by Allison Atkinson, ATC Racing    
This was the first annual Cyberknife of Texas Stage Race.  Saturday, The FRESH Road Race, consisted of three 18-mile laps around Lake Tyler in Whitehouse, Texas.  This road race had rolling terrain. Attacks from Jubilee started right off the bat at the first right-hand turn off the main road. They sent  one woman after the other off the front. The field bridged and caught every one. It was hard! At one  point I thought I was getting dropped, but luckily my teammate Sammi pulled me back toward the  front of the pack a few times.  This was Sammi’s first stage race as a recently upgraded cat 3, and she was  riding strong.
 Attacks initiated by Michelle Hayner (Velossimo), Ash Duban (Comanche), and various Jubilee racers  continued for the entire first lap. Every hill was an all-out kick to the top, and everyone became  strung out into a long pace line on the flat windy section.
 There was a hot spot on lap two. This was the lap where the winning break was formed. After a few  rolling hills, Kayla Sterling (Exergy Twenty16) attacked.  Initially no one went after her, but then, about 15  seconds later Andrea Thomas (Think Finance) jumped and bridged, followed by Duban and Danielle  Bradley (Jubilee). Hayner and both Shama women were not going with the break, so I decided to stay in  the pack.  I figured we would catch them after they went through the hot spot.
It turns out I was wrong. Although we did end up catching Duban and Bradley, there were still two up  the road, and their gap would grow significantly. I was feeling tired from battling the windy section  leading up to the hot spot.  Even though I was drafting off other girls I was still putting forth a huge  effort to hang on each time crosswinds gusted.
 I expected Hayner, Sheri Rothe (Jubilee), or Mandy Heintz (Shama) to break away on this lap. Sammi  and I spent a lot of time in the front chasing down a few half-hearted Jubilee attacks as we  anticipated the move for the second break.  Hayner went first.  I was swallowed by the peloton, and  we caught her. After that effort Hayner was breathing heavy, so Rothe took that opportunity to launch  out from the back of the pack when we least expected it.  I was boxed in by her teammates, but Hayner  was still at the front. She didn't go after Rothe at first, so I thought we'd bridge as a group, but Hayner,  without much recovery, jumped violently to catch Rothe. We chased but were outnumbered by  Jubilee blocks.
It was frustrating watching the two drift further and further away, mainly because I knew I was  supposed to be there with them.  Sammi, Shama Cycles women, Duban, Monica Hyslop, and I worked  to keep the pack moving. I moved to the front during the hilly section to spur some action by  attacking each hill.  All we could do was minimize the gap at that point, which turned out to be over 4  minutes!
It was a soft sprint to the finish and a pack finish time for Sammi and I.    The Cobb Cycling Time Trial was later that day. This was a 5.6-mile TT starting at the church and  finishing at the same point as the road race. It had one sharp right turn after a downhill, with  rolling terrain.  The ramp was pretty cool! I focused on staying steady down the first stretch. After  trying not to slow down too much for the sharp right turns, I maintained a good effort. The hilly,  winding section was fun, but I had to work to stay in my aero bars on some of the turns. Knowing that I  was over halfway done, I upped the intensity to the finish. Hayner took the win with a time of 12:59.    
Sunday was the Spine and Joint Hospital of Texas Crit, a 45-minute crit that went through the Tyler  Junior College campus.  The roads were in good condition, and the route consisted of two reasonably  sized hills, the larger of the two being right before the finish.  Right at the start Bradley and Kim  Jennings (Jubilee) formed a furious break.  The two got away fast.  Bradley’s team did all they could  to ensure that the gap was a big as possible, as she needed to up her GC position to earn the last of  the points needed for her upgrade from a cat 3 to a 2. The GC leaders did not bother to chase  down Jennings and Bradley, as they were not in contention for the podium.
The first lap was fast as we fought for position.  I believe it was lap two where Michelle Montoya  (Jubilee) went down after hitting a reflector on a crosswalk.  She was okay and up and racing again by  the next lap.  With the exception of the prime lap, the pace was steady, with attacks happening on  the major road before the right turn that led into the slightly bumpy downhill straight-away.  That  road led into a hard right-hand turn up to the hill before the finish.  It was important to be in a  
position toward the front on that downhill to ensure that you were first going into the hill.  I did not  do this too well.  Although I am a good climber, I was usually positioned mid- to rear-pack, so I had to  work extra hard every lap.  The women up front would drill the downhill, stay wide, and brake before  the turn uphill, which made it hard to smoothly take the inside line at a faster speed without risking a  crash.  Duban and Hyslop moved ahead for the prime lap, which Duban took.  In the end the winning  break finished 3.5 minutes ahead of the pack.
With two pack finishes and just an okay  TT I took 9th GC.  Hayner was 1st, Thomas 2nd, and Sterling  3rd GC.  The courses, officials, and volunteers made the Cyberknife of Texas Tyler Stage Race a success  and I look forward to racing again next year.
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