6-12-24 Hour Time Trials

 

Last updated 1/23/2020 at 10:53am

Jolene Nacapuy

Whether for 6, 12, or 24 hours, cyclists from around the country and the world gave it their all riding on $10,000+ bikes, ranging in age from 20 to over 70 years old while participating in the Race Across America's 6 – 12 – 24 Hour World Time Trials in Borrego Springs on Nov. 1 – 2.

There were 267 participants from 18 countries, competing in seven age-group categories within seven event categories.

The time trials are qualifying events for the Race Across America this summer when riders come through the first timing station here in Borrego Springs.

Two years into her 24-hour RAAM appearances, Canada's Meaghan Hackinen, the Second Place finisher to USA's Jennifer Orr last year, won the women's overall and broke Orr's mileage record set last year in the age 30 – 39 category.

"Last year I had no expectations," she said. "This year, I wanted to beat my previous mileage. I brought my A-game. I bought a time-trial bike and I had a great support crew, and they were a little more experienced."


Last year, Orr won the women's overall and the age 40 – 49 category with 456 miles, with Hackinen taking second overall and topping the women's age 30 – 39 category with the same mileage, albeit about three and a half minutes slower.

Hackinen was also "Ms. Consistency" around the course, both in lap times and most of her pit stops. For her, she said race tactics and even what she ate before and during the event were all figured out precisely in prep beforehand. And she stuck to the script. She rode 37 more miles (a tad more than two laps) than Christie Tracy, averaging 19.3 mph.


Given Hackinen's average speed of 19.3 mph, close to the 20 that Tracy targeted, and about two laps (and two hours) difference between the two, the mind reels at what could have been one of the most exciting and closest finishes, ever, in women's time trial events.

Hackinen also had the fastest solo time, and was followed by USA's Tracy, and UK's Crystal Spearman, respectively.

Tracy set a distance record for her 40 – 49 age category, despite an unfortunate incident on the track.

She won the 12-hour event in Borrego back in 2017, and was coming off a huge win at the Tejas 500-miler, a 24-hr event in Glenrose, Texas. She was feeling great despite a shoulder injury, and even a scraped knee resulting from a spill a week earlier. But her 24-hr race strategy in Borrego was simple: "Be steady, ride my own race, and keep pit stops to around a minute thirty seconds."

She also had a target average speed in mind of 20 mph for the race, meaning she had to average 53-minute circuits, plus pit stops, around the 18-mile course for around 460 miles. Helping Tracy to do that was her Servillo P3 racing bike that costs about $6,000, plus another $4,000 just for the wheels.

Tracy's 24-hour race began late afternoon at 5 p.m. on Friday Nov. 1. Besides being in the next older age group than her two closest competitors, she was on target on all of her race tactics – projected lap times and pit stops. It was around 3 a.m. on that same moonless night when she started to feel the cold, as did other riders. Certain areas of the northern part of the course had pockets of near-freezing air overnight, and Tracy's hands and feet were starting to go a bit numb.

However, instead of stopping to change into a warmer outfit, Tracy decided to power through. This reporter showed up in the pit area around 5 a.m. just as she was coming in for a pit stop. Her husband/crew chief Jamie assisted her off her bike, it was clear she was suffering. Turns out it was from hypothermia caused by wind chill while riding at 18+ mph.

Hypothermia is a very dangerous condition. Blood circulation in the extremities begins to shut down and transfer to the center of the body. Hands and feet go numb, then legs and arms. In Tracy's case, that slightly injured knee was also bothering her. She immediately went into her trailer with Jamie and they turned on the heater/blower.

According to the automatic digital counters, almost exactly two hours later (a lifetime in the world of competitive cycling), Tracy was back on the course. She had just lost two laps in distance and two hours in time, and instead of being ahead of Hackinen, was now behind.

After cycling 423.6 miles, Tracy finished second behind Hackinen's 460.8 miles, and it was "woulda-coulda-shoulda" about Tracy's fateful decision not to spend five minutes or so changing into warmer clothes when she first started to feel the cold.

For the men's, Andy Jackson, top-ranked in time trial events, and second ranked Michael Broadwith, both in their 40s, helped maintain the English tradition of cycling excellence. They both gutted out over 500 miles each during the 24-hour Men's Solo event, with daytime temps in the 70's and a moonless night, but where the temp dropped overnight in cold spots north of Christmas Circle to near-freezing.

Category winners, with their age group, mileage, and average speed as follows:

24-hr Event

Men's Solo 50 – 59 – Marko Baloh, 492 mi, 20.6 mph

Men's Solo 40 – 49 – Andy Jackson, 528 mi, 22.1 mph

Men's Solo 30 – 39 – Shane Trotter, 446.4 mi, 18.9 mph

Women's Solo 30 – 39 – Meaghan Hackinen, 460.8 mi, 19.3 mph

Women's Solo 40 – 49 – Christie Tracy, 423.6 mi, 17.9 mph

Women's Solo 50 – 59 – Lisa Bliss, 356.4 mi, 15 mph

Men's Solo Recumbent 50 – 59 – Joe Pixley, 352.8 mi, 14.8 mph

Men's Solo Fixed Gear 60 – 69 – Mark Skarpohl, 400.8 mi, 17.6 mph

Women's Two-Person 70+ – Love, Sweat & Gears, 158.4 miles, 6.8 mph

Mixed Two-Person 40 – 49 – Team Steinberg Coaching, 460.8 mi,

Men's Two-Person 50 – 59 – Team Iseri Brothers

12-hr Event

Men's Solo 50 – 59 – Yann Bertaud, 253.2 miles, 21.4 mph

Women's Solo 40 – 49 – Monica Bernhoft, 253.2 mi, 21.3 mph

Men's Solo Recumbent 60 – 69 – Jeffrey Ritter, 181.2 mi, 15.6 mph

Mixed Two-Person 50 – 59 – Team Geary, 235.2 mi, 19.8 mph

Men's Two-Person 40 – 49 – Team Get A Bike USA, 271.2 mi, 19.8 mph

Men's Tandem 50-59 – Team Skipper, 145.2 mi, 12.3 mph

Mixed Two-Person Fixed Gear 40 – 49 – Fix It Mann, 222 mi, 18.6 mph

Mixed Tandem 50 – 59 – A & J Jurczynski, 225 mi, 19 mph

6-hr Event

Men's Solo 30 – 39 – James McNaughton, 150 miles, 25.5 mph

Women's Solo 30 – 39 – Felicity Joyce, 136.8 mi, 23.1 mph

Men's Solo Recumbent 50 – 59 – Clifford Federspiel, 145.2 mi, 24.6 mph

Men's Solo, Single-Speed Bike 40 – 49 – Carlo Tannoury, 96 mi, 16.1 mph

It was another great cycling event in Borrego, and we congratulate all the participants, and especially the medalists, who gave it their all for 6, 12, and 24 hours.

Full article in the Nov. 14 issue of the Borrego Sun.

 
 
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