samedi 26 mai 2012

Top 10 at French Cup race!


Yesterday I had probably my best race since being in Europe, at the 4th round of the French Cup series. The race was held in Plumelec, Bretagne, on a very hard course, with a steep 2km climb that we did 9 times, finishing on the top of it.

The race was pretty hard from the start and after 15km of racing, I got into a breakaway of 12 girls. The break contained all the favourites in the race, so we very quickly gained a big gap over the bunch, and it was clear that we were going to stay away. However, we still had to get up that climb 7 more times!

Attacking up the hill
Unfortunately with 15km to go, I punctured, resulting in me having to chase quite hard up the hill to rejoin the breakaway. This took a bit out of my legs for the finish, and I ended up 7th. My team mate Claire Thomas was also in the breakaway, finishing 9th. This placing has moved me up to 7th equal in the overall standings in the series with one race to go.

Overall it was a good but extremely hard race. This week has been the first really hot week since I have been here, and the temperature during the race was 33 degrees-not my favourite conditions to race in!!

After the race we had a lovely 7 hour drive, getting back to Dijon at 2.30am. Safe to say everyone was pretty knackered by the time we finally got home!!

I am now on my way to Strasbourg to meet up with my mum who is over in Europe for work at the moment.




vendredi 18 mai 2012

Surviving the cobbles!


Well the good news from yesterday is that I survived the cobbles of Belgium and had a really good race in Gooik, a 140km UCI 1.2 race in Belgium! After a stressful lead up to the race, where me and Gen didn’t actually know if we could get a ride to the race until 7pm the night before, this race turned out to be a very successful one for our team, with 4 riders making the front peleton.
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As well as our normal Belgium team (Claire, Gen, Alex, Oriane and I), we had 2 guest riders joining us for the race- one from Italy and one from Luxembourg. This made for a very interesting team briefing, with the Italian only speaking Italian, Gen who only speaks English, and a team manager who speaks French and Dutch! There were multiple translations going on the whole time. Luckily the briefing for this race was pretty simple-get to the front before the cobbled climbs, otherwise you will definitely be dropped and your race will be over!!!
Team talk: everyone looking confused, with me just finding the whole thing quite funny!!

Climbing the Bosberg

In total there were 3 sections of cobbles in this race, the first two being over 2 of the famous climbs which are used in the Tour of Flanders- the Muur and the Bosberg. These climbs are HARD! They reach 20% at the steepest points, and when you are riding up a cobbled hill, you can’t get out of your seat or your wheels will slip, so you just have to grind your way up them. I managed to get over these hills with the front peloton of around 50 riders, with 7 breakaway riders in front of us. Also in the group were Gen, Alex and Claire. Out of the 200 riders who started the race, only the girls who made this group would be allowed to finish- racing in Belgium is definitely not like NZ where everyone can always finish if they want to!

This group stayed together for the rest of the race and I finished 33rd in the sprint, with Alex and Claire close behind. Unfortunately Gen suffered a mechanical in the last 20 km (her seat fell off!!!!), so was unable to finish.

The finish
After the race, its safe to say Gen and I were pretty smashed from 140km of pain!! However, we were very lucky to come home to an amazing dinner, cooked by Gen’s sister who is over to visit for a few days.

I am now on the train (again!) back to Dijon, where I will stay for a few days before the next French cup race on Friday. After that my mum is coming to stay for a few weeks, so I am really excited to see her!







mercredi 16 mai 2012

Holland, a french cup race and Belgium again


Instead of spending another week in Belgium after my races last weekend, I decided to make a trip up to Holland, to visit my Scottish team mates from last year. I had a great week catching up with them and exploring the town of Zutphen where they are living this year. We even managed to fit in a training race on Wednesday-unfortunately it had been raining that day, so I finished the race looking like I had been sprayed with a hose full of mud!

After the training race!
On my return to France, I got a bit of a shock when I was picked up by my team manager and told that we were going to pick up her car which I was going to drive home. She didn’t seem worried when I told her that I had no idea how to drive a manual, telling me that it was easy, and should be no problem since I would only be driving on a 110km/hr motorway!!!! Luckily I managed to look scared enough that she decided this wasn’t the best way for me to learn how to drive a manual!!!!

Yesterday was the 3rd round of the French cup series in Izernore, a small town 2 hours south of Dijon. Like all French races, the circuit was hilly, with 2 climbs on each of the 8 laps. I felt really strong in this race, and the pace felt so easy after all the Belgium UCI races we have been doing! My team mates Beatrice, Magdalena and I put in lots of attacks to try and split up the group, with all of us getting in small breakaways during the race. At one stage, Beatrice had a 50 second lead on the bunch, but unfortunately she was brought back by the strong Vienne Futuroscope team. In the last lap, we managed to get the group down to around 10-12 riders. However, the pace then slowed, and it was a reasonably big bunch at the finish. The race was won by 2 girls who had attacked early in the race, and I had a bit of a disappointing sprint, finishing 17th out of the 130 starters. However, I retained my 12th place in the overall French cup standings, and as a team we retained our 2nd place in the teams classification. Our young rider Alexia Muffat moved up to 3rd place on the overall standings, with another top 10 finish (10th place). Overall it was really nice to do a race which I could actually attack, and be a player in the race, rather than just trying to finish with the bunch! I am really looking forward to the 2nd half of the season when I will be doing a lot more of these types of races.

Today Gen and I are heading up to Belgium (again!) for a UCI race on Thursday in Gooik. I did this race last year and it is HARD- 4 cobbled sections, one of which is on a hill called the Mur (English translation = wall!!!). I only completed around half of this race last year, so the goal this year is to finish! Hopefully my good feelings from the weekend will continue on Thursday!

dimanche 6 mai 2012

SPAIN

After a long string of races in cold, wet and windy Belgium, Gen and I got a well deserved break this week, with a training camp in Platja d'Aro, Spain. The camp was run in an ideal area, only 10km of flat roads in the whole region, and the hotel was 500m from the beach! So mornings were spent attacking the men up the hills and afternoons 'recovering' on the beach or walking around some of the amazing coastline.

One of the beautiful arched walkways around the coast line
Riding with my team manager's son, Tom on the recovery day of the tour







Platja d'Aro beach















From Spain I travelled straight to Holland, experiencing my first ryanair flight (which was not as bad as I had been warned about! I competed in 2 races over the weekend- saturday was a belgium UCI race, and was typically flat, windy and cobbled. After some bad positioning near the start of the race, I finished in the 2nd peleton. Sunday was a national race in Holland, and was a similar course to the day before. I had a pretty good race, managing to position myself well in the bunch and get through the 5km long cobbled section with the front group. Unfortunately, after surviving this selection of around 35-40 girls, we were then caught by a 2nd peleton, resulting in a mass sprint finish, in which I finished mid bunch at 48th place out of 160 starters.

This week I am staying in Holland with some of my team mates from last year. So far it has been really good being able to talk english all the time again, and not having to concentrate all the time, trying to understand the french (it is really tiring!!!!)

I am heading back to france on friday for the 3rd french cup of the season on sunday.