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Mad Mac’s 6 hour XC – Omagh, 6th May 2012

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The winning team, Colm McGarvey of EpicMTB and Rudolf Brinkman.

Well done to Rudolf and his pal Colm McGarvey of Epic MTB Club who won the team race in Mad Mac’s 6 hour XC in Omagh last weekend. Here’s a few words from the man himself

“Well that was a nice day at the office. This adventure started last thursday when one of the Epic mtb lads didnt fancy doing the full 6 hrs on his own. So I said ok, I’ll come along and we do the team option. The race was in Gortin Glens forest park in Co Tyrone. We arrived in the mornimg to set up in the pits with food, spare wheels, coffee etc.

There was no plan made and there was no time for a practice lap so we went with a few other riders on a warm up half lap. The down hill section through the forest was deadly. Drop offs and jumps followed by rooty single track. 11.00 am was the start. With no idea what to expect I was off first and went for it on the first lap.

First it was the “waterfall ” climb which was super steep but short. After that a long fire road climb to the middle section which was called ” no mans land”. This was a boggy open mountain singletrack section. More climbing to come after that which brought you to the “Hells Ally” a super fast narrow gravel swooping decent. A short fire road brought you into the forest single track which I described earlier. Back over the finish line and into the pits to swap the timing chip to my team mate Colm McGarvey. He then went off and did the same lap again.

I was waiting in the pits area and getting ready for my next lap. Towards the 4 hrs it became harder to push the gears on the climbs. We still managed to keep consistent laptimes although they became a bit slower towards the end. From the beginning of the race we were in the lead in the team race. There were two teams behind us looking for a chance to take the lead. With no mechanicals and a steady ride toward the end we manged to do 13 laps in 5.40hrs. The 2 teams chasing us were on 12 laps towards the 6hr mark and did not have enough time to complete another lap. 1st place for Colm and myself. This was a great event and well organized. Also great craic in the pits and food after the finish for all the competitors which was needed.”

Results

Munster XC Series Round 1 – 29th January 2012

[Race report by David Furlong]

We set off at 8 in the teeming rain after hauling Ross out of the scratcher.

Got to Tracton in 2hrs20 mins which was about 1/2hr quicker than expected, so that was the first plus. It was still piddling down, got changed in the car outside some randomers house (that must have been a picture) and headed for the practice lap. We hooked up with Richie Byrne from EPIC for the practice and were instantly met by mud, roots, deep, off camber roots, even deeper mud, bridge crossings etc..etc.. hard going on the practice lap, but experience tells us it always is…

So off we go at 12 bells, me and Rossco in the ‘Elite’ section, how about that eh. First I saw of Ross was at the first river crossing where some dude tried to knock him into the river, then saved him just as he was bout to go…After that he was a little disappearing red dot in the distance

The lap was savage 85% singletrack, roots everywhere, switchbacking climbs and descents. Hard going in the mud in places but mostly rideable. A fantastic swooping singletrack tdescent then with a big drop at the end where the spectators were ringing cowbells and all that

Ross got in in a fantastic 10th place (especially given the head of him at 8 this morning ;) ) I was in my usual place towards the rear end, this time 21st, happy with that , it is Elites after all hoho.

race entry was a tenner, after which we got soup and brown bread in the local pub, happy days

Great start to the year, thanks to my travelling companion, all roads lead to Fermoy next week for Rd2.

Thanks to all the MBCC folks for a good day out

Results

XC Marathon Championships – 18th September 2011

David F leads a posse through some fast Ballyhoura singletrack

[Report by David Conway]

It’s 3011AD. A bog body is found curled up under an ancient mechanical device. The archives identify the machine as a mountain bike. On the body’s tattered clothing a small equilateral triangle containing the number 795 is barely discernible. The archaeologist whispers in awe  “The legend is true, there really were such heroes.”

That could have been the case had things ended differently. Here’s what really happened.

David F, David T, Barry and I headed off to Ballyhoura in the big blue van yesterday for the 2011 National Marathon Champs. Only DF had done this before but his report from last year had convinced us to give it a lash. We were under no illusions, it was gong to be a tough day.

The organisation was excellent from the get-go, with easy parking and sign-on and helpful marshals quickly setting the tone for the remainder of the day.

As we lined up at the start I had one thing in my mind. Barry had revealed his strategy of sticking to my wheel or DF’s wheel for most of the race and then going for broke towards the end. My counter-strategy was to get out of sight at the start and stay there. It’s hard to chase when you can’t see who you’re chasing!

Bang on time at 11:30am we were off and immediately into a long fire-road climb. I was startled by the early pace  – this was to be a 65km marathon, what was the hurry? Anyway I stuck with it and soon realised that just like any other MTB race, early position going into the singletrack is important, especially for anyone with notions of winning!

After about half an hour things settled down. The fast lads and slow lads had disappeared to their respective ends of the fields and I began to see who I was really racing against. Had some good battles, notably with a couple of lads from Unlaoised and Lakeside Wheelers. The course had everything, long fire-road climbs, fast flowing Ballyhoura singletrack, muddy heath-land and rocky descents. The mud was plentiful, and some of the puddles really should have had lifeguard stations. Sounds like hell but for me it was MTB Nirvana, I was having a great time!

I had managed to get far enough ahead of the lads so that I couldn’t see them behind me and I was feeling good on the bike, climbing well and almost floating down some of the man-made trails. In MTB there are fleeting moments when everything just clicks and I had more than a few of those moments yesterday.

Of course in a 65km race it isn’t all plain sailing. There were 3 very well placed food stops on the course at approximately 15km, 35km and 50km. I had enough of everything on board to make it to the 35km stop where I dismounted and took my leisurely time. Big mistake.

While I was there faffing around I saw Richard Lynch from Epic passing through and grabbing his bottle without even dismounting the bike. Holy c**p I thought, I’m usually well ahead of Richard in NPS races. By the time I was finished messing Richard was well ahead of me up a cruelly long fire road. In due course I caught up and exchanged a few pleasantries before forging on ahead. Made good time to the next feed station and stopped again. More faffing (lesson not yet learned) and sure enough Richard breezes by again grabbing his bottle on the fly. I got going and passed Richard once again but by now I was slowing down and didn’t find it so easy to shake him off. He was the wise old tortoise and I was the poxy hare.

Finally I managed to shake him, or so I thought. I was fairly well ahead in one of the final sections of singletrack when I mounted one of the famous Ballyhoura boardwalks, wooden structures traversing areas too boggy for standard trails. They are treacherously slippery when wet and require 100% concentration. Well I was tired. I was only about 5 metres from the end of the boardwalk when disaster struck and I found myself teetering on the edge, looking down into a black stinking boghole of  uncertain depth. I couldn’t recover, the unthinkable became the unavoidable and down I went. It was a big fall, the boardwalk was about 3 feet high at that point. I landed hard on my right arm and then the bike landed very hard on my head. Luckily the water was only about 6 inches deep but it stank to high heaven. As I was thrashing around in the puddle Richard the tortoise passed me again. Gentleman that he is, he paused to make sure I was OK before disappearing down the trail, never to be caught again. I was a bit shaken but thankfully nothing broken so I got back up and made it to the finish without further incident.

I wasn’t waiting too long before DF arrived with similar stories to my own, highs and lows, but mostly highs I think. We were waiting a long time for Barry and were actually beginning to worry when he arrived with the sorry tale of his misguided wanderings. He had missed a sign and ended up doing an additional 10km. David T arrived and we all set off home pretty pleased with ourselves having risen to one of the toughest MTB challenges on the calendar.

Lesson 1 of the day? Be the tortoise, not the hare. Stay on the bike and keep churning.

Lesson 2? Never, ever forget your helmet. If I had not been wearing my helmet, the bog body story might have come true.

All in all a great day’s racing, the most enjoyable of the year for me. Highly recommended. Well done to the organisers, Team Ballyhoura.

Results and Photos

Powerade Suzuki MTB Marathon Krakow 28th August 2011

[Race Report by David Furlong]

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When the opportunity presented itself to have a weekend away in Krakow with my dear wife and have a go at the Suzuki Powerade Krakow mtb Marathon who was I to resist? And of course in my ongoing quest to be crowned 2011 Racing795 International Mountain Biker of the Year……I packed my bike and off I went……..

The Suzuki Powerade Krakow mtb Marathon http://mtb.webworld.pl/ is the ninth in a series of eleven mtb marathons taking place across southern Poland during the year. Mtb’ing and marathons in particular are very big in Poland, and with 30% of the country covered in forest there’s no shortage of places to go.. These races offer 3 distances – Giga (usually 100km) Mega (50-70km) and Mini (20km). I opted for the Mega as I didn’t want poor Joy to be sitting around waiting all day :) . Distance was 63km with 1300m climbing.

The week leading up to the race was stinking hot – low to mid 30’s. Luckily though it was forecast to break on Saturday night, which it duly did. A drop of rain also on Saturday night ruined my chances of competing in an mtb race in bone dry conditions for the first time.

Having pre-registered me and Joy headed for the start area to be ready to go at 11am. Amazingly the start was only 5 mins from our city centre hotel (think Phoenix Park). The setup was great, loads of tents and the like and loads of people milling around. I even had a go on the warm up spinning machines :D

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Around quarter to 11 I headed for the start – the amount of people!! Like a freakin Ryanair flight except this time I didn;t have no Priority Pass! We’re used to lining up with maybe 100 or so, so 650 was a bit of a sight!

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So off we went. I was a bit far back for my own liking so going into the first section of singletrack I was at the back of the mother of all goober trains. Anyway it was great crack scything my way through the pack with all the goobers floundering in the mud. Experience has told me that if you can stay on your bike especially on the technical ups you will save energy and consequently make up loads of ground. Like always, as the race progresses you get more into it and before long you are with people of similar ability. The race was fast with lots of linking sections on farm tracks and gravel roads. Then into forest singletrack with some technical ups and downs. I made up loads of places here, but the fast lads were really gunning it on the flats. I tried all the tricks ie drafting as much as I could. The pace of the race was high – I had covered 11km in the first half hour, so I knew it wasn’t going to take me the 4 – 4 1/2hrs I had estimated. The last feed station (Powerade, fig rolls, fresh and dried fruit) was at 47kms and I knew there was just one more serious hill at 55km, so feeling good I pushed on. Just one quick stop to phone Joy to tell her I’d be an hour early..! The final 5km or so were great. Swooping flowy singletrack, and by this stage I was in a train with 4 others all dicing for position, mighty crack!

In the end I crossed the line in 332nd out of 668 finishers in 3hrs 35mins. Happy enough with that, I always reckon if i’m halfway up the field I’m not doing too bad.

I really like these type of events. Yeah so it’s not 1 ½ hrs of technical stuff, but you can’t have that over the longer distances. But this is what attracts the masses – we need to cop on to this in Ireland if we are to attract big numbers to mtbing. This was a great mixture of tracks, road, forest and enough singletrack to make it interesting – and all from a city centre start. The organisation and buzz were great.

Big thanks to my one-woman support crew – we might have to make this a habit, now where’s the next one….

Results here: http://www.sportchallenge.cz/pl/vybrat_zavod/vysledky?id_zavod=1109&id_startovne=110902

Bull Raid 12hr/6hr MTB Race, Bellurgan Park – 6th August 2011

Bull Raiders, Ross, Lynn, Rudolf and DavidF share one bag of crisps and one beer.

[Race Report by David Furlong]

Whilst the triathletes were off in Killaloe, myself and Ross (6hr pair) Rudolf and Lynn Hayden (12hr pair) and Damian Sikora (12hr solo) headed for the Bull Raid in Bellurgan Park Co Louth.

The format for these races is simple – do as many laps of the course as you can in your allocated time!

Me and Ross arrived about 12ish, the lads had already been at it since 7:30. Hayden looked in a bit of a daze having already done 3 laps. Rudolf was looking fairly fresh and Damian was as usual flying around with his big happy grin.

Me/Ross/Rudolf/Lynn were set up together in the pits, so there was a bit of crack and company when you were talking a rest.

The course was savage – 11.1km including all of this years NPS course – so pretty technical. Started off with a lungbuster climb then into the technical stuff – tight switchbacks, rocks and roots a plenty. I was lapping average about 50 mins, Ross about 45. For us it was one lap flat out, back to the pits, crash for five minutes, get some food, change clothes, off again. Similar for the lads, with Rudolf doing a few 2 lappers. Didnt see much of Damian as he was in a different area. Conditions were good, although a good shower in the early afternoon made things a little interesting.

In the end me and Ross managed 8 laps for 5th place, Rudolf/Lynn 15 laps for 3rd (!) and Damian 12 laps in 6th

The organisation etc.. was great and there was a great buzz around the place. I really enjoyed this event – the course was tough, but that made it great, you really had to be on your game or you could lose vast amounts of time easily. The format is excellent too, very sociable atmosphere

Fair play to the lads – they were all flying

12 hour Results | 6 hour Results | Photos