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WEEK 28 (Monday, July 7, 2008)
WORLD CHAMPION
It was absolutely indescribable to put on the rainbow jersey once again.
This World Championship title will for ever stand as one of the very
greatest victories for Kenneth and me, and it is guaranteed to give us
renewed strength and energy for many more years on my bike.
Two days have passed since I became World Champion in Marathon cycling and
it still seems unreal to me. Tears of sheer joy flowed freely a long time
before I reached the finish line and I was a little dizzy as I got off my
bike surrounded by a deafening racket around me. At the same time last year,
I was at home and could only barely manage to take a short stroll to the
grocery store. Uncountable hours of intense hard work lie behind what we
performed on Saturday, and that’s the very reason the World Champion title
tasted so utterly fantastic.
The first days after the World Championship in Cross Country, two weeks
before the Marathon World Championship, my body and legs were pretty worn
out, so we had to take a few really slow days to recover fully. We left
straight from Commezzadura (World Championship in Cross Country) for
Villabassa, the town where the World Championship Marathon was to start and
finish. This was in order to have enough time to cycle around the track
without wearing ourselves out beforehand. This enabled us to divide the
track up into sections, do the flatter sections on slower paced days, and
the tougher climbs on more intense days.
NAIL-BITING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP RACE
The women did a large round of 89 kilometres, with a total of about 3000
metres difference in altitude, while the men had to cycle 119 kilometres. As
expected, the cyclists were still in a group towards the first climb after
10 kilometres on undemanding undulating terrain, consisting of asphalt,
gravel and single track. Sabine Spitz immediately took the lead and
controlled the tempo right to the top, and by that time only Finnish Pia and
I were still hanging on. An ascent with a gradient of a whopping 14 percent
usually separates the best from the second best.
On the next flat section approaching the first mountain there were four
girls alternating in the lead without too much effort. I took the lead and
set my own tempo when the climb began again. By this time we were a group of
seven girls. I had done this climb while training the weekend before and
knew that it would take close to 40 minutes to reach the top. I was cycling
right at the edge of my capacity and managed to create a gap back to Sabine
and Pia. At the top I was leading by 35 seconds. I descended the other side
right on the limit of my capabilities too, and increased my lead down
towards the next flat section.
After that came a section of more varying terrain. I hoped that the girls
racing to catch up from behind were riding one by one, but that wasn’t the
case. Sabine had slowed down so Pia could catch up so they could ride
together to catch up with me. By the third flat section I had a good three
minutes’ lead on them. We had practised the descent down to this food
station many times and it paid off.
CRISIS ON THE FINAL MOUNTAINTOP
Approaching the final mountain, I had a lead of three minutes and 15
seconds. My offensive riding and aggressive climb up the first mountain were
beginning to make themselves felt in my legs by this time. I knew it was
going to be struggle with myself to get to the top without the others
catching up. After a good 45 minutes of climbing I started to feel a
pricking sensation in my legs and arms, and that’s usually a bad sign.
Up till now I had been careful at filling up with liquid and food, but
apparently not careful enough. It’s not easy to swallow either liquid or
food when one is as tired as I was only a few kilometres from the top of the
mountain, but I managed to swallow one more PowerBar gel, plus half an
EnergyBar, and this decided the end result for me.
I had no idea of how far Sabine and Pia were behind me when I started the
descent. A few kilometres down the hill I received a horrifying update.
During a long bend in an open section I saw the girls behind me, and they
couldn’t be more than 10-15 seconds behind. In other words, I had cycled a
full three minutes slower than my two pursuers, even though I had been
giving absolutely everything my body and legs were capable of. I simply
needed more time in order to keep them away from me as I approached the
final asphalt hill, so my only possibility was to do the descent at a
greater pace than advisable.
I received a bottle of Coke at the bottom and downed it. Kenneth ran next to
me for a few hundred metres and gave me instructions, telling me to keep a
clear focus on which jobs needed doing in the situation I was in, and I
tried to think as little as possible about how stiff and painful my legs
felt. I also got to know that Ole Einar Bjoerndalen was standing further up
the hill waiting for me.
Ole Einar ran along next to me up the steepest part and that gave me
supernatural strength up the final kilometres to the top. I got a glimpse of
Sabine as I rounded the top, and I knew at that moment that I would be able
to win if I gave everything for the last 30 minutes. The final glimpse I got
of Sabine was on a small rise before the last down-hills to the finish line.
The steep down-hills which I had practiced riding previously were a pure joy
to descend this day. I caught up with both motorbikes and had to really
brake hard and practically yell them out of my way.
GOOD PREPARATIONS RESULTED IN GOLD
I didn’t dare to look over my shoulder again before the final ascent, only a
few hundred metres before the finish. At that point tears started to flow
and my worn out body suddenly started feeling really good and happy again.
Our countless fans in Italy ensured a fantastic chorus of cheering and
welcome as I arrived at the finish. I got hugs from both familiar and
unfamiliar people during the first minutes after crossing the line, without
Kenneth turning up.
Kenneth hadn’t made it back to the last flat section, and he had more or
less accepted that it would be a bronze medal today. Up the last asphalt
hill where he had been standing, he had seen a Gunn-Rita who didn’t respond
to what he said and whose pedalling was slow and ineffective. But he never
got to see the energy kick in from the gel, the Coke and the PowerBar, nor
the sheer mental energy which came from having a multiple Olympic medal
winner running next to me and goading me on up the last climb.
“COMMENT OF THE DAY”
Kenneth got to hear the final result on the phone from our personal manager,
Roar, who had already wept his tears of joy at the finish line. Kenneth’s
first comment was: “Dammit, Roar, are you kidding around with me? You need
to make sure of the results.”
Kenneth managed to make his way to the finish line a few minutes later and
we were able to give each other a shocked victory hug of sorts. I must have
cycled incredibly fast down the last hills, as I won the race by one minute
and 40 seconds. Sabine got the silver medal, and Pia got the bronze.
We would never have won our eighth World Championship gold medal if we
hadn’t done the preparations we did through the final ten days before the
championship. Training just the correct amount on the track, doing some
extra on the parts of the track we felt would be most important, and laying
a detailed tactical plan which we felt would be effective.
THANK YOU FOR ALL THE SUPPORT
So it ended up being a fantastic and unforgettable day in many ways, with a
significance that we can hardly manage to grasp two days after. Maybe we can
write more about it after the end of the season! All I know is that we
really needed this victory. The Multivan Merida team needed it, the sponsors
and support team deserved this gold, our personal sponsors own a part of the
medal, Olympiatoppen and NCF, our supporters and family have all contributed
in their own ways to this becoming a reality. THANK YOU TO EACH AND EVERY
ONE OF YOU
J
In one week we’re leaving for Canada where we’re doing two World Cup races
as a final preparation before Beijing. You’ll be hearing from us again a few
days into next week when we’re settled and accustomed to a new time zone. I
wish you all a wonderful bike ride, both today and tomorrow
J
Cyclist’s greetings from Gunn-Rita and Kenneth
Multivan Merida Biking Team
www.gunnrita.com |
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