I must have become Tour/battle hardened because I managed to let the guys talk me into an incredibly late start - picking up Willie in Musselburgh at 11.15, and Andrew, Michael and Peter in Leith at 11.30. We almost got there late at 12.30...
After depositing our loads in the Village Hall (sorry, I've been drinking after 5 days living as a professional athlete) - cakes and other food for the party afterwards, as well as old technical tops to donate to African children - we went off for the, by now, customary warm up/recce. Today's was particularly slow and half(quarter?!)-arsed.
Take me to church - OUR service starts at 2pm |
Do you see MG wearing a rugby shirt or a cricket shirt? |
Letham Village Hall - scene of hilarity. And cake! |
Apples |
Nice plums |
A confirmed sighting of Nessie barely registers with the boys... |
And now there's a UFO hovering above them - you miss a lot when looking at your feet ascending a hill |
The mast marks today's highest point (after 3 miles of steady climb) |
Total confusion - where the f*ck does the course go from here?! |
It kind of keeps going that way for another half mile or so, before going up right - we got tired and turned back (it was only a recce after all) |
Other photographers would have avoided the grass in the foreground - I enjoy the inversion of the respective stages of the (French/Tesco) food chain; grain over horse |
The Stave (up at the start at this point) nearly forgets his number for the second time this Tour |
The start:
(photo: Ethan Lee) |
The front five (L to R: Scott Cassidy, Tom Brian, Ewan Gault, Del Rae, and Ali Brockie) do their usual thing and clear off (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
The second five (L to R: Keith Taylor, Michael, me, Peter, and Sam Fernando) get down to the real business of the day (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
I'll spare you the detailed description of the race, because I suspect that you have as much appetite for reading it as I do for typing it. I'll break it down into bullet points:-
- The front 5 cleared off
- The overall places 6-10 settled into their own fight
- The gradual incline over the first 3 miles suited me because I could settle in and chug along
- Michael went out hard and really "brought it"
- Peter was surprisingly (on account of that respect thing I mentioned earlier) the first to fall back
- Keith was the next to drop back
- Sam led Michael and me to the mast
- I descended marginally better than both to finish 6th (for the 5th consecutive race - very appealing from an OCD perspective)
- Michael was 7th ahead of Keith and Sam, with Peter 10th
- Our overall positions (after 5 days) were unchanged.
Two fantastic athletes - Del (left) won overall, but each won two races, and they crossed the line today with hands held aloft. Look out for Del at Rio 2016! (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
Pleased still to be airborne near the finish on Day 5 (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
PB ripping off my patented "Amazonian Tribal Lip" look (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
Willie looking annoyingly calm, unflustered and graceful (as ever) (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
The Stave versus his Nemesis. Both, in unison: "There's no f*cking way you're beating me!!!" (The Stave won - yay!) (photo: Vicki Charlton) |
Collecting my first ever (and quite possibly last) V40 prize - v v chuffed! (photo: Ethan Lee) |
The prize giving brought a chill down my spine when I realised that, despite the results categorising participants in 5 year Vet increments, the prizes were actually allocated on a 10-year spread basis. Which meant that my updates thus far of the V40 category (White Jersey) have been all over the place - Ian McNulty of Dundee (V45) was actually my closest rival. Unfortunately for Ian, the organisers made the same mistake and, at least to begin with, awarded his second place to Steven King of Carnegie (who to his huge credit seemed well aware that something was wrong).
Which meant that a similar fate was to befall Willie - the V55 category, that he was cantering to a win in, gone in a flash. Happily he was recognised with a spot prize (a bottle of whisky) for an outstanding performance in the wider V50 category.
So, that's that then. Or were you expecting some final reflections? Some lessons learned perhaps?
I'm not sure I have any.
But I did have a bucket load of laughs. If you are thinking of doing this yourself next year (and you REALLY should - it's fantastic), I'd recommend going with a tremendous bunch of guys (or gals). That'll make a big difference. I signed up for this on the back of Peter's blog from last year's Tour. He and Michael seemed to be having just the best time. And I wanted to live that. And now I have. For which I am incredibly grateful.
For me it was almost like a good stag weekend. A bunch of guys, some of whom knew each other, some of whom less so (or not at all) thrown together into an environment of doing an activity. And bonding through that activity. And becoming friends through that activity. And sharing experiences. And in-jokes. And taking on Tour-specific roles. And becoming increasingly weary or broken (but not hungover for a change!) through that activity. And leaving thinking that they'd quite like to see each other again quite soon. Or maybe that was just me...
I will always be Dunbar RC, but for a week it was a privilege to be an honorary Porty (the land of my childhood and schooling)!
Before I go, I do feel the need to make an apology. An apology to Young Sam. In my first blog (from Wednesday night's beach race) I said that I was "a little miffed that he didn't pull his weight into the wind". I've since learned (from Keith) that he is (a) only 17 this week, and (b) autistic. Which makes me just about the biggest prick going. I thought about editing my first post to delete the comment in question, but then thought that that would be sneaky, Orwellian, and plain dishonest - those were my genuine feelings at the time, so perhaps it is right to record the way I felt at that moment. It doesn't mean that those feelings are justified, or that I am not a dick for having felt them. So, again, I apologise Sam. Maybe I should be more careful about judging other runners next time.
Just don't accuse me of having learned something.
Stage 5 Results:
1. Scott Cassidy (Fife AC): 26:33
2. Derek Rae (Anster Haddies RC): +0:00
3. Tom Brian (Metro Aberdeen RC): +0:18
4. Ewan Gault (Central AC): +0:29
5. Alastair Brockie (Corstorphine AAC): +0:35
6: Nick Williamson (Dunbar RC): +1:58
7. Michael Geoghegan (Portobello RC): +2:01
8. Sam Fernando (Fife AC): +2:13
9. Keith Taylor (Fife AC): +2:13
10. Peter Buchanan (Portobello RC): +2:32
20. Willie Jarvie (Portobello RC): +3:58
58. Andrew Stavert (Portobello RC): +8:38
Yellow Jersey (Overall Classification) - Final, after Stage 5:
1. Derek Rae (Anster Haddies RC): 1:42:03
2. Scott Cassidy (Fife AC): +0:24
3. Alastair Brockie (Corstorphine AAC): +1:38
4. Ewan Gault (Central AC): +2:41
5. Tom Brian (Metro Aberdeen RC): +3:05
6: Nick Williamson (Dunbar RC): +8:19
7. Keith Taylor (Fife AC): +9:52
8. Sam Fernando (Fife AC): +9:58
9. Michael Geoghegan (Portobello RC): +10:02
10. Peter Buchanan (Portobello RC): +10:37
11. Ian McNulty (Dundee Hawkhill Harriers): +11:59
12. Steven King (Carnegie Harriers): +12:44
14. Scott Strachan (Kinross Road Runners): +13:30
18. Willie Jarvie (Portobello RC): +15:50
56. Andrew Stavert (Portobello RC): +35:05
White Jersey (Best Old (V40) Rider Classification) - Final, after Stage 5:
1. Nick Williamson (Dunbar RC): 1:50:22
2. Ian McNulty (Dundee Hawkhill Harriers): +3:40
3. Steven King (Carnegie Harriers): +4:25
4. David Downey (Dunblane Runners): +5:11
5. Scott Strachan (Kinross Road Runners): +11:01
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