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Ashland’s CX Race Recap
Charlie Farrow
Monday, October 22nd, 2007

With only 66 miles from my house, Ashland’s BayCross 2007 was a CX prospect
too sweet to pass up!!!! And once again a grand time was had by all; which
only adds further to my conclusion that when it comes to bike racing,
Wisconsin has it figured out!!!! The grassroots event is put on by a small,
but growing group of local enthusiastic cyclists coupled with a contingency of
committed recreational youth directors. Their inspirational leader is Paul
Belknap, a youthful visionary endowed with a mound of most impressive curly
hair that is hard to miss!!! It is such leadership and commitment that will
enable this race to just keep getting bigger and better. After the races were
completed, Paul was already getting fired up for next year, when he hopes to
have a consummate weekend race series complete with two separate race venues…

Although the Northland has been inundated with rain the past three weeks, a
shy reluctant sun even made a rare appearance as the races began… The
promoters had promised a “wicked good time” and they did not disappoint! This
course was exactly what one would expect from a “classic” cyclocross including
lots of mud, triple barriers, a strong headwind as one pounded along the
perimeter of a big field (featuring curious, even supportive horses on ones
right, behind a pictureques old fence), a “sand-trap”, two short sections of
dicey twisty single track, a little loose gravel, a quick run-up, and even a
dramatic river crossing!

Apart from the writer, Mike Weispfenning and his lovely wife, and Shawn Gort
and his whole entourage including two top-notch offspring and lovely wife, and
another fellow and wife of whom I met for the first time- all represented
Duluth in fine form. Note: It is the author’s sincere hope that next year more
Duluthians [Team Ski Hut?] will make the trip over to support this top notch
race, Mike Haag was especially conspicuously missing-in-action :( ... In any
event, Mike W’s wife in a fine effort, took second in the B race!!!! The A
race was comprised of about 10 to maybe 15 racers? The obvious favorite was
the multi-talented Scott Chapin of Hayward who has always been a strong
cyclist (and skier & runner), but this has been a “break-out” year for him
with most impressive finishes in many races this season. Therefore, the
writer’s forlorn strategy was to attempt to shamelessly hug his wheel for as
long as possible and hope that he would break a chain or get a flat.
Accordingly, after the initial start (which required running to ones bike) I
nestled in behind Scott’s wheel and steeled myself for 60 minutes of blatant
opportunistic drafting. At my age, there is no such thing as pulling
through!…Doing his duty, he pulled me and the rest of the group through the
flat field (with the significant headwind) and as the group took the hard
right onto the gravel railroad grade, I was still right where I needed to be.
Then suddenly just before we were required to take a hard loose-gravel
descending right onto some muddy-slick rutted terrain, big old Mike blasts out
and takes off, Scott reacted in kind as I did, but I was too slow, so as we
headed into the tricky river crossing it was Scott in the lead followed by
Mike and then the rest of us including everybody’s buddy and all-around great
guy, Aaron Swanson. Although deep and slippery, Scott cruised the crossing
with no problem, but Mike of whom I was following closely, hit the water’s
edge at a weird angle which sent him cavorting headfirst into a substantial
tree. It looked like it hurt something awful (apparently he cracked his helmet
he hit it so hard). The crash caused a complete halt to any forward progress.
Standing in the river, I looked up and just caught a glimpse of Scott riding
away. Mike went on to finish the race, although I’d give his crash a #4+ on
the Scotty Johnson Scale of Narley Bike Crashes (SJSNBC-see below for
explanation of scale). After we all got out of the creek, the race was back on
and while Mr. Chapin easily kept the rest of us at bay, increasing his solo
lead with every lap, the other top spots were, at least for the next couple of
laps, frequently changing hands making for exciting and fun racing. Plus there
were lots of spectators cheering everybody on!!! Ultimately, it was a great
time for all and at the conclusion the racers and family members were all
treated to a plethora of sweet breads, life-giving coffees, brownies, even
cheese dogs!!!! This is a wonderful local event!!!!

Note: the SJSNBC is a practical scale or "standard measure" used to offer
context and relativity to a particular bicycle crash. A #1 being a hard fall
to the floor resulting in abrasions. etc. A medium ranged score of a #5 or #6
usually involves full-on pain with broken appendages and bike parts...a #7 0r
#8 usually requires the use of an ambulance. While the #9s and #10s involve
cosmic pain, season-ending injury, and/or catastrophic bike destruction.
Thankfully, the writer has never witnessed a full-on #10 but I did see a #9+
which was the infamous Scotty Johnson crash several years-ago (for whom the
scale is honorably named). Letz just say that the crash involved a high-speed,
high-impact collision with one's private-sensitive area and a top-tube
followed quickly by another high-speed, high-impact to the same area by
another biker. Scotty took the severe dual hits while well into the
single-track and so then had to wait considerable time for the transport to
the ambulance. He wiled away agony by eating the readily available soil and
vegetation, removing his bloodied shorts, and by crawling and clawing
partially naked into a shallow pit near the crash site...and well, it just
gets uglier...but one gets the picture...a #9 is very very bad!
 
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