Showing posts with label USA Cycling Junior National Team. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA Cycling Junior National Team. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Rathe slips to 4th in Germany with one stage to go

OBRA racer Jacob Rathe and the rest of the USA cycling Junior National Team experienced the highs and lows of cycling today at Germany's Rothaus Regio-Tour.

Rathe started Stage Three in yellow after winning Stage One and keeping the lead after Stage Two. His teammates Lawson Craddock and Nathan Brown sat 12th and 13th, ready to help Rathe's cause. Bend's Ian Boswell was 78th after nursing a bad knee.

But things went a little south today when the large homegrown contingent of Germans decided to take control of the race and dominated all but two of the top 10 spots. The local press worded it this way ... "Deutsche Dominanz: Ron Pfeifer siegt in Wehr."

Ron Pfeifer, who sat in second place overall just four seconds behind Rathe coming into the stage, made it into a breakaway with no American riders. The USA boys went to the front and eventually pulled back a chase group and nearly half a minute on the leaders, but it wasn't enough to save Rathe's yellow jersey. Rathe finished in the first chase group but lost enough time to fall to fourth, 43 seconds back. The team moved down to fifth on GC with one stage remaining. Boswell eventually abandoned.

OVERALL RESULTS
Rothaus Regio-Tour
After Three Stages


1. Pfeifer, Ron GER 07.48.12
2. Krieger, Alexander GER 07.48.44 +32
3. Sütterlin, Jasha GER 07.48.52 +40
4. Rathe, Jacob L. USA U.S.A. Nat. 07.48.55 +43
5. Lergenmüller, Tobias GER 07.49.03 +51
6. Krauwel, Bas NED 07.49.06 +54
7. Schlichenmaier, Tim GER 07.49.18 +1.06
8. Fricke, Tassilo GER 07.49.30 +1.18
9. Freienstein, Raphael GER 07.49.32 +1.20
10. Ansari, David GER 07.50.10 +1.58

USA Cycling National Team riders

42. Eastman, Ryan P. USA 07.53.48 +5.36
57. Craddock, Lawson G. USA 07.55.02 +6.50
75. Mannion, Gavin J. USA 07.58.27 +10.15
81. Brown, Nathan USA 07.59.35 +11.23

Friday, August 21, 2009

Portland's Jacob Rathe keeps yellow jersey after two stages of Germany's Rothaus Regio-Tour


PHOTO: Rathe makes some new friends on the podium after his Stage One win. / Courtesy photo

Riding with the USA Cycling Junior National Team, OBRA cyclist Jacob Rathe (CMG Racing) won the first stage of the 25th Rothaus Regio-Tour in Germany this week and continues to hang onto the the yellow jersey after two stages.

Rathe, who finished 17th earlier this month at the World Championship Road race in Moscow, grabbed the overall lead on Stage One when he led a break most of the race, then escaped from that group with two other riders and took the three-up sprint for the stage win and race lead.

Or, as the official race website put it ...
"Jacob Rathe aus den Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika war der große Abräumer auf der ersten Etappe der 25. Rothaus Regio-Tour International. Der 18-Jährige aus Oregon gewann den Sprint in Buggingen gegen Ron Pfeiffer (Rheinhessen), Tobias Lergenmüller (Hessen) und Tim Schlichenmaier (Württemberg). Die Etappe war 104,7 Kilometer lang und wurde in Heitersheim gestartet."
You can read that complete report HERE.

With two stages to go, Rathe holds a slim lead over a bevy of tough German riders. His teammates Nathan Brown and Lawson Craddock sit 12th and 13th. Bend's Ian Boswell is 77th.

OVERALL RESULTS
Rothaus Regio-Tour
After Two Stages


1. Rathe, Jacob L. USA 5:33.59
2. Pfeifer, Ron GER 5:34.03 +04
3. Lergenmüller, Tobias GER 5:34.07 +08
4. Schlichenmaier, Tim GER 5:34.22 +23
5. Krauwel, Bas NED 5:34.27 +28
6. Krieger, Alexander GER 5:34.33 +34
7. Freienstein, Raphael GER 5:34.36 +37
8. Ansari, David GER 5:34.36 +37
9. Bechter, Ramon SUI +38
10. Fricke, Tassilo GER 5:34.37 +38

USA Junior National Team riders
12. Brown, Nathan USA 5:34.49 +50
13. Craddock, Lawson G. USA 5:36.07 +2.08
34. Mannion, Gavin J. USA 5:38.52 +4.53
57. Eastman, Ryan P. USA 5:38.52 +4.53
77. Boswell, Ian P. USA 5:38.52 +4.53

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Rathe Report: Driedaagse van Axel is crazy, scary, ridiculous and ... ...

Oregon junior racer Jacob Rathe has been in Europe with the USA Cycling Junior National Team competing in the 28th edition of the Internationale Junioren Driedaagse van Axel, a four-stage race contested May 22-24. Rathe sent Cycling Action this report.

By Jacob Rathe

The Course de la Paix may be the hardest junior stage race in the world, but Axel is the craziest. It's the Paris-Roubaix of junior stage racing. I didn’t do it last year, but U.S. riders reported it as: crazy, scary, ridiculous and made them pee themselves.

The race features small roads, cobblestones, wind and 180 riders. Even in the U.S. it would be crazy.

Stage 1
5:00 PM start time. We were on the start line, in the 5th row at 4:15. The race started with 8 kilometers of a nice, two-lane road. A quick left turn, through some farm fields, and we were on our first cobblestone section. If you're at the back now, the front of the race will be 1,000 meters ahead of you by the end (seriously). The first 8km was a miss-n-out. Everybody wanted to be at the front but nobody wanted to do any work, very nervous tempo.

I did ok and entered the cobbles around 30th place, in no danger of missing the split. The 180 rider field instantly went single-file, and even in 30th the front seemed very far away. We turned 90 degrees onto a paved road, I looked back and could see the shattered long line of riders still on the cobbles, a long ways back.

The next 40 km’s were somewhat chill as we weaved through the Dutch countryside on small farm roads. The wind was strong, and the front 10 riders were in an echelon, everybody else was in the gutter.

Nothing really happened until we got to the finishing circuits. Each of the three laps had a rough 500 meter cobble section, 2km from the finish. The rest of the course was pretty normal, with small roads, lots of turns and wind. I could see the pollen floating in the air during the race, and my eyes, nose, and throat burned with itch. Occasionally forcing a dry, wheezy, asthmatic cough. Am I sick?

Only Ryan and I finished in the lead group. About what I expected, Benny and Danny are track riders, and Russell is a mountain biker.

I got myself to the finish line. A group of 11 snuck away at the end, 20 seconds ahead. If I’m sick, I’ll know in the morning.

Stage 2
Stage two was a 7.9 km TT. Flat, fast and somewhat technical with wind. I felt better than expected. I never coughed during the TT, although I did before and after. I rolled a 10:10 for 15th place.

The winner rode it 32 seconds faster, and only four riders under 10 minutes. So I’m still within easy grasp of a top-5 GC. We did alright as a team, Ryan Eastman came in 26th, eight seconds behind me. Benny and Danny both under 10:31.

Stage 3
It was hot during the morning time trial, but as we readied for the road race in the evening when the race started at 5:30, it smelled like rain.

The Cobbles started 17km in. The start wasn’t so fierce, but we lined up in the back 1/2 hour early. I found my way to the front. My throat burned as my breathing escalated. “This is going to be a long day,” I thought, so I kept drinking, and half my bottle was gone in 10 minutes.

I hit the cobbles in good position when I felt something hit my leg. I looked down and my bottle is cock-eyed, barely in the cage. By the time I reach down it's gone.

Then the sky got dark and it started to sprinkle. Yes. Already I feel better. By the time we get to the finishing circuits it's pouring and my breathing is normal. I forgot about my earlier problems.

Before we started the circuits, 10 riders escaped up the road and got 30 seconds. Not again! It was a big, straight road. The peloton slowed up, I attacked up the right side, got low on the bike and didn’t look back. It took me 2.5km to reach them. Kazakhstan had two guys in it and were driving it.

We were working ok, not very smooth, but the pace stayed high and there were 50km to go. I didn’t really notice it, but riders kept coming up in twos and threes. With 14 riders, we were 35 seconds up on the peloton. It was looking good. The rain continued, and going into a corner the rider in front of me, and behind me, slid out. The cobbles were treacherous. The center ridge was the highest point of the road, and the sides were slightly off-camber.

The group grew to more than 20 riders with a gap of 35 seconds with two laps still to go. I got third in the intermediate sprint across the line and got a two-second time bonus. Then, literally three minutes after the moto tells us we have 35 seconds, we get caught.

Still feeling pretty good, I re-integrate with the main field. It didn’t get too crazy until the last 10km. It was still pouring rain, and the last time over the cobbles was treacherous. Tires were sliding out from underneath riders going straight. The only way through was in the middle or in the muddy grass. There was a huge pile up right behind me, but amidst all the noise I couldn’t hear it.

I had an ok sprint for 12th place on the stage, and I moved up to 13th on GC. Two U.S. riders went down at the end, Benny Swedberg and Ryan Eastman. But due to the 3km rule, they have the same time.

Stage 4
This was the last day of the race, and physically the hardest. The course went up and down the whole time and featured three king of the mountains sprints on each of the four laps, but there were many more hills than that.

The course weaved through the town, on big (relatively) roads, then off into the country on small twisty farm roads, weaving up and over the hills. There were lots of corners and lots of short punchy climbs. The KOM climbs were the hardest, all of them steep and between 500 meters and 1.2k, and with open rolling sections on top with wind.

The first lap was very nervous, but it seemed like the moment we crossed the finish line for the first time after 26.5km, it instantly calmed down.

The race leader was winning by about 30 seconds, time that could be lost very easily on this course. Riders would go up the road, and his team was there to set the tempo, keeping it manageable. As the lap board counted down, his teammates disappeared, and on the last lap he had one left.

There was a break of four up the road about a minute. It wasn’t coming back, and the yellow jersey was on the front.

My opportunity came when 4th place rider on GC (and the leader until the last day at the Peace race) Nikolas Arndt attacked at the beginning of the lap. The yellow jersey instantly responded, pulling the shattering peloton, but was unable to close down the five-second gap and sat up. Right when the slow up came, I was right in the front, and had the urge to jump, and I should have. I thought about it for one second and by then it was too late. I was pretty gassed, but so was everybody else.

I was hoping to take advantage of a GC battle to get myself the stage win. But, my chance rode away from me. I hovered near the front waiting for somebody else to make a move. It wasn’t until 8 kms when somebody jumped on a steep climb, and I followed. We got away, and the moto rolled up to tell us there was a 90-second time gap to the break. It's a big gap, but big time can be gained on steep climbs.

I was feeling really good and doing most of the work. The race was almost over, and I wanted time on the field. We caught up to a German riding by himself, he sat on.

Two kms later we got another time gap. This time it was 50 seconds. We could possibly catch them. If they started doodling around, 50 seconds would be nothing. They were in sight on the open sections, and I took a few extra risks down a narrow twisty decent with 3kms to go. The caravan behind the lead group had to pull over to let us by, we were getting close.

At 1k to go, they still weren’t close enough. My motivation faded, now I just wanted the best possible stage result. Nobody else wanted to pull, so I just set a decent tempo of the last 500 meters up to the finish. I ended up getting 7th on the stage, the German jumped around me at the end.

The peloton rolled in a good while later, possibly a minute. If the gap was over 51 seconds, I would have moved ahead on GC of everybody in the peloton, and I would be in no worse than 6th place on GC, I guessed. But, the time gap ended up only being 40 seconds, which slotted me in 9th on GC.

In hindsight, I should have ridden a lot harder in the last km to make sure I got 51 seconds and not worried about my stage result.

It was an awesome race, I actually enjoyed it. Never a dull moment.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Rathe Report: Peace Race the second time around

(Oregon junior racers Jacob Rathe, Austin Arguello and Ian Boswell have been in Europe competing with the USA Cycling Junior National Team. They recently finished the Peace Race in the Czech Republic against members of other junior national teams. Rathe, who finished sixth on Stage Four, sent Cycling Action this report).

By Jacob Rathe

Stage 1: Bringing Back Memories

Usually things are easier the second time … usually. I did this race last year. Mostly I remember it as blurry visions of suffering, a car’s windshield and the insides of my eyelids. But as the year progressed, I gained much more experience and somehow tricked myself into thinking the difficulty I had in the Peace Race last year was mostly due to my inexperience.

It didn’t take long to falsify that thought; about 500 meters, to be exact. The race rolled out of the town we were staying in for the whole race, Litomerice. It started slightly downhill on cobbles, through a roundabout, and then the first set of big rollers heading out of town. That was when memories proved accurate.

We had three loops to do. It started out rolling, but mostly went up, then up and up. Eight km later we crested the top and had a somewhat chill downhill and rolling section, until the next time around.

I wasn’t having a great day. The first lap I thought I would be dropped. I felt a little less bad on the second lap. The third time up the climb wasn’t looking good, though the legs were starting to come around. I started in a bad position -- very bad. I remember coming to the bottom of the last 800 meter pitch of the climb. There were 20 riders in a line in front of me with a gap to the peloton. The front was a loooong ways away…Somehow I crested the top in contact with the main group.

The peloton was all together until about 10 km to go when four riders got away. They weren’t far up the road, so I tried to bridge and ended up bringing the whole group within five seconds of break. But nobody felt like finishing it off so the break crept away again and ended up staying away, 23 seconds up on the field.

U.S. riders finished decently in the group. Ryan Eastman finished 20th, Austin Arguello, 22nd and me 25th. An Austrian won the stage and is in the Yellow Jersey.

Stage 2: Tempoless

Last year stage two was the only “easy” day of the race. It was mostly flat with a 1.5 km hill, and a 1km finishing climb. This year we had 18 km that was supposed to be flat, but it turned out to have a few climbs. Then we had the biggest climb of the whole race: 10 km at an 8% average grade that required 28 minutes of climbing. I had another bad day -- very unusual. I my legs haven’t popped open after that ear infection.

The climb really was awful. It never let up, and people kept passing me. The field blew apart into a million pieces, but eventually came together into two big groups. I was in the second group of about 60, not quite the “grupetto,” but pretty close. We finished six minutes back, ending my GC hopes.

Ian and Charlie finished in the lead group. Everybody else with me…Including the yellow jersey.

Stage 3: A+B

Last night I realized how hard this race really is. We have two stages today and two more monster stages this weekend. In the 12km time trial, Charlie, Ian, and Andrew hit it hard, Tinkles, Ryan and I “soft pedaled” it.

Nobody was really happy with their result. Andrew finished 22nd, Charlie 33rd and Ian 50th. The times were faster than last year, under what I remember to be pretty similar conditions. The winning time was faster last year, but there were many more times under 15 minutes this year.

Austin and I soft pedaled, coming in 114th, and 115th, respectively. I beat him by one second; we must ride together too much. Surprisingly, our average speed was about 41 kph, which used to be a good time trial for me.

The afternoon stage was uneventful: five circuits around a town with a few short climbs. I was a good day for me to take advantage of a tired peloton. Last year they raced it pretty hard. But, this year, Stage 2 was much harder, and Stage 4 is also harder than last year. So today most racers were content with a group sprint. I ended up in a few short-lived breaks but nothing substantial. My legs showed up today; I could actually move up on the climbs, and the burn almost felt good in my legs.

The finish was good for me. The last 400 meters were slightly uphill, but it was also somewhat technical. Since no team had an amazing sprinter (they don’t come to this race), the last couple kilometers were very unorganized. I was in good position, but I got swarmed when we turned onto a big road at a slow pace.

I ended up finishing 17th on the stage -- a good benchmark top 20 but not quite satisfying.

The German who destroyed the TT this morning also won the field sprint and is in yellow.

Stage 4: Stage from Hell

I think this is the hardest course in Junior cycling. This is the stage where you find out if you have done anything wrong. Everything you do the first three stages, with regards to fueling, hydration, rest, and where you ride in the peloton, will decide your fate. Everything you do wrong will come back and slap you.

We had about 1,000 meters until the first climb. Five kilometers. Up. First two kilometers’ average grade: 13%. Entire climb: 10%. Driving to the start you can see the mountain range, a big dark wall of mountain. After the climb it doesn’t go down, but continues to roll forever. They’re not small rollers, either; big ones that are exposed to the wind.

I made it up the first climb without much trouble. The rolling hills weren’t too bad for the next 30 km, until we had a screaming descent back down to the valley floor, with a lot of turns at 80-95 kph. Then came the next climb, only four kilometers this time. I sort of made it up in the lead group; the field split and only a 10 second gap was left to close down on top of the windy ridge. Only 10 seconds…

I was relieved to be there after the two climbs of the day. But the worst was yet to come. I remember this section to be very difficult last year, but that was when I got caught at the back, in the gutter. This year was no different. An echelon was up front, a small cluster of riders, then a long single file line in the gutter. We went up and down these big rollers, about 200 vertical feet of climbing for what really was forever. There was no rest, even on the downhill where you had to spin fast into the crosswind. All I remember is riding in the gutter, pretty much in the grass, and flipping the 100% effort switch to “on.”

A break was up the road, and six Russians (who had a guy in second place), were riding on the front. The Germans had only the yellow jersey left in the front group.

In the midst of pain and fatigue, I realized how amazing this race, and sport, really is. I would look up occasionally and could see far below to the valley and the dark mountains beyond. I’d watch the long line of colorful jerseys hammering through the small, twisty, country roads. This is more interesting than math class…

There were still four U.S. riders in the front group when we bombed back down to the valley floor. We saw 25k to go and thought we were home free. I was still slightly concerned about a short uphill I saw in the last 10k. But our elevation profile hasn’t been completely accurate. There have been climbs in the profile that never show up, while there have been many more climbs in the race that weren’t in the profile. I was optimistic.

But it came eight km from the finish. It was three km long, and steep. This is the time when the front group dismantles, and you hear grunts and moans. Again, somehow I clawed myself up and over the top in the lead group.
Four, three, two…kilometers to go. The break was caught long ago, a Nations Cup stage was up for grabs.

This was my biggest regret of this race: With 1,500 meters to go, the Jr. Paris-Roubaix winner from Belgium attacked, and I followed and bridge up to him. He sat up when I catch him. With one k to go I looked back, expecting to see the pack in a single file line. No. I stood up to re-accelerate but there was nothing left, and 1,000 meters seemed like an eternity to stay away. I waited, and all five seconds that I waited I was pissed that I hadn’t kept going. I jumped back into the front and found my way to the line for a sixth-place finish.

One of my goals for this race was to get a top-10 in a stage. But, if you can get sixth, then you can get third, or second …or first. Hindsight is 20/20.

Stage 5: The ‘Champs Elysee’

Although this is the “Tour de France of the East” or the “Junior Tour de France,” the final stage doesn’t have the same feel. In the Tour de France, the riders casually ride to the finishing circuits on the Champs Elysee in Paris, then start racing. I wouldn’t have minded something like that, but instead we had four loops through Litomerice and the surrounding hills. Only eight substantial climbs. Two climbs per lap and almost 6,000 feet of climbing separated me from the final finish line.

The climbs weren’t too bad. One was short and steep: 3k with 15 percent wall. The other was 4.5k with gradients between 5 and 10 percent.

A long story short, first lap: ughhh, maybe I won’t finish. Lap 2: I may as well. Lap 3: wait…one more lap after this?! Lap 4: 2 more climbs to go!

I rode the race boring…now that I think of it, I didn’t really do anything. Just hanging on, which wasn’t much of an issue until the last climb. I was confident I could get a top five on the stage if it came down to a field sprint or with a few riders off.

The last time up the climb was the only time it really took everything. But when I crested the climb, the wide open plains sprawled out in front of me, dark clouds loomed on the right, and a bright partly cloudy sky on the left. The long line of riders swooped down the steep, smooth, twisty decent. This really is the most amazing junior race on the planet.

It came down to the wire. Not for me, but it was fun to watch. In the flat last 5k, the race leader was on the front trying to bring back the break of five riders, including a Russian who was third on GC. The German and his teammate hammering on the front at 55 kph brought back memories from my April trip at Ster van Zuid-Limburg.

The finish didn’t come together. I got caught behind a crash with 500 meters to go. Ten riders gapped off the front and I caught back up to them at the finish line for 21st place.

The race was over. Five days before I had feared the climbs, the cobbles, the wind, the descents, the finishing sprints and the pain. But now that it is over it just seems like a bad dream…or maybe a good one.

Last week U.S. Development Team graduate Tejay Van Gardener, of the Rabobank Continental team, said that his biggest regret as a junior was not doing the Peace Race. I replied, “I think mine is doing it twice.” Surely I was wrong.

Interesting: the race finished in Terezin, I think the third deadliest concentration camp during WWII. Maybe a little weird also....

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Rathe Report: The streets of Hoboken

(Oregon juniors Jacob Rathe, Austin Arguello and Ian Boswell are currently in Europe with the USA Cycling Junior National Team, which just completed the Grand Prix Hoboken in Belgium. Rathe sent Cycling Action this report).

HOBOKEN, Belgium -- A typical race in Belgium: crappy roads, small roads, narrow roads, road furniture, lots of corners and more crappy roads. The race featured a total elevation gain of almost 300 feet in 116 kilometers, and more than 30 90+ degree corners in 50k.

It's been my first race in over two weeks due to an ear infection, I wasn’t expecting much but needed a good race under me for next week's Course de la Paix in the Czech Republic.

Thirty-three teams with a total of 196 riders lined up. We started in the city of Hoboken, did two 50 kilometer loops, then finished with two circuits around the town.

A break of three got away 20k into the race. They were joined not soon after by four more, including U.S. rider Andrew Barker. At the end of the first lap I made my way up to the break with four other riders. The break was now 12. Then more came up. Then it was 25. The group was more of a selection rather than a breakaway.

My only teammate in the group, Andrew, flatted on the second lap, and I was the only U.S. rider there until another teammate, Ryan Eastman, came up with another 10 riders. At the same time three riders sneaked off the front just as we got to the finishing circuits. They got out of sight, and I spent a lap trying to bridge up with another Belgian but couldn’t make it before getting swallowed up by the lead pack.

The finishing circuit was somewhat ridiculous, with several 90+ degree corners every kilometer and a cobble stone section that was scary to look at. From a big road, we turned onto a small road that turned to cobbles. Fifty meters later it opened up into somewhat of a field of cobbles, with train tracks and a sharp bend onto an uphill highway overpass. The train tracks weren’t even nice train tracks; rising above the cobbles and worthy of a good bunny hop.

There was no organized chase, but rather a constant barrage of attacks. Eventually five more riders got away to the lead group that grew to eight. I tried but had no more bullets left. We got caught by another group on the last lap, containing another teammate, Charlie Avis. I was destroyed, and he looked like he still had some hop in his legs so I told him I’d lead him out for the sprint. I led the last 1.5k through the town only to get swarmed with 200 meters to go.

Charlie ended up in 17th, Ryan in 28th, me in 29th. Austin came in not soon after in 41st, and all other U.S. riders finished in the top 100. We were 6th in team GC.

It wasn’t a great race for us, but not bad.

The Course de la Paix (Peace Race) starts on Wednesday. It's five days long with lots of climbing. Nations Cup-only national teams will be there, but the race is probably better suited to our strengths as a team.

VeloNews reporter Fred Dreier has been in Europe and spent some time with the Junior team. Read his report HERE.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Rathe Report: Bitter day, but a bright future

(Oregon's Jacob Rathe has been in Belgium with the USA Cycling Junior National Team for the four-stage Ster van Zuid-Limbug. His USA teammate Adam Leibovitz took the leader's jersey in the opening time trial and went into the final stage with a one-second overall lead. Rathe sent Cycling Action this report.)

By now the race finished two days ago, but I just got home early this morning. We finished the race Monday evening, got back to the Izegem house late and got up early to go to the airport. Twenty-four hours later, I was home.

Stage 4 was also the queen stage of the race; five King of the Mountains sprint points and hard finishing circuits. The climbs were nothing we had encountered yet in this race. They were between 1 and 1.5k, with gradients of 15-20 percent. They were hard enough to split the field in two.

We expected the overall to come down to the wire. With such small time gaps it was possible many different riders could still win. We were all tired from the time we spent on the front defending the jersey the previous days. It was already an accomplishment to keep a three-second lead for two days, but we wanted to finish it off.

The race didn't pan out as we had hoped. We lost the leader's jersey and the team classification on the last day. The break went pretty early in the race. We let it get some time, confident we could bring it back in the end. The gap was up to 1 minute 30 seconds with 60k to go when the chase started. Two other teams started the chase, and we soon joined them.

The pace was fast and steady, and I was was confident the race would come back togetther. I hopped in the rotation once we got to the finishing circuits. They were in the same town that the prologue was in, the prologue course being half of the circuit. I pulled hard, but not too hard, for the first two laps. That was when I realized the gap wasn't really coming down. It was still 50 seconds. Teams started to get a little bit desperate, and the chase was full throttle. Teams that had riders in the break would join the paceline and disrupt the rhythm. I pushed and yelled at them to make them timid about doing it, but they didn't care.

It was by far the most exciting atmosphere the race had been through. The course was a figure-eight. With two loops that didn't cross by-passed within a block of each other in the town area. A solid wall of people lined the streets of the climbs. After the start/finish line we turned right and up the climb, sprinting out of the turn each lap, feeling more like a criterium, not the bottom of a climb.

I am still surprised how the group of 6-8 riders stayed away. At the finish they had 23 seconds. We lost the overall race by 16 seconds. We just needed to go 16 seconds faster in the final 60k of chasing. Adam dropped to 3rd on GC. I went from 7th to 11th. The team went from 1st on Team GC to 2nd.

It was a bitter ending to what was a great milestone for the U.S. development team program. Junior Team Director Ben Sharp said that when he started this job only two years ago, it was a success for every rider to finish in the pack. And it wasn't unusual for them to be dropped early in the race. Now he actually had to think about how to win.

This is only the beginning for me, after doing Sea Otter and Willamette Stage Race in the states these next two weeks, I go back to Belgium for a month.

Photo courtesy of Sports Photography by Jos Aerden.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Rathe Report: Too Close For Comfort

Oregon racer Jacob Rathe (Hammer/CMG Racing) is currently in Belgium with the USA Cycling Junior National Team, which is competing in the four-day Ster Van Zuid-Limburg near the border of Belgium and the Netherlands. Rathe sent Cycling Action this report about stages 2 & 3.

(UPDATED BELOW: Monday, 3:25 p.m.)

Stage 2: Tactical Games

Yesterday was stage 2, and it turned out to be a very interesting day tactically. The race was 112k. We rode 77k to a town and then did five loops on a 7k finishing circuit. It wasn't very hilly, but it was hillier than I expected.

The first hour of the race was aggressive and nervous, breaks tried to establish themselves but enough teams were active that nothing stuck. Later in the race it became more dangerous for us. Our goal was to bring the pack in together for a bunch sprint and hope that the winner wasn't one of the few riders within five seconds of our race leader Adam Leibovitz. The winner gets a five-second time bonus.

A few small groups would establish time gaps but we were quick to plop 3 guys, including myself, on the front to bring it back. Things got really interesting on the finishing circuits. On the second lap Nate and I found ourselves in a breakaway group of 10 guys. Most of the good teams were represented, it was looking good. Since we have the leader's jersey, we didn't have to help with the pacemaking. We could get a free ride at the back because we didn't want to help a high-placed rider gain time on Adam, and possibly take the lead from us.

As expected, the other members of the break weren't happy we were there. They yelled at us to help but it was in our best interest that the break didn't succeed. For me though, it was a perfect situation. I was the highest-placed rider in the front group, and I could sit at the back and not do any work. At one point we had 33 seconds and I was the leader of the race on course.

But, the organization of the group fell apart, they were all tired. Had I pulled it had a better chance of succeeding, but I didn't know who was in the break, and if a higher-placed rider than I had beaten me at the finish, we would lose the jersey altogether.

With two laps to go another group of 10 bridged up to us. Adam was not there, but the third-placed rider was. At that point, the main field wasn't far back. We were somewhat relieved to bring it all back together and make sure Adam was in the front group.

Then the real work started to keep it together. No big moves went until the last lap, when the second-placed rider from Great Britain launched off the climb. It took myself and two other U.S. riders more than half a lap to bring him back. It was scary, but the USA train brought the race back together, holding onto the yellow jersey one more day. We have a stage this afternoon, and the last one tomorrow. I moved up to sixth place on GC, still seven seconds back.

Stage 3: A Tough Day For Team USA

We started the stage still in the leader's jersey by three seconds. It was a 112k race, ending again with five finishing circuits. The course was rolling and technical. It was a relatively mellow race the first 30k (for Euro standards), and enough teams were active that nothing stuck.

A group of three eventually sneaked away and gained a one-minute advantage. It was time for Team USA to go to the front. Four of us set tempo on the front, leading the now 175-rider field through the windy countryside and into the technical narrow streets of the small Belgian towns. We brought it back without too much trouble -- probably too soon.

I made a tactical mistake when I let a group go 5k before an intermediate sprint. I assumed the team with the red (points) jersey would want to keep it together. But I was wrong, and another group, this time of eight, got away and the gap rose to a minute. We entered the finishing circuits with eight riders storming away from the field and about 40k to go. Three of us went to the front again, setting the tempo high. It took us about 1.5 laps to bring it back without much of a problem.

That was when we got into big trouble. With two laps to go, less than 20k, we were all tired. We continued to be bombarded by attacks. With 1.5 laps to go another group got away. I was the only one left at the front, and no other teams were motivated to chase. I got on the front and gave all that I had left. I led the first half of the last lap until the escapees were in sight. That's when the sprinters' teams got excited and swarmed me. The break never did get caught, but they had less than 10 seconds at the finish.

Unfortunately, The Belgian who won gained enough time on the field, plus the time bonuses, to come one second behind Adam on GC. Toooo close...

We've got one more stage this afternoon, and we've got the top spot on the podium ... by one second.

(UPDATE: VeloNews.com reports that during Monday's final stage, Adam Leibovitz slipped to third overall when he finished in the pack behind a six-rider breakaway. Jacob Rathe was 11th on the final GC.)

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Rathe Report: Team USA Rocking the Roads of Belgium

(Oregon racer Jacob Rathe, Hammer/CMG Racing, is currently in Belgium with the USA Cycling Junior National Team. He sent Cycling Action this report).

APRIL 11 -- Yesterday evening we started a four day stage race, Ster Zuid Van Limburg (something like that), here near the border of Belgium and the Netherlands. We did a 5.3 k prologue starting and ending in the same small town. It was very nice and warm, close to 20 degrees Celsius with moderate steady wind. It started uphill, over a few rollers and back in to town with the last 1.5k slightly uphill with a steady headwind.

Team USA did great. US National TT Champion Adam Leibovitz took the leader's jersey with a time of 6 min 21 sec, and I came in 7th with a time of 6 min 28 sec. The next placed US rider was 11th, and all of us were in the top 30 of the 185 rider field.

We have a lot of work to do to keep the lead over the next 3 days...today we have a 112 k stage. The race will most likely be decided in the time bonuses given out at different sprint points along the stage and at the finish.

It is very nice in this area of Belgium, very old. And plenty of road furniture ...

The father of one of Rathe's teammates posted some video HERE.