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Day Four: The Red Mist Descends
The racing gets interesting as Dalbeattie unloads with both barrels
a frantic circuit of techy singletrack, roots and rocks, for the
riders to charge headlong around, duking it out against the clock
for the Overall Classification, reports Matt Skinner in the fifth
of his daily reports…
Special Stage Two
Dalbeattie Forest Team Time Trial
Total distance: 15km
Climbing: 800m
Followed by:
Linking Stage Four
Dalbeattie Forest to New Abbey
Total distance: 59km
Climbing: 1,300m
Day
four of the Chain Reaction Cycles TransScotland (Powered by Merida
Bikes) and the campsite awoke to blue skies and crisp sunshine for
the perfect start to the second special stage team time trial at
Dalbeattie Forest. Following the 15km sprint, riders would strike
out for New Abbey, another 59km and 1,300m worth of climbing distant,
where they’d spend the night close to the shadow of the ruined
abbey itself. After the monster haul of yesterday, this was slated
to be a much welcomed ‘easy day’. But the flat out 15km
time trial on Dalbeattie’s fine trails meant that it was going
to kick off with a high octane intensity to really grill the riders
until they were well and truly ‘well done’.
The course was both long and sustained with no real space to hide
or rest: it was pedal to the metal big ring stuff with little margin
for error. The flowing singletrack was folded with rocky and rooty
tech sections, steep power climbs and speeder bike raised boardwalk:
it was both fast and challenging, especially when taken at a redlining
race pace, and a test of both the body and the skills of each rider.
Unlike the first special stage at Drumlanrig where riders raced
in relay, the Dalbeattie special stage was a true team effort from
the gun: both riders completed the full 15km distance at the same
time; the results would be decided by averaging the two riders’
times. Seeded in the order of the last stage’s results also
meant that riders would have clear runs with few stragglers to fight
through, to charge cleanly all the way to the finish. Leading pair
and defending Merida TransWales Champions, Ryan Bevis and Jonathan
Pugh (RAM Bikes/Scott UK), stormed round the 15km course in an average
time of just 38 minutes and 15 seconds, and underlined in no uncertain
terms their seriousness in intent of securing the Chain Reaction
Cycles TransScotland (Powered by Merida Bikes) crown also.
Although
some riders flew, others had the wind from beneath their wings sucked
from under them as the course bared its teeth and intimidated themm
into making mistakes, un-ceremonially dumping them onto the dirt.
Mechanical gremlins also played their part and influenced a change
in the overall standings, as yesterday’s Scottish Borders
Veteran Women’s Solo leader Hilary Bloor (Team Planetfear)
suffered mashed gears and a snapped chain that relegated her from
first to third in one instant.
Fusion Bike’s Mansour Youssef showed that his third in the
open men’s category at last year’s Merida TransWales
as part of a team was no flash in the pan. Solo this year, he clinched
second in time trial in the Scottish Border’s Open Male Solo
category, just behind Whyte Bikes’ Andy Barlow. This second
place saw him move up to second in the overall standings, displacing
Ben Thompson (Nevis Cycles) into third. But with just seven seconds
between the two, this promises to be a battle that will continue
all the way to the line at Selkirk on Saturday.
Elsewhere, in the Veteran Women’s Solo race, following the
mechanical gremlins scuppering Hilary Bloor’s transmission
mid-race, Tatjana Troll’s strong performance earned her enough
time in hand to move her up to the top spot in the Overall Classification
a minute and 17 seconds up on Julie Dinsdale.
Following
the blood and guts efforts of the time trial, the linking stage
itself was a more leisurely affair. Retracing part of the singletrack
employed for the special stage, the route then hit the coast road
to run parallel with the picturesque Mersehead Sands before diving
on to the dirt once more to traverse the flanks of Boreland Hill
and Meikle Hard Hill up to a height of 300m. The trail then descended
for five kms before it headed upwards on a severe gradient up a
gravel climb. But then the pay off: a snaking, natural and constantly
accelerating wooded singletrack descent that spat riders through
mossy boulder slots, weaving through purple bloomed rhododendrons,
and rushing headlong into New Abbey and it’s fine selection
of public houses.
Tomorrow dawns with the third special stage which takes place at
the 7Stanes’ Mabie Forest, just a short spin from New Abbey.
The trails will offer thrills aplenty with fast and flowing progressive
singletrack, berms and techy rock sections to get the red mist descending.
It will be a key stage for all the overall classifications and the
warm up to the rest of the day’s linking stage. The route
will return the riders to Moffat, 64km north east and 1,200m of
climbing away to the north via Ae Forest and the exposed Lowther
Hills. With the weather turning from blessed blue skies to damp
and squib, the going may be tougher and harder than the distance
suggests. For although there are only three days left of the Chain
Reaction Cycles TransScotland (Powered by Merida Bikes), the last
two are monsters as the event heads back into the big hills…
Special Stage 2 Results
Scottish Tourism Women’s Solo Open
Category
1 – Meggie Bichard (Extreme Endurance): 48:17
2 – Helen Lambert: 52:15
3 – Jane Chadwick: 1:16:42
Scottish Tourism Men’s Solo Open Category
1 – Andy Barlow (Whyte Bikes): 38:25
2 – Mansour Youssef (Fusion Bikes): 39:56
3 – Ben Thompson (Nevis Cycles): 40:56
Scottish Tourism Veteran Women’s Solo
Category
1 – Julie Dinsdale: 58:07
2 – Tatjana Troll: 59:38
3 – Hilary Bloor (Team Planetfear): 1:17:16
Scottish Tourism Veteran Men’s Solo
Category
1 – David Piper (Team Chodskis Indians): 33:32
2 – Rob Waller (ERC One Week Younger): 41:43
3 – Antony Green (G A Cylces/gonebikinmad): 43:27
High5 Mixed Category
1 – Maddie Horton & Jay Horton (XC Racer.com/Trek): 45:53
2 – Alice Crook & Neil Hamblin (Cakemonsters): 51:07
3 – Yolande Wase & John Singleton (Laurel & Hardy):
53:54
Gore Veteran’s Category
1 – Bryan Singleton & Peter Strong (Global/Torq/Buff):
44:51
2 – Robert Barker & Mark Langdon (Sportstest.co.uk): 46:03
3 – Arthur Rijk & Tim Snyder (TNT): 52:32
Buff Female Category
1 – Julie Cartner & Renel Brennan (7Stanes): 48:22
2 – Sally Lee & Kate Chappell (Extreme Endurance): 55:59
BeOne Male Category
1 – Ryan Bevis & Jonathan Pugh (RAM Bikes/Scott UK): 38:59
2 – David Preston & Chris Herraghty (Hoop Troop): 41:21
3 – Rick Featherstone & Steve Heading (Hadrian & Beyond):
42:07
Current / Final Overall Standings
Scottish Tourism Women’s Solo Open
Category
1 – Meggie Bichard (Extreme Endurance): 37:31:12
2 – Helen Lambert: 27:41:39
3 – Christie Boucher: 28:16:21
Scottish Tourism Men’s Solo Open Category
1 – Andy Barlow (Whyte Bikes): 27:13:52
2 – Mansour Youssef (Fusion Bikes): 27:16:31
3 – Ben Thompson (Nevis Cycles): 27:16:38
Scottish Tourism Veteran Women’s Solo
Category
1 – Tatjana Troll: 27:57:13
2 – Julie Dinsdale: 27:58:30
3 – Hilary Bloor (Team Planetfear): 28:11:38
Scottish Tourism Veteran Men’s Solo
Category
1 – Rob Waller (ERC One Week Younger): 27:18:49
2 – Antony Green (GA Cycles/gonebikinma):27:23:29
3 – Matt Scrase (MTB Marathon.co.uk): 27:24:56
High5 Mixed Category
1 – Maddie Horton & Jay Horton (XC Racer.com/Trek): 27:26:03
2 – Alice Crook & Neil Hamblin (Cakemonsters): 27:35:38
3 – Yolande Wase & John Singleton (Laurel & Hardy):
27:41:57
Gore Veteran’s Category
1 – Bryan Singleton & Peter Strong (Global/Torq/Buff):
27:32:59
2 – Robert Barker & Mark Langdon (Sportstest.co.uk): 27:27:20
3 – Arthur Rijk & Tim Snyder (TNT): 27:36:15
Buff Female Category
1 – Julie Cartner & Renel Brennan (7Stanes): 27:31:00
2 – Sally Lee & Kate Chappell (Extreme Endurance): 27:44:41
BeOne Male Category
1 – Ryan Bevis & Jonathan Pugh (RAM Bikes/Scott UK): 27:12:23
2 – Andrew Wardman & Steven Halsall (7Stanes): 27:19:16
3 – Rick Festherston & Steve Heading (Hadrian & Beyond):
27:20:05
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