It
only rained in Scotland for about twenty minutes the entire time we
were there this year. We were only there for four days, but that has to
some kind of record. This
past weekend was round number five of the World Cup in Fort William, Scotland. Fort
Will has been a staple on the World Cup circuit for the last five or
six years and even hosted the World Championship last year so needless
to say they know how to hold a bike race. The race was even broadcast
live on BBC.
This year in addition to being blessed with great weather
and sunshine there were hardly any midges. Midges are the Scottish
version mosquitoes that seem to be even worse than Vermont’s black
flies. Being
a mountain bike racer traveling all over the world I have probably
spent more time in strange forests than I have in exotic cities. I have
become much more familiar with bugs and dirt than with shops and famous
museums.
Anyway, getting back to the weekend, we were blessed with
great weather again and a fast, dry (almost dusty) course. The
race course was the same one used for World Championships last year
with a few sections cut out to shorten the lap. The coolest parts about
the course are the B.C. style bridges that are littered throughout it.
This year they added a “decision maker” section where you could take
the long route on a wide bridge or ride the faster line on a very
narrow bride about six inches wide with some kinks. I chose the narrow
faster line and it worked well for me on five out the six laps.
The
race started well with Burry (Stander) and I both getting a front row call up and
leading out the first section of the climb. From there I dangled in and
out of the lead group of seven for the first half of the race. I then
dropped back to chase group and rode comfortably there until a last lap
acceleration dispatched me from the group, and I came in solo for 13th. Burry
hung tough in the front group and managed to bag another podium taking 5th on the day to the delight of his mom, brother, sister-in-law,
and nephew who surprised him by showing up unannounced minutes before
the start. My
result in this World Cup helped solidify my cause for making the
Beijing Olympic team which will be officially announced in two weeks.
Right now it is looking really good so keep your fingers crossed for
me.
Thanks for your support,
Todd Wells
(Photos courtesy of
www.cyclingnews.com)