|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/us-...traffic-crash/ -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 5:38:02 AM UTC-7, AMuzi wrote:
https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/us-...traffic-crash/ I remember Laurence commenting in an interview for the Santa Cruz news paper how hard Jobst's rides were. It was a small world back then. -- Jay Beattie. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 6:33:01 AM UTC-7, jbeattie wrote:
On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 5:38:02 AM UTC-7, AMuzi wrote: https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/us-...traffic-crash/ I remember Laurence commenting in an interview for the Santa Cruz news paper how hard Jobst's rides were. It was a small world back then. I have no memory of him and I did some of Jobst's rides until we had an almost violent disagreement with his lackadaisical care for the safety of the people riding with him. None of his rides bothered me though I was off the back most of the time but a LOT of his hanger's on crashed and sometimes violently. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
In 1972, when I was 23, I thought I wanted to be a racer, so I entered the Euclid St. time trial in Berkeley, CA. At the time I had no idea how fast the racers were. Laurence and Dan Nall started after I did, and they both passed me so fast that I realized I was destined to be a tourist. No complaints, though.
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
William Crowell wrote:
In 1972, when I was 23, I thought I wanted to be a racer, so I entered the Euclid St. time trial in Berkeley, CA. At the time I had no idea how fast the racers were. Laurence and Dan Nall started after I did, and they both passed me so fast that I realized I was destined to be a tourist. No complaints, though. Thanks for that anecdote. Yes, kids, such was life in Leningrad^WBerkeley, before Strava. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 5:13:12 AM UTC-7, Sepp Ruf wrote:
William Crowell wrote: In 1972, when I was 23, I thought I wanted to be a racer, so I entered the Euclid St. time trial in Berkeley, CA. At the time I had no idea how fast the racers were. Laurence and Dan Nall started after I did, and they both passed me so fast that I realized I was destined to be a tourist. No complaints, though. Thanks for that anecdote. Yes, kids, such was life in Leningrad^WBerkeley, before Strava. Out in Livermore, before it became a city and was just a quiet little town with the lab there and the three way fountain intersection, they used to hold crits in what was to become a business park. I was a Cat 5 and we would start behind the "real racers". I would close up that minute or so pretty rapidly and ride on the back of the Cat 3's, but that effort would invariably be my undoing and I would eventually be caught and passed by the Cat 4's just before the Cat 1's would come by. Then after I burned my lungs in my work at the Lab, I could no longer ride fast at all. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 7:39:03 AM UTC-7, wrote:
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 5:13:12 AM UTC-7, Sepp Ruf wrote: William Crowell wrote: In 1972, when I was 23, I thought I wanted to be a racer, so I entered the Euclid St. time trial in Berkeley, CA. At the time I had no idea how fast the racers were. Laurence and Dan Nall started after I did, and they both passed me so fast that I realized I was destined to be a tourist. No complaints, though. Thanks for that anecdote. Yes, kids, such was life in Leningrad^WBerkeley, before Strava. Out in Livermore, before it became a city and was just a quiet little town with the lab there and the three way fountain intersection, they used to hold crits in what was to become a business park. I was a Cat 5 and we would start behind the "real racers". I would close up that minute or so pretty rapidly and ride on the back of the Cat 3's, but that effort would invariably be my undoing and I would eventually be caught and passed by the Cat 4's just before the Cat 1's would come by. Then after I burned my lungs in my work at the Lab, I could no longer ride fast at all. If you were racing USCF in the 70s, you were a Cat 4. I think Cat 5 was launched sometime in the late '80s. I was already racing in Oregon, and I heard the creation of Cat 5 was driven by the need to reduce the size (and carnage) of the Cat 4 packs in California/NorCal-Nevada. And I think in the very beginning, you could elect to be a Cat 4 or Cat 5 when you got your license. I wasn't paying too much attention since I'd already achieved my status as permanent Cat 3 pack-slacker with a real job and no genetic gifts -- who was too big for the sport. -- Jay Beattie. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 8:47:39 AM UTC-7, jbeattie wrote:
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 7:39:03 AM UTC-7, wrote: On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 5:13:12 AM UTC-7, Sepp Ruf wrote: William Crowell wrote: In 1972, when I was 23, I thought I wanted to be a racer, so I entered the Euclid St. time trial in Berkeley, CA. At the time I had no idea how fast the racers were. Laurence and Dan Nall started after I did, and they both passed me so fast that I realized I was destined to be a tourist. No complaints, though. Thanks for that anecdote. Yes, kids, such was life in Leningrad^WBerkeley, before Strava. Out in Livermore, before it became a city and was just a quiet little town with the lab there and the three way fountain intersection, they used to hold crits in what was to become a business park. I was a Cat 5 and we would start behind the "real racers". I would close up that minute or so pretty rapidly and ride on the back of the Cat 3's, but that effort would invariably be my undoing and I would eventually be caught and passed by the Cat 4's just before the Cat 1's would come by. Then after I burned my lungs in my work at the Lab, I could no longer ride fast at all. If you were racing USCF in the 70s, you were a Cat 4. I think Cat 5 was launched sometime in the late '80s. I was already racing in Oregon, and I heard the creation of Cat 5 was driven by the need to reduce the size (and carnage) of the Cat 4 packs in California/NorCal-Nevada. And I think in the very beginning, you could elect to be a Cat 4 or Cat 5 when you got your license. I wasn't paying too much attention since I'd already achieved my status as permanent Cat 3 pack-slacker with a real job and no genetic gifts -- who was too big for the sport. Well whatever it was, we would be started a minute behind the other groups and I would make up the minute on the Cat 3's pretty rapidly which was a real bad idea and one that I would eventually have gotten over if I hadn't gotten the lung injury. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
vale, Laurence Malone
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 11:33:37 AM UTC-5, wrote:
On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 8:47:39 AM UTC-7, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 7:39:03 AM UTC-7, wrote: On Monday, May 31, 2021 at 5:13:12 AM UTC-7, Sepp Ruf wrote: William Crowell wrote: In 1972, when I was 23, I thought I wanted to be a racer, so I entered the Euclid St. time trial in Berkeley, CA. At the time I had no idea how fast the racers were. Laurence and Dan Nall started after I did, and they both passed me so fast that I realized I was destined to be a tourist. No complaints, though. Thanks for that anecdote. Yes, kids, such was life in Leningrad^WBerkeley, before Strava. Out in Livermore, before it became a city and was just a quiet little town with the lab there and the three way fountain intersection, they used to hold crits in what was to become a business park. I was a Cat 5 and we would start behind the "real racers". I would close up that minute or so pretty rapidly and ride on the back of the Cat 3's, but that effort would invariably be my undoing and I would eventually be caught and passed by the Cat 4's just before the Cat 1's would come by. Then after I burned my lungs in my work at the Lab, I could no longer ride fast at all. If you were racing USCF in the 70s, you were a Cat 4. I think Cat 5 was launched sometime in the late '80s. I was already racing in Oregon, and I heard the creation of Cat 5 was driven by the need to reduce the size (and carnage) of the Cat 4 packs in California/NorCal-Nevada. And I think in the very beginning, you could elect to be a Cat 4 or Cat 5 when you got your license. I wasn't paying too much attention since I'd already achieved my status as permanent Cat 3 pack-slacker with a real job and no genetic gifts -- who was too big for the sport. Well whatever it was, we would be started a minute behind the other groups and I would make up the minute on the Cat 3's pretty rapidly which was a real bad idea and one that I would eventually have gotten over if I hadn't gotten the lung injury. I never heard of him but a hard way to go and a shame. Deacon Mark |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
vale Mel Pinto | AMuzi | Techniques | 1 | April 5th 21 05:19 PM |
vale, Arthur Spanjar | AMuzi | Techniques | 4 | July 14th 18 01:29 AM |
vale, Erwin Pesek | AMuzi | Techniques | 479 | March 27th 12 06:14 PM |
Titec Malone road bars, 44cm, 26.0, single groove, silver, $15 | Douglas Landau | Marketplace | 1 | January 27th 11 01:28 AM |
Moss Vale - Bowral | Owen Cook | Australia | 0 | April 9th 05 01:00 PM |