Skip to main content

Back on that horse



Updates have been few and far between here. I showed up to the Sonoma Superbike Shootout/AFM round 2 but had a get off early on in practice where I messed up my braking sequence. While overall damages were fairly minimal, it was enough to keep me from riding the rest of the weekend. I stuck around to watch the races and had a great time with friends, hanging out and watching the really fast folks do their thing!

Upon heading home, I set out on a mission to repair the bike and myself. Hunting around for deals on parts, making use of some of my sponsorships and with the help of some friends found everything I needed. I was back on my street bike a little over a week after the crash, albeit a bit painfully. I built back up slowly, and worked on building the bike back up as well.
Approximately 6 weeks later, everything was back in running condition and I headed out for a double header weekend at Thunderhill Raceway to check out the full new track and get back out on the bike. The bodywork on the bike wasn’t painted yet, but it was mountable, so I tossed it on for the weekend with primer gray. I still had a finger wrapped as well, but it’s one I could ride without, so off we went!

The plan for the weekend was to take my time. I needed to build back up and work through my demons on that bike. Since I crashed on my second ride on it ever, I had managed to spook myself in regards to the braking/downshifting sequence. Being that I didn’t want to repeat bad decisions, we headed out nice and slow. Most of Saturday I was just taking my time and was in no rush to build up speed too quickly. I spent the day just working on making sure the bike was running well, I was running well and we spent the time just getting to know each other while learning the new track.

At the (totally awesome) finish line party that night, one of the instructors asked me about what was going on, so I explained my demons to him. He volunteered to help me out on Sunday, so I grabbed him for the second session and we started working together. He broke down the braking sequence for me in such a way to show that I had been doing it incorrectly, putting it in a way I needed to hear it. Additionally, he had some suggestions on how to slowly improve what I was doing without putting myself into a situation of feeling overwhelmed. 


Most of Sunday afternoon was spent working on what he had suggested. While overall weekend progress was slow, it was steady, and by the end of the day Sunday I felt like I was back to running my old pace on that track. I would have been very comfortable going into A group at the pace I was running by the end of it all. While there was still plenty of room for improvement with a number of corners where I knew I could quickly gain a significant amount of time, I had accomplished what I came for (and then some) and felt really good about where I was at by the end of the weekend!

Bike is now off finishing up its paint job, and I am prepping for Round 4 :)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Back On The Grid! April 2024

WERA – Talladega Gran Prix – April 13-14, 2024 It’s been a hot minute since I’ve been on a grid. Between life “shitake,” trying to get my business going, essential gear backorders, and the puppy, I hadn’t been able to get on an actual grid for a couple years. Sure, a few trackdays in there, and plenty of miles in the north Georgia mountains, but actually gridding up, going on green, and battling to the checkered was an experience that was growing a bit dim. Racing makes the rest of life boring. Seriously. That first flag this weekend for A Superstock, as we all launched into turn 1, “oh, ya, THIS IS RACING!!!!” was the thought that ran through my head. I had no delusions of being a “front runner” unless the grid in a race was small. Other than the previous weekend with Precision, I hadn’t been to Tally in over 2 years, and have never had brag worthy laptimes. My goals were to drop a little more time off my times there, and I had a “reasonable stretch” goal in mind. With Tally being so

Summing It All Up - 2019-2021

Crashes, Bike Bits, and Confidence Backstory In early 2019 I thought I had finally turned a corner on my current bike, a 2017 ZX10R. The first AFM round of that year I went out and started dropping time like crazy, finally down to my previous personal best times at that track. The next round I showed up with high hopes, only to end up with an epic highside that launched me to the moon and over 50' before coming for a landing. For a very long time, I couldn't figure out what caused that to happen, and while I could come up with things that might have contributed, it didn't quite add up.  After that, however, a series of cross-country moves started taking place in my life, as did learning new tracks, new riders, new race organizations, new track providers - plus everything "normal" people deal with on major moves like that.   I made some progress over the remainder of 2019, slow, but saw improvements. 2020 saw ANOTHER cross country move to ANOTHER region of the US,

WERA Roebling Road March 2021 - Ya Win Some, Ya Lose Some.....

 ....and sometimes you do both within half a lap. But that's not how the weekend started. Making races this year was looking very hit and miss, but with RIDERZLAW continuing their title sponsorship, a few rounds were not outside the realm of possibility; as finances were working out, I set up to head to Roebling Road, one of only 2 tracks I made it to last year for a race. I was excited to see if a) mentally I was back to a better place and b) to finally race a familiar track. Friday practice went smoothly, and by the end of the day I was feeling very comfortable at my previous pace, and could tell I had a lot left in me. Issue was, I still wasn't nailing the entire track - parts of it, but there were a couple places that still needed to come together for me, turns 1 and 5 in particular. Saturday I had a fairly early race with Formula 1 - with not even so much as a trackday since last September, it took me the better part of 2+ laps to "remember" I was racing, not jus