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Posted by Tim Crytser on Monday, June 29, 2009
Visit Racer X Virtual Trainer for all your training and nutrition needs!
1 What’s up everyone? It’s Daniel Corbin...
Well, the dust has settled and all of the regional qualifiers are in the history books. We now know who made it to Loretta’s, and who to look out for. I didn’t really pay much attention to the other regionals, but I sure do know how mine went! I’ll try to give you a quick, thorough run down of what happened (from my point of view!).
We packed up Thursday night and left early Friday morning, while we were all still zombies, and got to the track around 9:15. We thought that we were late, but practice didn’t start until about ten, probably because the track was drenched. It must have rained from as soon as the national ended, until that morning. That’s a bit of an exaggeration, because the first practice was actually all right until things started to get mixed up. The worst part of it all was that at sign up they tried to give me a sticker to go out in the first practice, but I gave it back to them and got one for the sixth practice instead. Big mistake. I should have never even gone out there.
The track was so slippery that I was just trying to stay up the whole time. At the end of the first set, the sun started peeping from behind the clouds. It seemed like as soon as it touched the track things started to tack up. The second round of practice was decent, and the third round was pretty good considering the mire it had been earlier. After everything was said and done my bike was a mess. We went to the car wash and cleaned it up really well, and then we went to my grandparents where we were staying Friday and Saturday nights. It’s so nice to have a shower and bed to sleep in.
Friday night I put on some graphics that I had gotten from Kipp at NineoneNine Designs for the regional. They are some sick stickers! All weekend I was getting comments from people saying how good they looked. After I was done putting them on I sprayed my bike down with a silicone spray Liquid Performance makes called Topkote to make my bike look even better, and to give it a lovely melon scent! I have no idea why they decided to give it a melon scent, that’s kind of weird. But it does smell good! Just don’t get too much of it or you’ll be passed out on the floor!
Saturday the track was so much nicer than it had been on Friday, and it ended up getting really rough and rutted. I started off on a bad note, getting bad starts in both of my first two motos. In the first start, which was 250A Pro-sport, I was paying attention to everyone else but myself, and the second start I just had a terrible gate pick. In the 250 class I came from around fifteenth to fourth, and in the 450A moto I came from all the way back in the mid twenties back to seventh, which was my worst finish of the weekend. The third class I entered was 250A, and I was sick of bad starts at that point. I got a third place start and stayed there until the checkers flew.
After that I finally got some rest, because all of my motos were almost back to back. I had the 11th, 13th, and 16th motos, and they were rolling on through the races. I ended up getting two motos in each class done on Saturday. The second round went even better, as I got a third place start in 250A Pro-sport and passed for second, where I finished. Then in the 450A class I got a top ten start, and got up to fourth and settled in. Things got a bit interesting in the second moto of 250A when one and a half laps into the race my seat fell off! I was in third when it happened, and I was really tempted to pull off. I’m not one to quit though, and I kept fighting on, standing up as much as I could. Sitting on a bare sub frame isn’t the most comfortable thing in the world! Talk about a cut-out seat! Add to that that it was the last moto of a long day, and it made for a pretty tough moto.
1 Daniel Corbin For all that I still managed to hold on to a fourth place finish! The only person who got me was my good friend Brock Schmelyun. He got me pretty easily, as I didn’t have much for him. Of course when I got back I had to have a little talk with my mechanic, which was my brother since he wasn’t racing at that weekend, and because he insisted that I let him. We were all happy to get back to my grandparents so we could relax after a long day of racing.
The whole day I never had a problem with fading or getting tired, I was a little worn out at the end of the day, but I still felt good. My training is really working, all the working out on the TRX, and going to the gym and all the cardio are really paying off now. So is the stretching I’ve started doing. When I woke up Sunday morning I was so stiff that it hurt to bend my back. I started stretching everything out and in no time I felt 100% better.
Something else that is really working is my bike. PR2 has got that thing working great, and the suspension took everything the track could throw at it. The engine is so strong as well, and I was the only person on a 250 to jump the famous uphill triple. I’m a shameless representer, and I’m not afraid to give credit where credit is due, and Chris and Jeff from PR2 definitely deserve some credit for how well that bike works.
Sunday was definitely my best day, every moto was a good moto. In my last 250A Pro-sport moto I got a second place start, but I let Shuckhart by my in the second corner. I don’t know why, I just thought that he was going to get me anyway. Because I let him get me, Spangler was able to get me as well, but I got by Shuckhart and Moore two laps in. I finished that moto in second and ended up with a 4-2-2 for a third overall.
In my last moto of 450A I got a top ten start, but in the third corner someone came across the track and took me out. I got up way behind and in dead last, and rode as hard as I could. I don’t remember passing most of the people I passed, but I came across the line in sixth, almost dead even with fifth. I had no idea were I finished, and the person who tells you to go to the impound area was pointing in a direction that could have been the impound area or telling me to go back to my pit. I looked at the impound area and realized that there were only five people sitting in it. I just started shaking my head, I couldn’t believe that I had managed to get all the way back to sixth. I finished 7-4-6 for 5th overall.
Well, it couldn’t get much better than that, but my next moto was a good one none the less. I started out in fourth, and I was right behind Shuckhart. I went all out coming into a corner and blew right by him, the only problem was that I was going way to fast to make the corner! I rode right off the track, and ended up in sixth by the time I got back on the track. I rode my butt off and came back to third by the third lap. The leaders had a lot of time on us, and I was catching second but there just wasn’t enough time for me to get him. I went 3-4-3 for a third overall.
So that wrapped up one of the best regionals I have ridden, big props to the Coombs' for running a great race and getting the track into great shape. I also would like to extend my appreciation to Vurb for the article they ran of me on their website. Thanks to all of my great sponsors; Coach Seiji, Racer X Virtual Trainer, Twigg Cycles, PR2, NineoneNine Designs, Fly, Scott USA, SPFC, and Jordan’s Flooring.
Posted by Tim Crytser on Monday, June 29th, 2009 at 4:36 pm
Posted by Tim Crytser on Monday, March 23, 2009
Visit Racer X Virtual Trainer for all your training and nutrition needs!
Hey everybody, I just got back from Lake Whitney a couple of days ago. Here’s a run down of the week...
Whitney was full of surprises for me from the moment we left my house until the very last day we were there. I was really cutting it close getting packed to head down there as I didn’t even start to pack up until the day before we left. I don’t know what I would have done if I hadn’t gotten Friday off of work. I had been so busy with my work and training that I didn’t have even a spare minute to try to pack any of my stuff. After we had left on Saturday morning I finally realized that if I hadn’t gotten Friday off, I would never had enough time to pack up and get there on time.
Unfortunately, my whole family couldn’t go; my Dad had to stay home to work, and my brothers and sisters had to stay as well to help him. So my Mom, baby sister, and I left on Saturday morning at about 6 o’clock. It took about twenty-two hours to get from our house to the track, but fortunately the trip was relatively smooth. I was wondering what the scenery would be like in Texas the whole way there, because every state we went through was different. I was surprised to see that it was almost exactly like back here in Maryland, except for some mean looking ground cacti that seem to be their version of thistles or dandelions or something.
We did get a little glimpse of the more desert like part of Texas just a couple of hundred feet before we went through the gates of WB Ranch Sunday evening. All of the sudden, the road turned to dirt and there where low shrubs on both sides of the road. The ground was bare, hard, and clayish looking, except for those little cacti dotting it. I thought, alright, now we’re in Texas. It was only a glimpse though, because as soon as we drove onto the ranch the landscape changed to grasslands with trees and shrubs. There was a wrought iron sign on the side of the road telling us to go slow and watch out for exotic animals.
The first animal we saw was a regular old doe, and we were laughing that this might be one of those “exotic” animals the sign just told us about. We have deer all over the place back home, there are tons of them even on just our piece of property. Come to find out they do have exotic animals. There are some African red deer on the ranch as well as zebras, antelope, gazelles, and maybe a few others.
The weather was also a little bit of a surprise. When we got there on Sunday, it was about 80 degrees and sunny. I was sweating like a pig because I was used to temperatures in the mid to upper thirties. Monday was practice day, and the temperature had dropped to the mid 60’s because clouds had rolled in. Little did I know that that was the last time that I would see the sun until I got home on Monday.
Never before have I ridden on such a loamy track. I felt like crap in my first practice because it seemed like I wasn’t going anywhere; the track was just eating up all of my bike’s horsepower. They really dig that track up; there must be at least a foot and a half of loam. It feels like riding in silky smooth mud that doesn’t stick to your bike. The soil is mostly clay, but it seems to have sand in it also, because it drains water quickly, and also stays pretty loose. My second practice was much better, but I still wasn’t up to speed because I was really fighting my suspension. That’s a sponsorship that I’m really going to go after now that I’m back home.
I wanted to ask Malcolm (Stewart) why he pulled in behind me in that practice and would pass me, and then slow down and let me by again, and then pass me again. He must have done that three of four times in that practice, which I thought was strange, because I’m no big name or his competition or anything. If I wasn’t fighting my suspension so much, I might have had a little more for him. I could hardly pick the rut that I wanted because the bike was in the air half of the time! Soft didn’t even describe what my suspension was, and I was getting the tar beat out of me. When I got back to my pit, I felt like I had been hit by a car, and I was really frustrated because I didn’t think that I would be able to stiffen it up enough. I cranked the clickers almost all of the way in, and it actually worked surprisingly well.
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My first moto, 250 A Pro-sport, was the very last moto on Tuesday, and the track was as rough as it was going to be. I got a sixth place start from the out side and as soon as my tire hit the dirt off of the concrete pad, I almost stopped breathing and had a death grip on my handlebars. Right away I noticed and started forcing myself to breath, but I didn’t notice my death grip, and halfway through the moto my arms were dead so that I could hardly hold onto the bike. I did the best I could, and finished the moto in eighth. My terrible form didn’t help either; I was leaning back most of the time instead of over the bars.
I was thinking that Seiji would tell me that I rode like a turd, but he really surprised me by saying that I rode really well. I guess he didn’t think that I’d do very well because I’m riding a stock bike in a really stacked class. That meant a lot to me to hear him tell me that I rode well, and it gave me some extra confidence. My biggest goal for the week was to prove myself to him. To prove that I am worth working with, and that I’m not crazy to think that I can accomplish my goals.
My next moto was the 250 A class on Wednesday, with pretty much the exact same lineup as the Pro-sport class. It was a mud moto as it had rained all of Tuesday, but the track crew did a great job and it wasn’t that bad. On the gate I noticed that my sub-frame was loose, and being my own mechanic I have no one else to blame! My Mom held my bike and the gate for me, and I ran back to my pit, grabbed a hex key wrench, and raced back... It was the wrong one, and as I sat there on my bike wondering what to do, the gate dropped and everybody but me tore off for the first turn. At that point I was thinking, ‘I should just quit and go back to my pit’. I looked back at my Mom and she was screaming “go! go! go!” so I put the bike in gear and took off! By that time everyone was already in the second corner. I rode hard and stayed off of the ground, unlike a lot of other riders, and amazingly got up to tenth, where I finished.
Shortly after my moto it started raining again, and the temperatures were in the upper thirty’s. The locals where going nuts, complaining about how cold it was, and I saw a couple of them bundled up enough to go on an artic expedition! I was staying in a tent up until that day, and my Mom was sleeping in the car with my sister. The tent started leaking when the wind really started blowing, and I was planning on cramming in the vehicle with them to save myself from the cold wet tent.
We were so lucky to have pitted next to the track owners, Allen and Jamie, and their son, Alex. Alex is a really cool kid, and the whole week he was taking me around an introducing me to a bunch of industry people. That night they had gone over to eat at the neighboring ranch, which is called Buffalo Ridge Ranch. They were talking to the ranch owners and our situation came up. All of their cabins on the ranch were already booked, but they decided to let us stay in a bunkhouse that they use for summer camps.
So I didn’t end up having to squeeze into the vehicle with my Mom, and we slept in a warm dry bed for the first time since we left home. I really have to thank Larry and Carrie, the ranch owners for their hospitality. I can’t say thank you enough. We ate dinner at the ranch Friday night, but unfortunately they didn’t have the 48 oz steak that I really wanted. I did try fried pickles though, and they were really good. I also had a real quesadilla and it’s nothing like the Taco Bell version.
Saturday morning I did a short, easy run just to keep my metabolism fired-up since I wasn’t riding, and as I was running along the ranch driveway, which is about a mile and a half long, I started wondering if lions were included in the list of exotic animals. I’d hate to have to kill a beautiful lion with my bare hands! Lol! I seriously doubt that they did, but hey, who knows?
Sunday was the most important day of the week, everything was hinging on the second set of motos. I was coming in with two top ten finishes, and I always seem to do better as the week goes on. I had a terrible day. In my first moto of the day, the second moto of 250 A Pro-sport, I got a bad start, rode really well, and battled my way up from mid twentieth to twelfth. The last lap I was thinking, ‘alright Daniel, just stay up and ride smart, and you’ll be just fine’. No sooner than I thought it, my front wheel washed out coming into a corner, and a group of riders that I had just put behind me got me back.
I ended up finishing the moto in seventeenth. I was so bummed. If I had finished in twelfth, I would have most certainly gotten a top ten overall. I ended up thirteenth overall. Remembering that I could still finish top ten in my other class, I tried to keep my spirits up. The second moto of 250 A was even worse. I didn’t even finish the first lap. Coming back down off of St. Whitney, my front wheel tucked and sent me over the bars. It happened so quick that I don’t really know what happened. When I got up my handle bars had been twisted down to my gas tank. I tried to pull them back up, but I couldn’t, so I had to pull off the track. The crash must have been a hard one, because it bent my sub-frame, twisted my bars all of the way down, smashed my radiator in a bit, and bent the radiator brace mount.
So that was the note that I left Lake Whitney on. I was really wishing that I could go to Oak Hill to redeem myself, but I had to get back home to work. I had a great time though, and I have to thank the people who made it possible, www.coachseiji.com (Coach Seiji), Racer X Virtual Trainer, Twigg Cycles, Nineonenine Designs, Fly, Scott USA, SPFC, and Jordan’s Flooring. I also want to thank the McWilliams, Larry and Carrie, Andy, and everyone else that helped me out so much. And a huge thanks to Vurbmoto for naming me their rder of the day. Thanks guys, that is quite an honor! Until next time...
Posted by Tim Crytser on Monday, March 23rd, 2009 at 3:01 pm
Hello, my name is Tim Crytser and I am your Virtual Trainer. The Virtual Trainer website was created a few short years ago with the idea of bringing the weekend warrior the best in...
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