Crank cycling wants to congratulate Colin Ng for his win at the western collegiate cycling conference.

Colin is the 2010 category C champion. This years Championship criterium was a challenging .5 mile Course with last 200 meters being 7 percent grade to the finish line.

As soon as the whistle was blown Colin moved quickly to the front and stayed in the top ten to avoid any mishaps. UC Davis immediately started sending attacks up the road. Colin had won his last two races. UC Davis had made it there goal to tire Colin out so he would not have anything for the sprint. Colin had to chase the UC Davis team down as his teammates were suffering. Colin spent the majority of the 30 minute race in the front chasing moves down.

With one lap to go Colin was in 7th place and his teammate Matt McKinzie came to the front and protected him from the wind for half a lap. Colin was 4th out of the final corner and drove hard to the finish line. Matt hung on to take 6th. Good Job UCSD, and good job Colin, and Matt.

Colin (Quadzilla) driving to the line!!

This past weekend was a solid weekend of racing with lots of wins.

First off was Justin Farrar in Maryland. He entered his 2nd category 4/5 road race of the year. There were 75 riders in his field. The race was on an 8 mile circuit on slightly rolling terrain with 2 steep power climbs. After lap 3 a 5-man break got away for 2 laps. Justin’s teammate Iain reeled the break back in on the final lap, with one mile to go. With about 300 meters to go, Justin was boxed in 12th position looking for an opening. He had to push his way through other riders in the field. By the time he hit the front , he was only chasing one other rider to the line and he took 2nd.

Good job Justin.

Justin killin it!

The UCSD Cycling Team managed to pull off two wins, three 2nd places, one 3nd place, and a smattering of top 10 finishes. The first race was the Golden Acorn Road Race on Saturday. Colin Ng (AKA Quadzilla) took 3rd followed by Ben Ostrander taking 4th in the men’s C’s.

The second day of racing had the mens C’s and D’s combined. UCSD fielded a 12-man team and was aggressive from the gun. They sent riders off the front every lap until a break of 3 finally stuck. Colin (Quadzilla) was in the break.

The break put 40 seconds into the field and if the race had another 15 minutes, they would have lapped the field. Coming out of the last corner, Colin turned on the gas and destroyed his opponents. After the race, Colin Marveled, “ I thought it was some sort of new tactic they were doing, going slow to the finish line.” Nope, Colin was just faster!

Matt McKinzie easily won the field sprint taking 4th overall and 1st in the D’s followed by Jeffrey Skacel in 2nd overall.

The athletes coached by Crank Cycling dominated this past weekend. Good job guys and gals!

Coach Jesse

Qaudzilla in the Break

Matt sprinting away from the Field

The first night of Tuesday Night Racing  for 2009 at the San Diego Velodrome  was last night.   It was a nice warm evening and everyone had a great time.  Coached rider Todd Woodlan was looking strong in the C group, and will be surely upgrading after a few nights.  Chris Daggs raced  with the A group and was looking pretty strong himself.     I played race director for the evening,  so no racing for me just yet.  Below is a photod of me motorpacing the A group to get them warmed up.

-SeanSean Motorpacing

Ryan Dotters with CycleOps Power dropped off a special prototype bike for me yesterday at Crank Cycling, the Pro300T Indoor Cycle. That’s right. The “T” stands for tandem. People want to train like they ride, so for all of you tandem riders, here is your chance to ride INDOORS with your riding partner. The PT300T… is the only tandem bike made more the indoor market and it features 2, Joule computers, so each rider can see the power output. This one is just a prototype, so there may be a few changes, but I hear that the production model is going to be ready by Interbike 2010.

We put a SRM on Elite amateur riders at Redlands Stage race, and then Daggs and I did a write up on his  power output.:

How much power does it take to hang with the pros in a big American stage race? For the Redlands Bicycle Classic, we put an SRM power meter on the bike of Eric Marcotte, a 30-year-old chiropractor who races as a Cat. 1.


Marcotte’s power decreased each time up the climb on stage 3. (Wattage is yellow, elevation is red.)

Marcotte lives in Arizona and races with the California-based Pista Palace squad. This year he won stage 2 of the Valley of the Sun and placed fifth in the GC. He then won stage 3 at the Tucson Bicycle Classic from a break. At Redlands, Marcotte was racing in a 190-man peloton that featured 13 pro teams. Here is what the numbers revealed.

How much power does it take to hang with the pros in a big American stage race? For the Redlands Bicycle Classic, we put an SRM power meter on the bike of Eric Marcotte, a 30-year-old chiropractor who races as a Cat. 1.

Just got off the phone with one of the Crank Cycling Coached athletes, Justin Farrar. He just won his first crit of the year. He has spent a good part of the winter doing tempo efforts and sprints. He is diligent at following his workouts and is a really good listener. He sat in for the 1st half of the race and watched the other riders tire themselves out. Right at the half way point the only move that could stick got away. Justin made sure to bridge across to the move up the road without bringing the field with him. The move was caught a few laps later so Justin sat in and waited for the finish. With 2 laps to go he move to the front of the field and with half a lap to go he turned on the juice and easily took the win.

There are quite a few more wins in his future. I will keep you updated on his progress.

Coach Jesse

We are happy to  to let everyone know that we are putting  an order of Crank Cycling  shop  kits this week.  Let me know asap if you want a set of bibs or a jersey.  Skinsuits  are gonna be about $100,  and bibs and jerseys are gonna be about $70 each.

You will find a size chart HERE: http://www.pactimo.com/static/size_chart.pdf

This past weekend the collegiate team I coach (UCSD) won there first race. It was a 2 day race weekend.

The first day was a criterium and the mens D racers were very aggressive, making many attacks and finishing in the top ten. Annabelle racing in the women’s Ds took 4th.

The following day was Road Race on a technical course. The Mens Ds started out aggressive again attacking and counter attacking the field till Josh Rudiger and Useff Azzasi from (UCSD) got off the front. Within a lap Josh had a minute on the field with help from Useff who then drifted back to the field. By the beginning of lap 3 Josh had 4 minutes on the field.

Thats when the rest of UCSD went into action they destroyed the field in the crosswind doing an echelon. 6 man chase behind the solo rider 5 of them being UCSD. Josh hung on to win and UCSD also took 2nd, 4th(Useff), 5th, 6th and 7th.

I lead race tactic clinics for the mens and women’s Ds in the off season and all their hard work and willingness to listen is paying off.

Go UCSD!!

Till next time
Cheers,
Coach Jesse

So it is the beginning of the racing season for some of us cyclists in Socal. That means by now we should have all gotten enough base miles in. Wether those base miles are LSD Long Slow Distance or Tempo rides. Now it is time to add intensity. One of the biggest mistakes of training athletes is to add a new and more taxing effort to the workout repertoire and not take anything out. This leads to fatigue, not enough recover time, and eventually over training.
When my athletes are  done with the majority of their base training I cut the  tempo workout in half and only have them  do it once a week. That gives the opportunity to fit in more intense efforts on days that they  would have been doing a second or third base training efforts. See you all on the road or in class

Cheers
Coach Jesse

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