T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2789.1 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Jun 21 1994 10:59 | 23 |
| I talked to Ed yesterday. It was the first time we'd talked
since the Sunday morning the race ended.
Ed said he was a little upset with himself for not continuing
once he had warmed up on Sunday morning. I asked what he was
basing this on. He said that he felt fine on the Monday, Tuesday,
and Wednesday after the race and that most of his reason for
stopping must have been mental. I guess one of the other men
restarted in the morning and finished with 360 miles. Adrian
Harris stopped at 7:30 AM with 406 miles, and Ed finished with
something like 348 miles. Had he gotten back on the bike and
ridden until 9 AM, Ed could have made another 46 miles, more
or less.
Anyway, this hypothermic condition is nothing new for him and
we've dealt with it before.
Scott
We agreed that, once it starts raining anytime, he needs to stop
and get into some warm clothes. He was somewhat relieved when I
told him the rain that night was freezing, since it hadn't started
that way.
|
2789.2 | ex | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Wed Jul 20 1994 10:32 | 21 |
| Ed will pick up the minivan on Thursday and the RV on Friday.
He and half the crew will leave Saturday morning. The rest of
us will fly out on the 27th.
He told me last night that they are starting all solo riders
together. Seems silly to me, even if Shawna Hogan thinks she
can compete, head to head, with the men.
That will make for one congested start, I'll say that.
Hope the weather breaks a little. If it doesn't, there will be
a lot of riders dropping out (in a race where a lot of riders
drop out anyway).
I, of course, will enter my RAAM diary after I return and
catch up on my sleep.
If you want updates about Ed Kross, you can call his home
number (508) 872-4592.
Scott
|
2789.3 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Jul 26 1994 16:49 | 9 |
| Well, I'm outa here.
Fly to LA LA land tomorrow.
If you want updates on Ed Kross specifically, try calling his
home (508) 872-4592. I think he's gonna have various people there
watching the phone and getting updates from us.
Scott
|
2789.4 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Aug 15 1994 09:54 | 12 |
| I'm back at work today.
Ed's time was 9 days, 14 hours, 19 minutes.
He finished 8th overall, 7th among the men. Seana Hogan (woman)
beat all but five of the men. She is unbelievable. I would not want
to compete against this woman. She has raced three RAAMs and
destroyed every woman except Muffy Ritz.
More info later after I wake up and compile it.
Scott
|
2789.5 | | NOVA::FISHER | Tay-unned, rey-usted, rey-ady | Mon Aug 15 1994 12:40 | 4 |
| Seana is the first person to have won 3 consecutive RAAM's. Finally
broke the existing woman's record.
ed
|
2789.6 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Aug 15 1994 12:50 | 3 |
| Also the first to win 3 RAAMs, consecutive or otherwise.
Scott
|
2789.7 | My recollections | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Aug 16 1994 10:25 | 152 |
|
1994 Race Across AMerica
These are the results I had as of Monday, 8 August, 1994.
Men
---
1. Rob Kish 8d 14h 25m
2. Bob Breedlove 8d 15h 58m
3. Pat Ward 8d 17h 09m
4. Daniel Chew 9d 00h 29m
5. Darrell Bowles 9d 05h 03m
6. Bruno Heer 9d 11h 15m (7th overall)
7. Ed Kross 9d 14h 19m (8th overall)
8. John Stoneman
Women
-----
1. Seana Hogan 9d 08h 56m (6th overall)
Team
1. Centurion 5d 09h 17m (Germany)
2. Manheim/Powerade 5d 10h 15m (Georgia, USA)
3. Brazil 5d 12h 10m (Brazil)
4. Kern Wheelmen 5d 14h 22m (California, USA)
5. Pacificare 5d 19h 30m (Texas, USA)
6. Bally's 5d 21h 24m (California, USA)
7. Fontanil 5d 21h 49m (France)
8. Y 5d 22h 02m (Pennsylvania, Virginia, USA)
9. Coldwell Banker 6d 02h 14m (California, USA)
10. McKinley Paper 6d 03h 17m (Australia)
11. Ideo 6d 04h 17m (California, Illinois, Massachusetts, USA)
12. Tyrolia 6d 04h 44m (Austria)
13. Kaiser Permanente 6d 12h 49m (California)
Ed bettered his time from 1992 (on a much harder course):
9d 20h 56m ==> 9d 14h 19m
He also finished much closer to the winner:
~42 hours behind ==> 23h 54m behind
Ed had not solved his nutrition needs. Although he led at the first
Time Station, he was getting bloated. Late the first night, he
stopped to hurl on the side of the road. He continued after that
without too much discomfort.
Saddle sores became a problem very early in this race. Ed was using a
Page 2
Flite saddle. Regardless of the weight, he should have used his
leather saddle.
He had breathing problems in the mountains in Colorado. He seemed to
have some kind of respiratory infection. He could breathe and ride or
breathe and eat, but he could not breathe and ride and eat. He didn't
have this problem once we left the mountains and Colorado. Our nurse
thought he might have been suffering from altitude sickness. Not
sure.
Ed had another bout wherein he was bloated and unable to eat much.
After a major bowel movement, he was eating like a RAAM rider should.
As is typical, he wasted time off the bike before and after he slept.
Towards the end of the race, Ed and John Stoneman battled for days,
with Ed coming out the victor. I talked to John at the awards
ceremony. Very nice fella. He asked if we were feeding Ed bum info.
I said, "No. All I have to say is `John's coming' and he's back at
it."
Ed wants to race again in 1996. He probably feels like he hasn't
given this race his best. I have to agree. Had he had his
nutritional problems ironed out, thing could have been a lot
different.
One cannot say enough about Seana Hogan. She is such a tough rider
that most of the men could not overtake her. She has knee problems in
long races, so she has to wear some kind of brace on each leg. We
could see some bruising on the back of her knees from the braces.
Near the end of the race, one Time Station person mentioned that he
could hear Seana crying as she rode past.
Lots of riders were off getting IVs in or near Blythe, CA.
Daniel Chew was introduced before the race as a fella who wanted to
ride 1,000,000 miles in his life. At 31, he had already ridden
345,000. His first long ride was a double century at age 10. He was
off the bike for 19 hours at one point. After passing Ed, he rode off
and soon was out of sight.
The folks in Metter, GA, proved to be typical of man of the people at
the Time Stations. Very friendly and very supportive. When we got to
Metter, they were having a barbeque. When Ed came by, they all stood
in the road and yelled and applauded. Fred talked one of the women
out of her shirt (which she changed for an Ed Kross shirt in the local
7-11 bathroom).
Page 3
Final Notes
The following people made up the 1994 crew:
Stan Barrett Mechanic, Massage
Jodi Cecchi Massage
Scott Critz Driver
Patty Dietch Nutrition
Sally Fuller Nurse
Fred Kresse Mechanic
Vic Kross Crew Chief
Mark McMaster Mechanic
Juan Ochoa Mechanic
Our CB handles this race were "Scooter" and "Pie." So, of course, when
we had a post-race party, Fred Kresse brought a box of Scooter Pies.
In Pritchett, CO, I saw John Lee Ellis. He had said he would not be a
part of RAAM this year. Actually, he was one of the covert officials
watching the course. He and I talked some and then we were off.
We met Bonnie Allison in Guthrie, OK, Wednesday afternoon. Bonnie won
in 1992 as a senior rider. She told us about getting hit by a car 650
miles from the finish. She had 18 stitches in her head, some disk
problems, both wrists hurt. The crew turned her handle bars over so
she could shift by hitting the STI shifter with her arm.
Because Ed was eating everything in sight, we had more food than we
knew what to do with. So, one morning, Fred started throwing out some
old, stale doughnuts. I suggested that maybe Ed might ride faster if
Fred rolled the doughnuts past him. So, of course, Fred alternately
threw doughnuts at Ed and tried rolling them past him.
During our trek around Atlanta (Sunday morning), lots of traffic. The
roads are hilly and windy, so it was hard for (timid) drivers to pass.
This was a major pain in the posterior, since I had to pull off and
let people pass about every five minutes.
|
2789.8 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Aug 16 1994 11:37 | 23 |
| Lots of other stories that I'll remember in dribs and drabs.
Chris Kostman was the official following the teams (non-stop
action). He would just sleep in the front seat of his van.
But, he said he'd have to write himself a note (to be read
when he awoke) to assure himself that he had not fallen
asleep at the wheel and crashed.
Michael Shermer talked about seeing Aldo Calandro (from Italy)
sitting on the side of the road.
MS: "Aldo, what are you doing?"
AC: "Michael, my feet, they tell me to stop. I say, `OK.'"
The German team that won used no PA system. They carried a whistle,
a horn, and a kazoo. Each sound (or sequence of sounds) indicated
to the rider which way to go. Kostman mentioned that they never
missed a turn or checkpoint.
Bruno Heer (Austria) liked listening to reggae or calypso music.
It sounded odd when played over a PA system.
Scott
|
2789.9 | wow! | MOVIES::WIDDOWSON | Raid94: 750km 16,000m 106hrs | Tue Aug 16 1994 12:03 | 1 |
|
|
2789.10 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Tue Aug 16 1994 12:34 | 8 |
| Thanks Scott and please congratulate Ed on a wicked effort!!!
Sorry if I missed it, but is the Ed's best effort to date?
Sheesh, I eat everything in sight when I'm resting. I can't imagine my
appetite after crossing a continent!!! :-)
Chip
|
2789.11 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Aug 16 1994 12:59 | 16 |
| Yes, this was his best so far, although, with his nutrition
needs sorted out, I believe he can win. He is that good and
he can ride like a demon when he needs to.
Fred Kresse decided, after seeing the post mistress in Pritchett,
CO, that he would retire there, marry her, and live happily ever
after.
If you've never heard of Michael Hiltner, aka Victor Vincente of
America, you've missed hearing about one different dude.
Ed's talking RAAM '96. I won't be with Digital then, so I'm
unsure if I'll even have enough vacation time to crew. Have to
wait and see.
Scott
|
2789.12 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:26 | 20 |
| RAAM folks added another column to the route book. Invaluable,
in my estimation. It was MTNT (Miles To Next Turn). Before this
column was added, you'd have to calculate (roughly) when the next
turn would occur. Normally, you don't need this info. But, when you
have to leave your rider to get gas (or Chapstick or food or whatever),
s/he needs to know what's coming up and when.
The MTNT column also decremented each time you passed a checkpoint.
So, the route book is getting better and better.
The fella that does the route takes a 2 or 3 week vacation just
before the race. He drives the entire route, using a tape recorder
to record information.
There were a few little hiccups in the route book, but nothing
major. Once you got the hand of it, things usually went without
a hitch.
Scott
|
2789.13 | | NOVA::FISHER | Tay-unned, rey-usted, rey-ady | Wed Aug 17 1994 13:10 | 5 |
| I liked his article on accurately measuring the course. Uses an Odo to
4 digits, does test laps to get his tires warmed up to the needed
temperature. A real techno-weanie.
ed
|
2789.14 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Wed Aug 17 1994 14:17 | 5 |
| Forgot to mention.
Over 91K feet (17 miles) of climbing.
Scott
|
2789.15 | :-) | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Aug 17 1994 15:21 | 1 |
| Oh sure... over nine days! :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-)
|
2789.16 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | | Wed Aug 17 1994 18:48 | 5 |
| I like the description of the trek around Atlanta. Now why does that
sound familiar? Did they throw any beer bottles? How many dogs did he
get? ;-)
What a ride...
|
2789.17 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Thu Aug 18 1994 10:02 | 10 |
| No beer bottles or dogs to mention.
One non-RAAM rider came up behind us and asked if this was
RAAM. We told him yes. He asked who our rider was. We told him.
Funny thing was, he couldn't get up to Ed or ride with him.
If I had a choice, I'd miss Atlanta by more miles next. Another
person said the same thing at the post-race festivities.
Scott
|
2789.18 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Fri Aug 19 1994 13:45 | 10 |
| Ed wanted to average around 340 or 350 miles a day.
He averaged 302. (2900/9.6) Not bad, but not good enough to win.
A little less wasted time around sleep would have helped
a lot.
If he had wasted just 8 hours less, he would have averaged 313+.
Scott
|
2789.19 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Aug 23 1994 10:22 | 16 |
| We had 9 folks on the crew (4 veterans and 5 new guys).
No crew problems at all that I know of. I think this
race went better than the 92 race, from the crew's
perspective.
Juan Ochoa gave us some concern, though. He had been out
cycling with his brother in Washington state when he crashed
coming down Mt Ranier. He broke his arm and had numerous
other problems, not the least of which was a huge hematoma
on his left hip.
Oh, yeah. Juan was riding his brother's brand new Erickson
road bike (10 days old). I think the frame lived but a lot
of components died that day.
Scott
|
2789.20 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Aug 30 1994 10:34 | 11 |
| One night, we stopped and set up for Ed's sleep break on this
long, straight section of road. That meant that we could see
every rider coming through from a long way away.
Well, I see this rider coming, and, from guesstimates, thought
it was Ed. So just as he gets to me, I say "Ed, the RV is over
here." Problem was, it wasn't Ed. The rider turned and shouted
"What?" Anyway, no harm done, but it pays to know who you're
shouting at.
Scott
|
2789.21 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Wed Aug 31 1994 09:21 | 18 |
| While at the Carlisle TT last night, Ed indicated that Juan
Ochoa would be there. I asked if he would be riding. Ed said,
"Oh, I guess you didn't hear?"
Juan was our RAAM mechanic who arrived in California with
a broken arm and a huge hematoma on his left hip. He and his
brother were descending Mt Ranier in Washington when Juan
crashed.
Anyway, the bone had shifted during RAAM and was healing
improperly. You guessed it; back to surgery to re-break the bones
and re-set them.
I asked him how the hematoma was. He said it was still there,
although it was almost gone. Remember, this all occurred over
a month ago.
Scott
|
2789.22 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Wed Sep 07 1994 12:49 | 6 |
| Just an FYI:
RAAM '92 cost ~ $14K
RAAM '94 cost ~ $18K
Scott
|
2789.23 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Oct 10 1994 13:13 | 19 |
| Saw Ed last Tuesday evening. We had been pondering (for
a couple of years) why he got bloated at the beginning
of RAAM (both in '92 and '94). Randy Ice, who works closely
with the UMCA and does all the drug testing, told Ed that
there were a number of riders who got bloated.
So, bloating seems to go part and parcel with ultra-cycling
events.
We've talked about having Ed ride 100 to 150 miles a day,
beginning two days before the start of RAAM. That would allow
us to start feeding him the large amounts of food he would later
need for the race. Then, if he got bloated, it would probably
be before the race started, and he could be over it when the
race actually started.
Just a thought.
Scott
|
2789.24 | :-O | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Mon Oct 10 1994 13:35 | 1 |
| <- Hmmmm, but that doesn't explain my bloating :-)
|
2789.25 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Oct 10 1994 14:37 | 22 |
| Chip,
Well, no doubt about that. But, it's happened to every rider
I've been with.
I think it occurs because, all of a sudden, the body is consuming
very large quantities of food.
I wonder if the folks that use liquid diets (Pro Op or Ultra
Energy) have the same problems.
If I were Ed (and I'm not even close), I'd talk to some of the
riders I knew and see if they got bloated, and if they did, what
they did about it.
Cathy Ellis is close by and Nancy Raposo isn't too far away. They
could help some, I'd. Might be harder to get info out of the
other men that he has to compete against.
I guess maybe next year will be another year of experimentation.
Scott
|
2789.26 | | MOVIES::WIDDOWSON | I have given my liver for my art | Tue Oct 11 1994 02:40 | 5 |
| Yea I know that it's a different scale, but I have found that day two
into a hard alpine trip (100+miles/day 8000+ feet) I can get very
poorly as my body tries to come to terms with switching from sedentary
(200 miles/week) to all out blasting. Of course I'm just eating
solids..
|
2789.27 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Oct 11 1994 10:57 | 12 |
| Rod,
That's pretty much what Ed ate this year for RAAM. We tried
maltrodextrin in '92, and he got bloated. We assumed it was
the liquid diet, so we canned the liquid and went to solid
food also.
John Ellis had the same problem in 1991.
It would be nice to know why this happens.
Scott
|
2789.28 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Wed Oct 12 1994 18:52 | 13 |
| Just an educated SWAG, but whatch otta do is up the fiber (and liquid)
intake about a hundred notches, especially before the race. Also the
(vitamin something-or-other, pantothenic acid?).
We are built to process some 50 to 60 grams of fiber a day. Likley
your guy is doing 15 to 20, although getting enough liquid. Fiber
intake has lots and lots to do with digestive latency, so if you have
a digestive transit of typically 24 hours, and suddenly start cramming
four times as much food in one end of the pipe...
Increasing your fiber will decrease transit time, thus your ability to
process the, um, crap. Mail me for some more information...I gotta go
(no jokes, please...) ;-)
|
2789.29 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Thu Oct 13 1994 06:43 | 6 |
| <- Transit time? That's great!
Some days my transit time is in minutes :-) My wife thinks I have
no digestive system... Just one straight pipe.
Chip
|
2789.30 | | LASSIE::ZIELONKO | | Thu Oct 13 1994 13:55 | 3 |
| >...switching from sedentary (200 miles/week)
I wish I could be so sedentary.
|