Xtreme Outfitters Mountain Bike Team Calendar


Thursday, September 20, 2007

Downieville Race Report from Eddie

This is the race I will always want to do well at. With the steep, long climb and the long single track descent it makes for a great race. My buddies and I started to ride the coarse 5 weeks before the race. Most was for the conditioning, but for me it was to get my bike together. I added a lot of new parts, but my gears were jumping every where. I would make the ride, but with a lot of annoying skipping. On the last week I turned the bike over to Extreme Outfitters and in an hour the problem was solved, rear derailleur cable housing was not long enough. Thanks Brian.

Well the only thing I wanted from the race to have a better time than last year, I was feeling good and I really thought I could place. The night before decided to registrar and take my motorcycle to make the trip faster. The ride was great but after I met some friends and my brother for beers, I didn’t realize I could drink that much beer. Needless to say I paid for it the next day. I did not feel well the next day. After several trips extracting the fluids and the morning breakfast during the warm up, the race was about to start. At this point I hoped to just make it. Once the race started a ¼ of the way up the paved road I had to pull over from being nauseous as I put my head down I looked over and saw lots of people riding right by. After a few minutes I decided I paid too much for this and I better get my ass in gear. I started off slow but when I got to the dirt road I felt a little better and as I got closer to the first saddle I felt great. I then notice I was passing a lot of people .When I got to the top I felt aggressive and went at race pace also I sprinted over the rollers. All the while I kept passing people and no one passed me.

I don’t know exactly were but at least ¾ into the race I came over a hill and some one was just standing there looking up at me. I slowed down and the rider behind me took the opening past the person, while I crashed into him. That wasn’t bad till I pick up my bike and suddenly I couldn’t move. I had muscle spasms. I just stood there cursing trying to stretch out every part of my body. Lots of people rode right by and I could not do a thing. I had to get myself on the bike and just peddle, in a few minutes of spinning my muscles finally relaxed. But a lot of riders had already passed. I decided I better make the best of it and after taking Sport Legs pills I went for it. I did not pass as many people as before but no one caught up to me.

Well, I finished and still came in under 15 minutes under my best time.13th in sport. May be next year I’ll do better.

Downieville Race Report from Adam

Pre-riding the Downieville XC course every weekend paid off well in
2005, finishing in the top 30% of the senior sport males was my best
race of that season. This motivated me to take it seriously this year.
Pacing the climb, tire selection, avoiding pinch flats, fixing pinch
flats, attempting to memorize the blind sections of the downhill,
it'll hold your attention for sure. Brought my 12 year old Y33
suspended bike, recently "updated" with a home modified swing arm
(increased travel, tire clearance, and disc mounts). Been loving it
all season, haven't ridden any thing else off road this summer since
cracking the chain stay on the hard tail due to mud induced chain-suck
racing early in the season. Had a bunch of pinch flats this season,
been planning on going tubeless, even built up the wheels for it, just
haven't gotten around to using them yet. Tried different tires each
weekend (mismatched as usual, wider in front, heavier in the rear)
decided that short or blocky knobs have been confidence inspiring
through the rocks, skinnier taller knobs seemed to squirm around not
bite in, even on the hard packed dirt road decent. The Saturday pre
rides went well.

Inspected the bike on the Sunday before the Saturday race, and found a
small crack just below the relocated shock mount, no biggie, I had
time to repair it Monday. I drilled holes in the ends of the crack,
(to stop their propagation) and brazed a plate over it. During Paint
preparation with the sandblaster on Tuesday I discovered two more
cracks in near the main pivot, these couldn't be fixed without brazing
in a new seat tube. So Wednesday I had three days before the race and
I no geared mountain bikes built up. I dug out the new partially
assembled hard tail frame and the stupid light Stans tubeless wheels,
wrenched 'till midnight, road it to work the next morning and worked
out the new bike kinks on my lunch break.

I've been paying attention to my rest/recovery just before races. My
week day routine ends with a 40 minute 1400' climb from the office to
home, decided to pay $1 to take the bus home for the first time ever
(this was my rest day). When I got home (the bus took longer than
riding!) a friend had left some plants on my porch, I guess I got a
little over excited because I sprained my ankle digging compost into
the garden, most painful thing I've done in many years (even after
applying a Lidocaine patch). Decided to call in sick to work for
Friday and declared that I wasn't racing Saturday. When I woke up
Friday afternoon I felt 99% better. Rode over to meet Eddie & George
Cruz for dinner and stay at Eddies house so we'd get an early start
Saturday, didn't sleep more than 30 minutes all night.

My goal of finishing in the top 25% was staring to seem out of reach.
Took some ibuprofen, warmed up and picked a spot on the line in the
front quarter of the field, ended up easily passing folks the entire
climb, Should have remembered I was on a 22 pound bike, and going to
lose positions the rest of the race, could have been more aggressive.
Was still passing people on the dirt road descent. This was my first
off road tubeless ride and first hard tail ride in months! 20 psi in a
Mosquito Airlight 2.3 in front and 24 PSI in a Smart Sam 2.25 in back,
seemed to be working well enough to comfortably push the front end to
the limit in a couple corners. As expected I lost at least 10 spots to
the suspended folks in the baby heads.

Somehow this warped my front rotor a bit. Also, I nicked a log
damaging a spring in the pedal, it kept releasing and was hard to get
back in. I had put all my weight forward and on the sprained ankle
trying to clip in during the decent when the warped rotor pulsed and
through me over the bars. Six more guys went by while getting back on
the bike. The rest of the race wasn't to bad. Didn't notice the elbow
wound until after the finish, got 17th (top 25%) and 4 stitches.

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Coolest 24 - 8 Hour Solo Race Results

From The Union:

The Xtreme Outfitters Mountain Bike Racing Team had good results at the first eight-hour mountain bike race it competed in. The Coolest 24 (and 8) Hour Race was held May 11 in Cool.

For the team, Eddie Cruz came in fourth of nine in Men's Solo 8 Hour Master (45+) with seven laps in 7:59:35 while Adam George came in fourth of 23 in Men's Solo 8 Hour with seven laps in 7:17:25. Troy Groves came in fifth of 23 in Men's Solo 8 Hour with seven laps in 7:27:45 and Hyland Fisher came in 14th of 23 in Men's Solo 8 Hour with six laps in 7:37:50.

Racers began at noon on Saturday and finished riding at 8 p.m. Most of the team completed seven laps with a total of about 77 miles and 10,500 feet of climbing. For more information go to www.thecoolestmtb.com.



Sunday, March 11, 2007

2nd & 3rd place at Cool, CA

From The Union:

Xtreme Outfitters mountain bikers Troy Groves, left, and Hyland Fisher, right, finished second and third, respectively, in the Men’s 30-39 division of the Sports class at the 15th annual Cool Mountain Bike Race.