Bookmark & Share TwoWheelTales.com

Blog Posts by Jeremiah Bishop

http://www.jeremiahbishop.com
MonaVie Cannondale Team - 2008 US Nat'l Champ MTB Marathon & Short Track

Tweet, Tweet:
Here's some of my (@JeremiahBishop) recent Twitters:
>>5 hrs at Wolf Gap today . Best ride of the year!!! Yellow gold and green. Uber technical rocky single track half of it I have never ...
>>Movie night. See ya there? http://fb.me/HskB2Ohk
>>Hmm should I go steel reserve? Or a little more upscale like miller highlife? LOL
>>Bicycle beer run! May even grab a lottery ticket. Ha ha ha
>>Perfect weather and felt strong for the SM 100. however 3 flatts turned the race into a fun day of riding with friends. 5 th place

CRANKED!

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on September 15, 2009

SOMETHING NEW.  –JEREMIAH BISHOP.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

This post has no comments. Leave a comment.

Posted under MTB: ENDURANCE, NON-BIKE

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on September 15, 2009

Tags: ,

Massanutten Hoo-Ha SVBC Team IMBA

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on April 29, 2009

One of the cross country races I look forward to each summer is the Massanutten Hoo-Ha.  This year the event is celebrating it’s twenty-first running and teaming up with IMBA as a Team IMBA Event.  The Hoo-Ha is also a stop on the Kenda Cup East series and will feature some great new trails built by hard working members of the Shenandoah Valley Bicycle Coalition, so there are tons of reasons why the twenty-first annual Hoo-Ha is going to be better than ever!

I’ve joined the SVBC Team IMBA as a great way for me to partner with my club to shoot for a fundraising goal that will continue the good work that IMBA and the SVBC are all about.

Just think, each trail that is properly built, maintained and enjoyed responsibly now is one that will still be going strong when my son Conrad is ready to head out on a ride of his own!

I hope to reach my goal with your support. Every $10 contribution will add up to make a big difference. To donate, and learn more about Team IMBA and the SVBC, check out my Team IMBA page.

Thanks for your support, I hope to see you at the Hoo-Ha!
Jeremiah

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

This post has no comments. Leave a comment.

Posted under MTB: ENDURANCE

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on April 29, 2009

New Leaf Adventures NUE Cohutta 100

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on April 27, 2009

Saturday was the kick off of the National Ultra Endurance 100 series in the Piney Mountains of Tennessee on the border of Georgia.

The race started at the whitewater facility of the 1996 Olympics. Over the course of a hundred miles the major climbs totaling to 12,000+ feet, combined with a tough field of racers, made for a great challenge.

My training had not fully readied me for a 100-mile race at this point in the season, but I was really excited for the challenge of a new race an my first big challenge of the year for ultra endurance racing.

At the start, a lead group was established when Chris Eatough set a blistering pace on the first 10 miles of single track. That separated the contenders out of the main field. Chris Beck, Jeff Schalk, Chris Eatough, Mike Simonson, Josh Tostado, Sam Koerber, Chris Peariso and I made the cut.

Schalk attacked as the rest of us pulled into the second aid station to look for our bags. I chased and closed the gap down after 10 minutes or so.

After an epic battle with Jeff Schalk (last year’s series winner) for the better part of six hours, I experienced some cramps on the last climb. I rallied to finish just a half a percent off the pace and netted second place in my first 100-mile race of the year in 6:25! Not shabby.

The contrasting difference is amazing between competing in the 20-min short track at Sea Otter last Sunday and racing just six days later for six and a half hours!

I’m looking forward to continuing the upward trajectory of my fitness now that things are settling into a great groove here at home.

Keep pushing!

Jeremiah

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

This post has no comments. Leave a comment.

Posted under MTB: ENDURANCE

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on April 27, 2009

Road Racing; well sort of…

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on April 14, 2009

With a big block of racing ahead, this weekend my roadie friends Curtis Windsor, Andrew McKeegan and I decided to go to the Morgantown road race.

Twenty miles into our drive, Erin called to inform us that we’re probably not going to make it in time – the race was actually four and a half hours away, not the three hours we allowed! WHAT! We’d all taken for granted that the race was in Morgantown, but it was outside the town in the opposite direction we were coming from.

While we drove to the race, it was pouring buckets of rain under a blue-grey velvet sky, we committed to going despite the likely prospect of having to do a wet three-man team time trial of shame to catch the race but somehow we managed to make it to the start 30 minutes early! In a miracle of geography, we must have snuck through a wormhole or more likely West Virginia really has a half time zone that is 30 minutes late.

Now, I am so glad I stuck it out. The race was awesome! I told Andy and Curtis that if they could slip off the front a little before the KOM. My plan was to attack the pack break away and then we would regroup on the backside. As they say, things rarely go as planned in bike racing.

Just two miles into the race, Andy and Kurtis slipped off one by one while the pack was just talking and warming up for the 50 miles of racing ahead. I blocked some and the duo was out of sight in ten minutes! They were off for like the whole 47 miles! Ouch.

 

Halfway through we hit a nice mile-long climb and the attacks started; a selection of six was made, we bombed at max speed down the three steep switchbacks of the decent and then we immediately hit the KOM heart rate still jacked from the first climb. I punched it all out, and pulled away from the chasers.

A course marshal informed me that Andy and Curtis were almost three minutes up, and I started to wonder if I would be able to catch them by myself!

I had two hungry racers chasing hard just behind me. They were 20 seconds back for eight miles. As I started to tire into a long flat headwind the chasers closed in on me and got within 10 seconds. I knew I would be better to link up with the two tired guys in front of me than to have fresh riders sitting on my wheel for miles; I dug deeper. The course started a 1-mile climb and I got the gap to the leaders down to 35 seconds and the chasers as far behind but THEN…

I was flying down a mountain descent in full chase mode onto a false flat downhill past a group of mobile home trailers. A black dog ran out in the road and came straight at me!

I dodged left, the dog goes left too, but I saw it coming so I locked it up! Almost doing a nose wheelie I made impact on the dog’s left ribs and toppled to the left but I got my foot out. I got it down to 5 mph and didn’t totally crash.

So, I yelled at the stupid dog, I put my chain back on and looked behind me to see the chasing duo speeding my way. I was pumped with adrenaline, so I didn’t wait.  I just took off and blasted off full tilt now just 15 seconds ahead of my chasers. I was fired up!

The last big 2-kilometer climb about ten miles from the finish was just what I needed. I could see my target ahead and jammed out of the saddle swinging side to side. I could tell I would catch them just at the top in time to latch on.

Now regrouped just as planned, we all worked together like a well-oiled machine. Just 3 miles to go I could smell the finish line and our now solo chaser was out of site. I launched an all out attack at the transition of a 200-foot hill about two miles to go. Zoom! I won.

It was a super course, a lot like the roads in Leige, Belguim. The feeling of going that fast on a bike through the mountains is just awesome.

Next stop, Sea Otter!

Hope there are no dogs on the course.

Jeremiah

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

This post has no comments. Leave a comment.

Posted under MTB: ENDURANCE, ROAD BIKE, SEA OTTER CLASSIC

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on April 14, 2009

KEEN Sandals

Look! Custom rotors!!

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on March 27, 2009

HOT!!!!


Though only 40 are in existence right now, you will be able to buy them in a few weeks at MonaVie-Cannondale.com!!!  The Scalpel rocks–lovin’ the new rig!

Zoom,
Bishop

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (2 votes, average: 3.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

This post has 2 comments. Leave a comment.

Posted under MTB: ENDURANCE, MTB: GRAVITY, SEA OTTER CLASSIC

This post was written by Jeremiah Bishop on March 27, 2009

Tired of Being Tired?