Cycling and crashing are the kinds of things that come together whenever you liberally combine Newtonian Physics, skill, and overconfidence. In other words, I’ve been falling off my bike for nearly as long as I’ve been climbing on it.
One of the more memorable crashes of my youth involved the commute home from my high school and a lady driving into the parking lot of the local grocery store. Her car and my bicycle momentarily occupied the same space, a physical impossibility whose only opportunity for resolution lay in the boot of her car, and that’s precisely where I went looking for it. Another time, the right-front braking on my first real race bike helped me disprove the theory that I might be able to achieve sustained human flight. The resolution of this particular question also led me to learn how to re-cable the brakes on my bike and embark on my quest to perfect the wrapping of handlebar tape.
Some of these early lessons and their subsequent visits to emergency rooms and time spent nursing wounds led me to better understand where the limits lie that convert harmony between rider and machine into chaos. More importantly, it gave me an appreciation that descending and cornering at speed, while thrilling, provide limited reward with respect to the risk. Some might call this wisdom or maturity, but I like to think of it as something marginally more productive than refusing to learn from one’s mistakes.
It is the human condition, however, to become accustomed to current levels of risk and that we continue to push boundaries. We refer to this phenomenon as “progress”, and with progress comes an inherent sense of overconfidence; it is in our nature to assume that since we successfully pushed past the previous boundary, that the one that lies before us will be passed with similar ease.
It was with this confidence that I entered the first of three ninety-degree corners on lap four of yesterday’s Magnuson Park Cross race. During recon and the previous three race laps, I had recognized the risks of this first corner; leaving a fast section of tarmac, the course re-entered the mud and grass as we circumvented a tennis court. It would be easy to carry too much speed into the corner and loose traction on the flimsy, low-pressure cyclocross tires.
With each lap, the speeds increased, and with each lap, I successfully navigated the course. The riders around me were tiring, I was moving up in the field, and gaining confidence with each lap. On the section just prior to the first of the turns, I took an opportunity to pass a pack of slower riders from another category, set up for the corner, relaxed, and readied for the challenge presented by the upcoming muddy sections.
I felt it long before anything happened. It was one of those notions that enters your body somewhere between your senses and your brain and lingers there before turning sideways to make sure it’s noticed as it passes through your system. The tire in the front wheel depressed as I leaned on it – then folded over. I spent an eternity in limbo between the rider I had only just been and the rider whom I was about to become.
I aimed for the dirt, it seemed softer than the tarmac. I don’t know if I hit it or not, and I’m not sure what caused the rather deep gash under me knee, or the double-loop in my chain for which I could find no remedy at the trailside. What I do know is I was in a heap and the riders who had been enjoying my ample draft suddenly found themselves similarly on the ground, though for different reasons. Several cursed at me, one postulated that my mother had been unmarried at the time of my birth. While he may have been wrong about the specifics, he was certainly right in his sentiment: I was a fool who didn’t understand his own limitations.
It seems fitting, then, that I was the only rider I took down who failed to finish the race. Next time, I’ll aim to go just fast enough not to crash out.
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View Comments
@Kyle
I should hope you were in the big ring, unless you were emulating the truck-drafting scene from Breaking Away.
@Steampunk
But still in the full tuck which seems to be customary in Ontario despite being nowhere near spinning out?
@unversio
Well, we'll probably move it into the leading photo for our annual Broken Chain (Anti-V) Award.
@unversio
I'm still trying to figure out how the hell this happened. You do have to admit, though, that Frank's got talent!
@Xyverz One of Frank's magic tricks using only a perfectly standard bike.
wish someone had video of me hitting the pavement at 25mph and barrell rolling across the street at IMWI last month... super epic. 500 people lining the street...could've heard a pin drop. no grace to it though - too fast to fall with a plan.
@Steampunk
You've just described most of my riding this winter. The problem with crashing on a descent & breaking your collarbone at the end of Autumn is that all of your comeback riding is done on wet slippery roads, it's good fun trying to convince yourself that, no, the bike isn't going to slip out from under you at a moments notice.
@Deakus
You point out the inherent danger (and, er, fun) of racing. Unless you ride like David Moncoutie, or you dont want to win, your "law" is impossible to follow in a race...
@Mikael Liddy
Yeah: it feels like my whole centre of gravity has shifted northward by several centimetres.
@frank
Going uphill or down? Either way, I wouldn't have been cussing you out after your weekend crash--because unless I was about to lap you, I would have had that danger behind me. As it happens, I was leaning into the turn at the very top of the descent. The pace of the ride was fairly casually deliberate--in the big ring, but not killing it.
Oh gosh. Sounds like a tough day at the races.
I've managed to not crash yet during cx racing. Definitely not skill, more just about luck & that I haven't been at it all that long. My day is coming, I'm sure of it.
Hope the knee is alright, Frank! And sorry if it was covered, but did your front wheel taco/get tacoed? Can't figure out if you rolled a tubular or buggered the wheel.