What does this have to do with the Worlds? Nothing, but it makes me laugh and includes a wicked photograph so this is the guest article today. @roadslave joined the 2012 Keepers Tour for the full week of riding and ranting and he was excellent at both. He rode at the front with a Chris Horner smile and now he admits to only riding for four years. Fair enough, with only four years in, there is still time for a few firsts. Here is one.
VLVV, Gianni.
It should be no surprise that, having grown up in the 80s, one of my favourite movies of all time is Top Gun. There aren’t many situations in life that can’t be fitted to one of the many great quotes from the film, and there are certainly many that can be adapted to cycling (“It’s too steep, I’m switching to guns”, etc). Anyhow, you remember that bit when Shorty gets told off in class for flying too aggressively, (“gutsiest move I ever saw, man”) and gets on his huge, err, throbbing motorbike to be chased through San Diego by Kelly McGillis?
“My review of your performance was right on, in my professional opinion”
“Jesus, and you call me reckless. When I fly, my crew and my plane come first”
“I’m gonna finish my sentence. My review of your performance was right on. I see some real genius in your flying. But I can’t say that in there. I was afraid they’d see right through me. I don’t want anyone to know that I’ve fallen for you.”
Now, I’ve been cycling for a little over four years. I’ve covered tens of thousands of kilometres on six bikes in seven countries on two continents. I’ve bored most people I know with how much I love cycling. I’ve begun to follow the pro cyclists, and have even ridden some of their rides. And I’ve spent too long on sites like this talking about cycling when I could have been using the Internet for useful stuff, like, err, porn. But, up until last month, I’d never fallen for it. I have now, and boy, it hurt.
It was a stoopid fall. A through-and-off at the end of a fabulous long ride, out with a buddy on a cold, crisp winter’s morning in the hills southwest of London. On the drag back into town, a miscommunication – I thought he was going for it, but he was actually sitting up. Our wheels overlapped. He steered the way he thought would get me out of it, but no. A 50/50 chance, and the house won. BOOM! Tarmac, Roadslave, Roadslave, tarmac. Introductions at over 45 kmh are always going to be a little bit rushed, but even so. Helmet was cracked in two, shredded sacred garments out at the elbows (sorry, Frank), leg warmers and gloves in tatters, road rash on face, elbows and knees, and the most sodding awful bruise on my hip.
Amazingly, other than it looking like someone had taken an angle-grinder to my Ergo-levers and saddle, Bike No. 1 was ok. As, by and large was I. Nothing was broken, no concussion, no lasting damage (I hope). Which was amazing, given the physics of the deceleration, the road, my weight, and ending up on my face in the oncoming traffic lane.
Adrenalin is a wonderful thing. I was on my feet in no time, picked up and checked the bike, rode the last 20 km home, and hosted 20 five-year olds, plus parents, for my son’s fifth birthday. It was only later that things went a bit doolalley. The shock came that afternoon. Uncontrollable shaking, feeling faint, wanting to throw up. Mind you, that could have been the impact of the 20 five-year olds. The stiffness came the next morning (written with a straight face… probably the most painful bit of the whole episode was getting out of bed that day.) The whiplash came on Day Three. I still can’t fully look over my right shoulder and there is still bruising weeks after the event. I won’t go into details, but if you’ve ever watched CSI, you’ll know about blood pooling and gravitational effects. Suffice it to say, I’ve had some swelling and discolouration in some strange and unexpected places.
I was off the bike for six days. Irritable, bored, grumpy. I had been planning on doing a big block of training just prior to Christmas. Why?
a) It’s what the pros do.
b) It just sounds cool. “I’m doing a big block now to lay the foundations for the cobbles in April”
c) I was changing jobs, so had the time on my hands but the training was out the window. I moped about the house, lost and forlorn.
When I did get back on, yes there was residual soreness and stiffness, but it made my heart soar to be back in the saddle. I honestly believe that was when the healing process really started. Admittedly, I rode like Nick Clegg/Barack Obama (apply to whichever country is appropriate, insert your own weak politician, etc). I had no power, no stamina, no confidence. As my US cycling sensei told me, my body had basically gone into blue screen mode. But it still felt so good to be back riding again. I (or rather my backside) became a bit of a local celebrity, and we did the round of Christmas parties, gallery openings, and for a few seconds, trended on Twitter.
The Stig, our tame racing cyclist, was pretty matter of fact:
“Bummer. Biggest cause of accidents. Period. You hear the ‘Zippp’, you prepare for the worst. Last time I crashed, it was in the finishing sprint of a big crit and wheels overlapped. Tore so much skin off my thigh that I was in hospital for weeks getting a square foot of skin graft. I was lucky. The other guy lost his thumb, and the third guy fractured his skull and was in a coma for two weeks – he was the only guy not writhing around on the ground screaming like a little girl.”
It was the response of my non-cycling friends and family that surprised me the most: zero sympathy, lots of anger (“how could you have been so stupid? To pick today, of all days, when you knew we had the kids party?”) and much encouragement to take up golf (thanks, Dad). When she saw the bruise, and the red mist had cleared, the wife forced me to go to the ER. The doctor’s response was priceless; “So, you fell off your bike, and you have a bruise and your wife has made you come to have it checked out? Well, it looks fine to me.” He was looking at the small road rash above my left eyebrow. “That’s not the bruise I want checked out… this is.” “JEEESUS!” At which point he ran off, leaving me with my pants down, to get the other doctors into the cubicle. What, you want a second opinion? “No, I just want them to see this.”
The most thoughtful response was from my US cycling sensei via email. I think it’s worth sharing in its entirety:
“The overlapped wheel. No one gets away for long without going down because of that. Ask the pros. It amazes me how often big groups go down in the peloton because of it. For all the riding you’ve done – and challenging riding at that – you can feel good that it hasn’t happened before. As you now know, the worst part of those falls is that you literally get catapulted into the pavement; there’s no sliding or deceleration of one’s body. Of the several times I’ve gone down, about 1/3 are because of overlap. I broke my hand once. Glad to hear the bike is ok – but a shame about the cosmetic damage. I can understand why the wife is upset, as I know you do too. Funny – if you’d gotten injured in a car crash, it would be nothing but sympathy from her. But because you (we), as grown men, choose to dress up in tights like superheroes to pedal half the day on the open road on what most adults see as a child’s toy… well, I think most see it as borderline selfish, risk-taking behaviour… how do you explain to the kids that their dad got seriously injured doing something that was totally voluntary. Hence, IMO, the disproportionate reactions to cyclists on the road (how dare they enjoy themselves while I have things to do!). That’s just my take on it… I know plenty of guys that pretty much stopped cycling after they had kids – not just because of time constraints, but also because of knowing how bad cycling crash injuries can be and how it might impact their families. Personally, I think that was an extreme position for them to take, but then, I don’t have kids.”
Now, I know it’s supposed to be taboo to talk about this stuff – and, indeed, it is in breach of the new Rule #81. (This did happen before its introduction.) But I really don’t know if I’m lucky – after all, it could have been a helluva lot worse. Or am I plain idiotic (see Rob’s excellent article on overlapping wheels), unlucky (proper cyclists rarely fall), or normal (this is just something that happens from time to time, so get used to it)?
Forget the responses of non-cyclists – we tolerate them at the best of times. All of my cycling buddies gave me comradely and knowing looks, as if I’d passed some rite of passage, and was now a proper cyclist. Have I? Am I? Just the other day, @Houdini was describing another rider to me: “He rides like someone who hasn’t fallen off yet.” Before this fall, I would have had no idea what he was on about, but now I get it totally.
As with most things cycling, when in doubt, I look to the pros. And my conviction is that falling is a rite of passage. It’s what proper cyclists do. Getting back on defines the true cyclist. Hoogerland is defined by his fall, Cavendish either wins or crashes and burns. There is no middle ground. Part of our love for JENS! is because we saw him bounce his face down a mountain in 2007, or in 2011 when he went down twice, swore at the camera crew, got back on and up to the front, and rode tempo for the next hour in service of his (undeserving) team leaders.
Then there is the dark side. We know these falls can lead to the bad places where we do not want to go. These occasional tragedies unite cycling like no other event. IMHO there is nothing more noble, more heartbreaking, or that stirs greater pride, than a neutralised, mournful peloton. Self-shackled race horses. Chapeau Millar, the dignified master of ceremonies for the last horror, grew as a cyclist and as a human that day.
So, while a first fall is a rite of passage, it is also a warning of where not to go and what not do to. For each fall we get up from, we have the adrenaline-primed happiness of knowing it could have been much, much worse.
I am a cyclist, today is a good day, today I rode on.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/j.andrews3@comcast.net/Nigel/”/]
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View Comments
great article.
I spent my teenage years crashing bmx's, mountain bikes and skateboards, my shins and knees look like i've been in a shark attack.
As yet, i've avoided anything more than a light scrape on the road. i know it'll come at some point....i really should wear gloves more often.
@Cyclops
That's my one phobia -- losing a front wheel on a fast descent. And it started this season after a crash (March). This really hit me after the doctor's release (broken clavicle) out during the 2nd rehab ride, while going down a long, fast section. The descent lasted long enough to get it in my head, so I stopped almost near the bottom and checked both skewers. I wanted to get beyond it and resumed all the downhill speed and more so. I have the *phobia*, but rationalize it as craziness... I know that I constantly check the skewers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21Dts9r88Hw
@Cyclops
You are now forgiven for posting that avulsed arm photo earlier. +1. Beauty
Really nicely written piece. Welcome to the club - and fromthe sounds of it you entered with style by going down on the high side - the hardman's way to crash. One correction - its a block of training. You ride a bloc - when you are channeling Vino. There is also the Australian "choc a block" - as in " I walked into his caravan only to find Tom Cruise choc a block up one of the young camera boys".
@unversio
Yeah I found my rear QR loose while on vacation with my bike earlier this month (in and out of the car with it, taking wheels on and off) and I guess I had not checked it well enough.
Finding the lever that has almost worked itself into the open position after you've ridden up and down 1k of elevation gives you a bit of pause thinking "what if".
@Marcus What are you saying?
@doubleR So sorry to hear about the nasty damage you've sustained. All I can say is to go slow but please don't give up. The bones will heal and the confidence will return if you just give them time. Don't make any decisions while you're still feeling wounded and vulnerable. Kia kaha, Oli
Great article, Roadslave. Maverick out.
@ErikdR
It's adrenaline I reckon - after a fall you've obviously put yourself in danger and your body's natural reaction is to juice yourself up to get out of danger and get somewhere safe. It sucks when it wears off, your body cools down and things start throbbing.
By the fucking way, crash talk must be about as bad as puncture talk for the superstitious. After I saw Scaler 911's purple arse on here, I innocently thought, huh I haven't crashed for a while. Few days later, hit a pothole doing I think 40-ish on a decent, had the bars jerked out of my hands when the front wheel hit, then bucked off the saddle when the back wheel hit the pothole. No fucken chance of holding that one together, although I did manage to get hold of the bars again on the way down somehow, since I hit the ground holding them and turned a 42cm set of bars into a 38cm set of bars at the drops.
Moral of the story is, I wasn't wearing gloves; I took half the skin off my right palm, and the skin off the tips of my index and middle finger, and a decent chunk of flesh out of my left elbow. The following week at work sucked hard (can't type with 2 fingers on your right hand, can't lean on your left elbow, can't sit back in the chair because of bruised hip)
Moral of the story #2, do it in front of an audience. I was riding round the burbs here, and hadn't seen anyone at all for 40 minutes; the street I do it in front of a parked car getting ready to pull out, 2 guys with concrete mixers, and a car full of a women getting ready to go somewhere. Very embarrassing to ride around hilly Wellington for years and never cook a decent, then come here and stack it on what could generously be described as a 'rise'.
Good Mercxk I think I've crashed more than some of you have had hot dinners. Admittedly most of the bangers were while I was a cycle courier (stupid riding + 8 hours a day + taxis) but they're par for the course. I've got the cyclist's collarbone and rarely feel anything in my elbows when I crash these days.
Oh and get good scars - after one run in with a taxi, I headbutted the curb and split open the skin to the left of my left eye socket. Bit of tarmac got in there, and now I have a small permanent dark road coloured scar there, a wee bit like a single teardrop tattoo that Marcus got either in Prison or Freddy Mercury's house (Marcus' reasons for being at both places is the same).
@roadslave525Sometimes when things are going well you don't think about the negative aspects of life and sport. Going 4 plus years with out a crash is a pretty good stretch. I've fallen 3 times just this year including getting hit by a truck, which was by far the worst crash and I was back on the bike within the week. It's been almost 5 weeks and I'm only now feeling mostly better and regaining some fitness.
@Cyclops is right on, things can go to shit so suddenly it's scary. There have been several instances recently of cyclists being killed on the road here in central Texas and it really gives you something to think about. Is your bicycle properly maintained, is the route your taking safe? Are you going alone, with a group/team?
Really the only thing to do is get back on the bike and ride.