The moment Sam W. decided this ride was a bit too fast for him and decided to do his own thing I suspected I was in trouble.
I haven’t ridden with Sacha before but just seeing him riding in the first few kilometres I knew he was a strong rider.
Still, “third is the worst I can do in all sprints in this ride”, I thought. That was my natural positiveness and optimism in action.
An optimism that lured me into taking turns at the front with my riding mates.
Not my wisest move. Why would you do that if you know that you are in trouble?
I got away with it though. At least until the coffee stop.
As soon as we got to the first ramp after Wargrave I was going backwards. Not long after I signed Sacha to pass me and told him to carry on, I was going to drop and ride solo.
Now, on my own. I set a crawling pace home.
Unfortunately for me GC Denis and Sacha waited for me at the end of Drift Rd.
“Third in the sprint I thought”. Not sure who took it. I was literally minutes behind.
Despite words mentioned indicating otherwise, I interpreted their gesture of waiting for me as noble, friendly and caring.
They slowed down the pace, allowed me to sit at the back of the trio, and looked back every now and then to make sure I was still there.
And I was. For the most part. Every now and then a gap opened but they waited for me. Over one of the bridges GC Denis opened a gap. Sacha stayed with me and rode in front of me to close it while GC Denis slowed down.
I was so impressed that I decided I was not going to sprint at the final sprint. And, believe me, I don’t make such a decision all that often.
As soon as we got to Sunbury-on-Thames GC Denis moved to the front and upped the pace. I was at the back holding for my dare life.
He kept accelerating. Going faster and faster. My heart rate was going up and I was starting to get excited.
But I told myself: You have been sitting on their wheel for the last 25km. Don’t sprint. It wouldn’t be good sportsmanship, it would be bad for your reputation, it wouldn’t be fair. Leave it up to them.
We passed the mark I use to start my sprints and I stayed at the back. Ready to enjoy the show.
Sacha moved to the right and accelerated. Somehow I was still on his wheel.
Next thing I know is I was thinking: “Fuck it, I’m sprinting”.
And I took it. Not my best sprint. Definitively not my most honorable sprint, but I took it.
This was an expensive ride from the reputation point of view. I’ll be lucky if Sam W. doesn’t report me to the Kingston Wheelers committee for false ride advertisement (I posted the ride as K2.5, it felt to me as K1.5, although it probably was a traditional K2) and that final sprint probably destroyed any possibility of anyone thinking that I am a fair sprinter…
But that sprint made it up for being third at Drift Rd. Totally worth it.
The ride in Strava (my longest ride in three months!!!!): https://www.strava.com/activities/17731174062/
Take care of yourself
Javier Arias González











