New winners, GC changes and close finishes on an epic Stage 2
Fernie-Porky Blue
51.6km.2000m climbing/2000m descending
Stage 2 of the TransRockies
switched up the challenge from the rolling technical trails of the opening day
to a long leg-crushing climb and descent of over 1000 metres vertical on Porky
Blue, one of the signature rides in the area. The day dawned clear and the
thermometer rose even more quickly on the second day baking the remaining
moisture out of the trails leaving clouds of dust and an extra level of
difficulty on the descents for the
riders. As is so often the case, a different type of route brought different
riders to the front of the action and the GC leader jerseys changed teams in
several categories.
TR7
The racing stared off literally
with a bang as the starter’s pistol was fired for the traditional loop of
downtown Fernie behind the vintage fire engine. Team Fernie, the leaders in the
Men’s Open TR7 category experienced a more ominous bang shortly after as Martin
Vale blew his rear shock a short way into the course.
Upon hearing of the incident from
Carter Hovey, the other half of Team Fernie, former TR winner Marty Lazarski
offered his bike as a loaner but they had to chase Vale who’d headed back to
the start to seek repairs. They caught Vale, switched pedals and Team Fernie
began their chase now over a half hour behind the rest of the field with the
entire field to pass ahead of them. The reports came in from checkpoints that
Team Fernie was on a rampage tearing through the field back toward the front
and by the finish they’d recovered to 5th place and had reduced the
gap to only 15 minutes. The bike change and charge probably saved their race as
they now stand only 11 minutes back behind Stage 2 TR7 winners Travis Hauck and
Brian Cooke (Bicycle Café/Gericks Cycle) who also took the leaders jerseys.
The other Fernie team leading
their category, the Open Women duo of Krista Turcasso and Angie Krasnay won
their second straight stage to make sure that they’ll be wearing the leaders’
jerseys again in front of their family and friends when the riders roll out of
Fernie for the last time on Stage 3.
Crashes were also a story of the
day with Ryan Schellenberg of Stage 1 Open Mixed winners being taken down in a
multi-bike crash and being forced to limp home to the finish line where they
held their overall lead by only 16 seconds over the Swiss Team Zaboo 29 of
Simon Zahnd and Yvonne Burgi who won stage 2. The long climb also suited
Swedish two-time Olympic Biathlon medallist Anna-Carin Zidek who’s at the
TransRockies competing in her first mountain bike race with husband Tom Zidek.
They moved up several places and grabbed 2nd place on the day. Likewise, the
Czech Masters found the course to their liking and grabbed the stage and
overall lead in the Mens Master 80+ division from two Canadian teams chasing
them. The overall leaders in the 80+ Mixed and 100+ Open Gender divisions
remained the same.
TR3
After finishing 3rd on
Stage 1, newly-crowned 2011 Canada Cup Champion Catherine Vipond stomped her
pedals hard on the gruelling 25km ascent to the top of Porky Blue and held on
for the stage win ahead of 3-time Xterra World Champion Melanie McQuaid with
Dyck coming in 3rd. The changing places mean that the overall win is
wide open between these three riders with only 4 minutes separating Vipond in 1stoverall and McQuaid in third. Stage 3 is expected to be another 3+ hour test
with 2400 metres of climbing, much of it on singletrack.
Canadian National Champion Max
Plaxton seemed to establish his dominance on a Stage 1 which he won by 6 ½
minutes over Neal Kindree but the former 2-time National Espoir Champion
continued his remarkable comeback from long-term injury with a storming ride
which pushed Plaxton to his limit. Kindree went over the top of the day’s main
climb with a minute’s lead on Plaxton who fought hard to reel him back in. They
entered town together and Plaxton took the stage win by only a second from
Kindree. They remain 1st and 2nd in the overall standings
with one day to go.
Kindree has one more chance to
try and take a stage from Plaxton on the tough Stage 3 which serves up a
relentless route of singletrack up and down across the North flank of the Elk
Valley. Seven major climbs await and over 30km of tight, rooty singletrack must
be mastered before riders arrive at the plush world-class facilities of Island
Lake Lodge.
Stage 3 Preview
Fernie-Island Lake Lodge
44.8km/2275m climbing/1897m descending
After a time trial and a loop,
Stage 3 is the TransRockies first point to point ride of the year starting in
downtown Fernie and working West across the mountains North of the town
including Mt Hosmer, Mt. Fernie, into the trails of the Fernie Alpine Resort
and then a final climb up to the finish line at spectacular Island Lake Lodge.
While the highest point of the day is less than 400 metres above the start
line, the route has at least seven tough climbs, many on singletrack so the
44.8km length includes nearly 2300 metres of climbing. Expect average speeds to
be slower and finish times to be close to the same or slower than Stage 2.