, passed Tim about a couple minutes before the radio tower and the end of single track. Jafer was only able to enjoy his lead for about 30seconds then his rear tire blew out on the rocks, as well as his hopes for a top finishing time. Unsure of what to do, he ran the bike, rode the bike with the flat, then finally decided to pull over and fix the flat so he didn't destroy the rim. He only had about one minute left in the single track then literally everything else was down hill. It was very disheartening to have a blowout that close to the finish! It was a fairly fast change as he lost only 6 minutes on the other two riders, for an official finishing time of 2:57:12 but his unofficial real time should have been 2:51:18 for the 34 miles. Jafer would have loved the opportunity to show the mountain bikers how a roadie throws down in a sprint...until next year!
Here are a few
pictures from a creek crossing, pictures 338-341 are Jafer.