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May
2007 Newsletter
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New Members |
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Marshalling Rota |
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Performance |
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Sportive Spot |
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MTB Riders - Friday Night Summer Series |
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Track Riding - Fancy a Try? |
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Supplements from Allsports |
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Sunday Club Runs |
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New Ventures |
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New Trophies |
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Coaching Bits |
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This Kid is Full of Whizz! |
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New Members
We welcome Cory Bemis, Chris Hawley,
Katie Bowen, Nik Kershaw, Rob Langley, Liam
Malone, and welcome back Hans van Nierop.
Marshalling
Rota Thanks very much to the vast
majority of members who have turned up and
marshalled on their appointed day and to
those who have let me know that they need to
change their day. Sadly there have been
one or two members who have had memory
problems and have neither arrived to marshal
nor let me know that they can’t make it.
If you have lost your hard copy of the rota,
or never had one, the current marshalling
rota is on the club website. Please note
that there are quite a number of club
members who are not on the rota (so haven’t
been sent a hard copy) – I had to complete
it before the start of the season when the
membership list was slightly different. If
you’re one of those lucky people I don’t
want you to feel guilty – I know where you
live and I’ll pick you off before the end of
the season – I’ve started already! – though
if you live in the wilds of Cambridgeshire
or Somerset you should be pretty safe.
Performance
George Atkins has been performing with great
success in the international arena riding
for the British Cycling East Midlands youth
team. He achieved a high position in a race
in Belgium followed by third place in the
Isle of Man International youth tour.
Closer to home Phil Rayner has been having a
wonderful road racing season both in LVRC
and British Cycling races. Phil, a modest
man by nature, is getting so many points in
BC races, that he’s afraid that he’ll be
moved up to 1st Category by the end of the
season.
Colin Griffiths, as well as producing a
superb blog, is time trialling at a great
pace and is also getting high positions in
LVRC races. Read the blog on
www.colinsbikingbits.blogspot.com and
you’ll see why he and Phil are riding so
well! Robin Townsend took third place in
the NCRA handicap race at Southwick and Jill
Postlethwaite won the women’s overall prize
in that series. Jill has also been
performing with distinction in women’s road
races and posted a personal best in gaining
20th place in the women’s section of the
National Ten Mile Championship at Sawtry
last Sunday. Jill, along with Sara Frost and
Barbara Etoe made up a women’s team in the
National Ten, only the second time in my 22
years at the club that we’ve had a team in a
national time trial championship. (I’m sure
someone will remind me of a men’s team in a
100km 4Up time trial, but I guess that’s
something the participants will want to
forget!) Paul Tomlinson gained 3rd place
in the 45-50 category in the National Ten on
Sunday then followed this with a course
record on the Sulby circuit on Tuesday.
Needless to say, Vic Barnett is at the top
of the leader board again in the National
Mountain Bike Cross Country Series Super Vet
category. In club events, Matt Plews has
had an excellent start to the season and was
a worthy winner of the Clipston circuit
series. Perhaps the one to watch though is
Ian Waterfield – he seems to do a PB for ten
miles most weeks and I’m sure he’ll soon get
twenty fives sorted out.
Sportive Spot
You will probably have heard of the Ten Tors
Expedition – for groups of young people
yomping over Dartmoor, invariably in
appalling weather. This year it was worse
than appalling and had to be abandoned. Not
so the Dartmoor Cyclosportive which
continued in pouring rain and this year
featuring the intrepid Andy Blake. Andy was
one of 100 starters and reached the first
marshalling point at 30 miles in around 2
hours, by which time he was freezing cold
and wet through! His plan had been to
complete the 100 mile route but at 30 miles,
decided to plump for the alternative 100km
route – still a brave effort – a further 36
miles is a long way when you’re drenched and
shivering especially as the route included
the formidable climb past Haytor. Nearer
to home, eight club members rode the
Rutland/Melton Classic Sportive. Although
the weather was favourable, it was hardly a
soft touch with hilly roads and a 10 mile
off-road section. Bill Barrie, Paul
Bramford, Kim Lewington and Julian Middleton
completed the full 160km route, which Paul
described as ‘very stressful’ and Linda
Yarnold, Steve Alden, Stuart Dawkins and Nik
Kershaw made short work of the 100km route.
Please give me a short report when you’ve
ridden a sportive or a century ride – I
would like to make this a regular spot. At
the very least I hope for a report from Bill
Barrie and Julian Middleton on their
experiences in the Etape du Tour.
Mountain Bikers – Friday Night Summer Series
We know (at least, we think) you’re out
there and riding the series but you never
send in reports. Matt Plews would like to
include you in the press reports. Please
contact him on 0116 2404723 or, preferably
e-mail him at matt@cyclesport.fsnet.co.uk or
matt.plews@alliance-leicester.co.uk.
Track Riding – Fancy a Try? The
club has the option of a track session at
Newport velodrome on Sunday 4th November.
The cost is £30 per person for a 3 hr
session and we need a minimum of 15 to have
our own session, the maximum being 25. This
session is open to first time and
experienced track riders. Track bikes will
be available for hire and basic coaching
will be provided by a qualified track coach.
The down side is that the session starts at
9am through to 12noon. At that time of day
there should be no problems with hold-ups,
so the journey is about 2.5 hrs or, put
another way, on the road for 6.30AM!! An up
side is that there is a good pub for a group
lunch nearby. We need to know who may be
interested asap so we can book the slot.
Please phone or preferably e-mail your
interest to Trevor Wise, 01572-822709 or
trevor.wise@tiscali.co.uk
Supplements from Allsports Trevor
Wise is able to obtain a significant
discount on energy drinks, energy bars,
amino load etc. from Allsports based on
orders of £100 in total. If you want to
place an order please contact Trevor as soon
as possible (phone no. and e-mail above) and
he will send it off as soon as he reaches
the magic £100.
Sunday Club Runs
First of all a big thank you to Wayne Holton
and Alf Marlow for the excellent work they
done for several years as club captain and
vice captain respectively. They’ve both
decided to call it a day, Wayne because he
fancies a break, and good luck to him – he
deserves it, and Alf because he’s working
very hard on graduating from being a darts
superstar to being a darts megastar – read
the Harborough Mail darts reports – Alf’s
there with 180’s most weeks. Soon it will be
every week! Matt Plews and Carol Birch are
now organising the Sunday club runs.
Volunteers are needed to lead some of the
club runs in July. These are runs that cater
for whoever turns up, including new and
prospective members. They are not training
or fast rides. The leader chooses the route
and the café stop (about 25 miles to the
café). If you would be willing to lead on
one of the dates below please contact Carol
Birch on 0116 2792756 or e-mail
cbirch@betula5.freeserve.co.uk. Dates
are 1, 8, 15, 22 July.
New Ventures
This season we are organising 4 national
events swhich give us an excellent
opportunity to showcase Welland Valley CC.
On August 5th, as well as organising the
usual Duncan Murray/AA Brown Races, Jill
Postlethwaite and Paul Tomlinson are staging
a round of the National Women’s Team Road
Race Series. On August 19th Nick Barnett
is taking on the LVRC 40-45 and 45-50
National Road Race Championships – and in
Phil Rayner and Colin Griffiths, we’ve form
horses in both of these races. On
September 29th Wayne Holton is running a
round of the Rudy Project Time Trial Series
at Naseby. On November 4th (note change of
date from December 2nd) Nick Barnett is once
again in promoter mode, this time with the
Inter-Area Cyclo-Cross Championship. We’ll
need lots of helpers for all of these events
(and for our round of the NCRA handicaps on
July 5th). We organisers all know that club
members are willing to help, but we also
know that you like to be asked rather than
to approach us with an offer of help. Please
make our days by offering us your help
rather than waiting to be called – we hate
begging! New
Trophies Many members will be
aware of the recent premature deaths from
cancer of Lee Scampton and Barry Marshall,
two long time club members from yesteryear.
In their memory, two new trophies will be
presented, the Barry Marshall trophy for the
winner of the Tuesday night ten mile time
trial series and the Lee Scampton trophy for
outstanding performance in a Sportive.
Graham Goode, another former club member
will be donating the Barry Marshall trophy.
Members past and present are being invited
to make a donation towards the Lee Scampton
trophy. Please give donations to Gavin
Hinxman, George Barnett or me.
Coaching Bits
In the 2006 May edition of the newsletter I
was waxing lyrical about the advantages of
measuring rate of exertion by power output
rather than by heart rate but was bemoaning
the fact that SRM cranks, Powertap and
Ergomo systems cost as much as a small
family house. You may have noticed
recently a product review of the Ibike in
Cycling Weekly, price £299 with a further
£70 for a fixing kit – which brings
measurement of power within the range of
many if not most club members. While I was
in Mallorca over Easter, one of the training
group was using an Ibike and was very
pleased with it. He’d also bought it on the
Internet from a USA company and had got it
for much less than the UK price. I decided
to buy one – I got it from Aspire Velotech
and it cost me £230 ($448), post and packing
included, for the Ibike and fixing kit. So
what does it look like and what does it do?
It is llcms x 5cms, is very light and sits
on your handlebars. There are sensors on
forks and chain stay and magnets on front
wheel and crank – for speed and cadence. The
sensors are wired to the main unit. You can
get a slightly cheaper fixing kit which
doesn’t measure cadence. It computes
wattage but doesn’t measure it directly as
do the more expensive systems. It takes into
account gradient, speed, frictional drag,
wind speed, weight of rider and bike and
from these comes up with wattage generated.
While it measures cadence, this doesn’t form
part of the calculation. It can be set up
to facilitate interval training based on
wattage and as with most bike computers,
calculates maxima and averages of the
parameters measured as well as giving trip
time and distance. The accompanying
software and USB lead enables downloading of
data to a computer. For each ride it graphs
wind speed, bike speed, elevation, power and
gradient. They can be shown all together,
separately or two, three or four at a time
and you can zoom in or out to analyse
particular parts of the ride. At any point
in the ride it shows how much of your energy
is expended on overcoming friction,
accelerating, overcoming gravity (i.e. going
uphill at steady speed) and overcoming air
resistance. Is it accurate? I don’t know,
because I haven’t ridden beside anyone with
SRM cranks (apparently the most accurate
system) to check it out. The readings seem
to be ‘about right’and it appears to be
consistent, which is the main thing. As you
have to feed a lot of data in before you
start using the Ibike, you do have to be
sure that you’ve fed in accurate data –
which isn’t difficult. So what are its
limitations? If you wanted to switch it
between two or more bikes, you’d need to
upload different data into your Ibike every
time you switch, which would be a bit of a
drag. For this reason I’ve just bought a
second one to put on my time trial bike.
Wind speed is measured by air going into a
vent at the from of the Ibike. This needs to
be located so that your arms and break
levers aren’t close enough to set up wind
eddies near the vent. I’ve yet to go out
with it in heavy rain – whether rain gets up
the vent and what its effect would be have
yet to be seen – the makers claim that there
is no problem. As cadence measurement is
an ‘add on’, cadence isn’t shown on the
graphs. Unlike the SRM software, heart
rate can’t be shown on the graphs and I
think this is a significant omission.
However, as I have a Polar heart monitor
from which data can be downloaded to Polar
software, it’s easy to switch between the
Ibike and Polar screens. There is a second
piece of software included called ‘Training
Peaks’ which I’ve read about and may be able
to combine the two downloads but I don’t
know yet – I’m afraid I have the mental
agility of a garden slug when it comes to
using new software. What have I learned
from it so far?
I’ve been surprised how few watts I
actually produce going downhill, even on
gentle gradients – in other words, I’m
adding little to what would be achieved by
freewheeling. In contrast I’ve been
surprised by how many watts are needed to
ride uphill. So if you want to take 30secs
off your time over a ‘ten’, which is easier
- faster down hill or faster up hill? It’s a
no-brainer, even for a featherweight like
me. Also it’s obvious when you think about
it, but on a downhill section, a tremendous
amount of power goes into overcoming air
resistance, so the importance of an
aerodynamic position can’t be overestimated.
I’ve yet to use the Ibike in a time trial –
this Saturday in the N&DCA 25 will be the
first time. I shall probably be so busy
looking at it that I’ll leave the road and
end up in a hedge bottom – again! I’m
aware that I’ve a tremendous amount yet to
learn about how to use the equipment to best
effect – I’ve just bought a copy of
‘Training and Racing with a Power Meter’ by
Allen and Coggan to get more of an idea.
Hopefully I’ll have learned enough to impart
lots of wisdom by the time I write the
August newsletter. I would definitely
recommend the Ibike – despite the
limitations I’ve mentioned, it’s very good
value for money. Interestingly, it’s the
same price as two pairs of Rapha limited
edition mitts plus a Rapha/Paul Smith tweed
and houndstooth cap! One last thing – if
you’re concerned about what happens if the
goods are faulty and you bought them in the
USA, let me reassure you. My USB cable was
faulty – I e-mailed the manufacturer (in
Dallas) who duly sent me over a replacement
under warranty. Dave Birch 24.05.07
This Kid
is full of Whizz Cycling is now
one of the nation’s champion sports. Cycling
has shaken off the shackles after being
named as a Cinderella sport and become one
which the country will be relying on to
deliver gold medals in the Beijing 2008
Olympic Games. At the recent World Track
Championships, Team Great Britain won 11
medals in total, 7 of them gold. Out on the
open road our Nation’s best are also ‘doing
the business,’ winning stages in big
continental races, or if your name is Nicole
Cooke, number 1 female road cyclist in the
world. With all this success the sport has
been able to draw in more lottery money to
develop the grass roots of the sport and
breed the next generation of champions.
One local rider who is receiving a huge
investment in time, coaching, training camps
and mentoring is George Atkins (15) from
Kibworth. George is a select member of the
East Midlands Olympic Talent Team. During
the next few weeks George will face some
major challenges as he develops both
academically and physically. Academically
George will sit his GCSE’s at Robert Smyth
School, physically as I compile this
article, he is preparing for a selection
race for the European Youth Olympics in
Belgrade during July. As part of a team
who help George with advice, it is down to
him to ensure he puts in the time on the
bike to ensure he can sprint, climb and
time-trial his way to success. So far this
season he has delivered. He is dynamic,
committed, aggressive, and hungry for
success and constantly searching to become a
better bike rider. I believe with these
qualities we will see him ride for Team
Great Britain this summer and achieve the
grades in his GCSEs. It is hard to image
that this youngster once attended Whizz Kids
on a Saturday afternoon, he still is a
Youth, and so I guess he is still a Whizz
Kid. Hopefully he will put in an appearance
at a future Go-Ride session! At grass
routes level the Whizz Kids sessions are now
in summer mode with structured activities
taking place on a regular basis. The
sessions are attended by over 40 young
riders eager to develop and learn new
skills.
The parent’s meeting was cancelled due to
the lack of coaches available on that day,
but since the last publication there has
been a very healthy response from parents
willing to offer support and help at the
sessions. Every little bit of help makes a
tremendous difference. On behalf of the
Whizz Kids, thank you.
I have to report that one of the founder
coaches of Whizz Kids, Anne Barnett, has
found it increasingly difficult to
contribute to the delivery of Go-Ride due to
other commitments. We wish Anne well and
thank her for helping to establish Whizz
Kids. Plenty of activities have taken
place over the last couple of months, all of
which you can view on the cycling club’s
website
www.wellandvalleycc.co.uk. On the
horizon are a number of exciting
opportunities. The development of all of
the Whizz Kids is tremendous, all of the
coaches are pleased with how the youngsters
are getting to grips with the different
skills and aspects of cycling. But it is
very evident that they want or need to face
greater challenges. During June, July and
August there are a number of opportunities
that we will be promoting or other local
clubs will be promoting. These
opportunities are to enable the youngsters
to experience open racing. Friday 8th June
at Mallory Park. Leicester Off Road Club is
promoting their 2nd MTB event at the famous
Mallory Park Racing circuit. Utilising the
tracks and surrounds of the super fast
tarmac race track, there will be races for
all ages and abilities. For the Over 16’s
/ U14 / U16 categories, they have got a fun,
challenging course around the outside of the
motor race track with gravel tracks, a nice
short leg breaker climb, 2 wooded sections
to test your technical skills, a mini moto x
track (jumps are allowed!), short drops etc.
It’s got everything and although challenging
to the best riders, it’s a great course for
those less experienced riders looking for a
fun race.
A short course shall be used for the U12’s
incorporating the mini motoX track. On
Tuesday 5th June I will deliver a session on
the Sports Field behind the Mkt Harborough
Leisure Centre. The session is aimed at the
older Whizz Kids (10+), it will be more
focussed on race skills.
The fun starts at 6.30pm, finishing at
7.45pm.
Friday 15th June As part of a local
Mountain Bike Race Series, the cycling club
will be promoting a round of the series.
The event takes place at Kilworth Springs
Golf Course, a separate race will be held
for Under 12’s, starting at 6.30pm. The
circuit will be mainly flat around the golf
fairways, duration of the race will be
around 15 minutes. This event will be an
ideal course for Whizz Kids to try
competitive racing for the first time. The
event will cost £1 on the day, all riders
will receive a prize. On Friday 6th July
we are currently in discussion with
Leicester Off-Road Club with regard to
jointly organising an Inter-Club Challenge
where the Whizz Kids will compete against
the Youth section of their cycling club in
activities promoting the start of the Tour
de France. The event will take place at
Mallory Park, I will issue details closer to
the date. The next day, Saturday 7th July,
we have our own scheduled Whizz Kids Go-Ride
session, a session not to be missed! The
session will form part of the Harborough
District Council Community Sports Day. The
theme will obviously be the Tour de France
which starts later that day in London. We
are requesting the Whizz Kids to wear a
yellow or green or polka dot t-shirt
signifying the colour jerseys the tour
leaders will be wearing. The Youngsters
will then compete in our own Tour de Welland,
une, deux, trois, Aller. Parents will not
miss out as they will be able to sample some
French wine. On the last Tuesday in July
(31st) ,starting at 6.45pm, Bruntingthorpe
Aerodrome will be the venue to participate
in a five mile time-trial, the aerodrome is
traffic free and extremely safe. If you
own a bike why not have a go yourself and
see how fast you can cover the five miles or
you could accompany your son or daughter to
give them encouragement. There will be a
series of 4 races to get stuck into! A new
initiative will then be promoted from
Tuesday 28th August as the Whizz Kids will
be able to compete in a 3 series of races
utilizing the varied terrains Bruntingthorpe
can offer. Week one will see the youngsters
compete in a circuit race, week two will be
an off-road race and finally week 3 will be
a Skills test. All competitors will
receive a special prize.
If you need anymore details please get in
touch. Wishing you all a great summer!
tickety boo
Dean Barnett,
Youth Development Officer
deanbarnettuk@yahoo.com
Tel: 01858 434821 |