
Rudy Schuster and Matt Gough summiting Monster Hill
Thanks for the awesome report and pics Rudy. Congrats to all who raced – you represented Team Peloton well.
the RUDY experience
Fort Collins Cycling Festival
Men’s Cat 4/5
There were five Peloton riders in cat 4/5. Our group start was rather erratic. We should been starting in five minute waves. The group in front of us went and the official kept waving us. The other official called us back, but half the group kept going. They launched us all and we regrouped in the first 200 meters. We had a brief conversation about trying to get over the top of Rist together. With the recognition that things will probably split up and every man may eventually fend for himself…which is what happened.
The tempo to the base of Rist was moderate. As expected, the pace picked up quickly on the climb. The Peloton Cycles group made the first selections that happened before Whale Rock. After Whale Rock, I knew that Brad was in front of me and everybody else was behind me. However, I have no idea how close or far they were behind me. I was assuming everybody was close. I am not familiar with Brad’s riding, so I had no idea what he was capable of. I know that Matt is able to match and exceed my efforts. Chris, Justin and I have all been close in race times the past year. I know that I usually pull away from Chris on moderate climbs and he typically catches and passes me on the steeper sections of climbs. I have not ridden consistently with Justin. This is as far as I was able to keep track of what was happening around me. I am not good enough to keep my head straight when under extreme physical stress.
So, I put my head up, pushed back in my saddle, rotated my hips back, straightened my back, and focused on a consistent-hard cadence; and made sure I was on the wheel in-front of me and not letting a gap open. The pace picked up and I became chase one. Shortly before the “mailboxes” I was setting pace. I do not know if I was setting for others or just myself. Riders quickly began choosing their own pace and the groups fragmented with the increasing grade. Every wheel in front of me was a target. I would catch one, determine if the pace was fast enough for me to stay, or if I should to pass. The steep section between the mailboxes and the firehouse was to be my first test. I was still passing people on the first half of it. I caught a rider in a Washington State University (WSU) kit about 1/2 of the way up that section. He picked up his pace when I caught him and he paced me for a while. When I passed and started setting pace he thanked me for taking a turn pulling. I took this has a good sign of somebody who would cooperate to achieve a common goal. After the firehouse, the WSu rider and I agreed that we should work together and needed each other for the trip to Masonville.
Matt caught the WSU guy and me right after Stove Prairie. A fourth rider with a Primal kit caught us too. The trip down to Glade Road was fast and fun with the four of us sharing the work. We had a good agreement to work together and keep the group intact. I had a few minor pains in my legs on Rist and Buckhorn Road. On Glade it developed to full-on cramping in my right groin and left quad. I knew that if I was dropped by the group I would be dead in the water. My only choice was to keep pedaling until recovery or total failure.
Now for a quick side trip…my eating plan was working perfectly. I knew I would burn about 3000 calories and had a plan to take in about 600. I was eating gel packs on regular intervals. My plan was to drink a bottle of Hammer Perpetuem between Stove Prairie and Glade. I felt good about all of this. I will need to find a way to take in more calories and electrolytes on future efforts of this size. I also nailed the pre-race meal with a good breakfast and took the right number of stomach acid reducing pills to prevent me from puking in my own mouth when my heart rate spiked. I think the correct term for my problem is acid reflux.
On Glade, I thought I was done due to the cramping. I continued contributing during the pulls and mastered the art of relaxing all leg muscles and shaking them out while drafting. I was amazed at how much this helped; although I am not sure if it was psychological or physical. My legs recovered by the time we got to the end of Glade; at least the cramping was gone. Matt and I knew the hills that were coming up and took the lead. I set the pace up to Horsetooth Park. Matt pulled us up to the turnaround and down to South Bay. Some other guy in a blue kit caught us as we pulled out of South Bay. He was tired from the chase and hung on the back.
After the merge onto Centennial it was time to pay the piper again and climb Suicide Hill. My legs started fighting back. The Primal rider attacked and pulled away. Matt started to pull away on the steepest section. I fought to keep his wheel and stuck it. We topped out together along with the WSU and Blue riders. I have the descent and left turn where Centennial meets Stadium Hill wired: 53×14 and 40mph. I took the lead on the descent and slingshot over the riser to cross the second dam. Matt took the lead to start Monster Hill and I took over someplace around the middle to finish it off. My wife and twins were at the top with cow bells and cheering for us (see the picture). The WSU and Blue riders, Matt and I worked across the Dams. Matt had a mechanical issue on the summit of Bingham Hill. He stopped. The WSU guy, Blue guy and I kept going.
There was a headwind from the south when we turned onto Overland. WSU guy and I were swapping leads. Then I popped like a balloon! I was done. My speed dropped and legs turned to rubber. I got hung out in the wind and started to drop off. WSU turned to look for me; I nodded my head to let him know I was done. The Blue guy must have still been on my wheel. I was having visions of making the turn onto Laport and getting out of the wind. The Blue guy took a pull when I really needed it. Finally I made it to Laport and picked up my pace. The Blue guy dropped off and I caught somebody else. Matt caught me right before we made the right onto Howes to do the final lap around the block to the finish line. I was glad to see him. We caught a fourth person. At about 50 meters Matt launched and crossed the line first of us four; the four of us were given a group finish time. The WSU guy finished about 40 seconds ahead of me.
My winter and spring seasons were plagued by personal sickness and sick children (remember toddler twins). I was in better shape in January than I was in June. My races were my training for the first half of the summer. I hit the tarmac and training hard in July—and it paid off. This was a great race for me. I am very happy with my result. I nailed the eating; albeit a little shy on the number of calories en route. We worked together as a group and it was successful. I got to work and finish with a teammate and friend. I pushed my physical limits, recovered, and kept going. The good thing is that I pushed my limits and did not hit total failure. That limit is still out there; which means I can do better and go harder. Looking back now I can pick out a few places where I could have made up time; and that is good because it means that there is room for improvement at my current fitness level and I know I can achieve a better fitness level. This race set a new bar for me. Obviously it is disappointing that it is the last road race of the season.

Rudy SChuster, Matt Gough and Chris Kinneer at the start


Rudy with his biggest fan

Rudy's other biggest fan
This concludes the RUDY experience.