| |
| |
|
 |
|
Adam Craig, TEAM Giant, Check in From World Cup #5, Mont
Sainte-Anne, Quebec Ive been coming here for a long time to race bikes. The
first time was the Cadet downhill at age 14 in 1996. My first World
Championships were here in 1998. Its always been a great time. This year
especially. Keeping with the theme of no proper goals for the 2005 season, I
didnt want to focus on Mont Saint Anne, but I was keenly
aware that it was on the horizon. After racing on silly smooth tracks in Europe
for a while, I was fired up to get on some proper burly trails.
|
|
The event
organizers didnt disappoint, delivering the GOODS! I could describe the
course, but it would take forever because every inch is worth talking about.
Lets just say its perfect, short steep climbs, tons of technical
singletrack, and just enough smooth terrain to get a drink every once in a
while, key this year because it was around 90 degrees and quite
humid....
As a
random aside that I didnt think Id be writing right now, Carl
Decker had a proud, and diverse week. Electing to stay in Park City, UT for
Elite Road National Championships on Wednesday instead to coming to the east
coast to get in tune with the roots and mud seemed a bit odd to me. I guess it
was the call though, as, after just under five hours and 125 miles of racing,
Carl made the move of the day to cross the finish line first, ahead of the best
non-pro roadies in the country, earning the stars and stripes jersey of Elite
National Champion. To cele! brate, Carl woke before dawn the next day, flew to
Maine, then drove six hours to Quebec, arriving in the early morning on Friday
to prepare for Saturdays world cup. Proud.
The race for me was pretty much awesome. Carl stopped and
soaked his heat swollen feet in the creek once a lap, which he also claimed was
awesome, although not very fast. I finished the melee of the first lap in third
place, after being beind fellow Giant guy for a bit as the lead duo of
Christoph Sauser and Frederick Kessiakof opened a gap of twenty seconds. Over
the next three of six laps I rode alone in third place, bringing the gap to the
leaders down to single digits. They were definitely watching though, and making
sure I didnt make contact. On the fourth g! ap Geoff Kabush emerged from
the distant chase group (Im amazed there was a group of any kind on this
course) and starting closing the gap to me. We started the fifth lap together
and stayed that way for a bit until Geoff decided to turn it up a bit and try
to reel in the leaders, who were gradually distancing themselves on the climbs.
I rode the last lap smart and steady, holding Liam Killeen at bay to cross the
line fourth, 1:45 behind the winner, Sauser. I was pretty stoked on the day,
but not 100%, as my legs never felt really strong and I definitely never was
riding as fast as Im capable of, close, but that extra ten percent would
have been the difference for sure. Still, on the podium, and moving up to ninth
in the overall standings after racing as close to my backyard made this kid
pretty happy. Well see what Brazil brings, the three guys in front of in
QC arent going
.
Sunday
was a bonus play day for the Team Gaint XC boys, Carl borrowed my Super-D bike
and did downhill runs off the Gondola. I somehow finally had the stars align
and was able to paddle a borrowed kayak down the Taureau Section of the
Jaques-Cartier river on a beautiful summer day. Ive been trying in vain
to run the Taureau, the king of all creeks east of the Mississippi, for years
now, so it made for a nice cap to an already amazing weekend. |
|
|
|