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Sorry to hear that.
You have done an impressive effort during the last week.I did notice that also cap48 had to scratch because of that:
#TCRNo7cap48
Osamu Brown scratched in Belgrade, Serbia.
12:29 01-08-2019, after approximately 1150km.
Osamu is suffering from Shermer's neck, and after-effects of a crash on day 1. -
Bad luck Frank, you've been going great and I've enjoyed your route choices.... well done. These thinks just spring from nowhere just when we think we've got the game dialled. Good news is you've got another 30+ years for some redemption! Enjoy the trip home, will catch up when next in town. Cheers Steve
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Ah sucks mate! If it makes you feel better the route is Hella fucked now anyway. I've got a hotel after not even crackinf 150k. My 'race' is pretty well done too. Fucked route + parcours.
That neck shit scares me. I thought you'd seen Scherrit? I've never had neck issues life that but you've had other shit to deal with rather than tting everywhere. Anyway. Beer some time. I'm fucking cut off one drink right now. Cheap date.
Tl;dr, scratched, neck probs, train home.
I've just scratched.
Riding a few hours after tweaking my bike to raise the bars yesterday told me what I didn't want to hear, which was that, however high I got my bars, i was finding it increasingly hard to look down the road.
What finally convinced me was reading this account from Felix Wong, linked from @skinny 's blog, in my hotel last night
https://felixwong.com/2015/08/my-experience-with-shermers-neck/
I'm experiencing exactly the symptoms he describes, and doing the same things in response - getting my bars as high as I can and riding on my aerobar pads. Essentially schemers is usually seen as a sudden thing, but his was progressive over several days, as mine has been.
I could carry on and see how it goes for a couple more days. Climbing would be fine but what I really don't fancy are long, twisting descents, so makes sense to give up now, at Spittal an der Drau, before heading into the Alps. Also, tbh, I don't fancy letting it get bad, like he did, with consequent harder recovery. And reading his account made it only too clear where things are heading.
So I'm at the station, waiting for the 11:40 to Zurich, then a tgv and eurostar. Actually I might forget the eurostar and go for a ferry from dieppe.
Very disappointed. After a bad start I was going well. Had got up from around 150th place at the first checkpoint to about 60th, thanks to some good route planning and TTing across Serbia. If I hadn't messed up my di2 yesterday I'd have managed a third successive day of around 330km, which is far better than I did in either tcr 2016 or indypac. I'd expected to drop back a few places on the parcours but gain again on the sections I'd routed across Switzerland and France (my total route stats were 4040km and 38k m of climbing, so much flatter than any others I'd seen and only marginally longer, I'd put loads of time into optimising it). So I felt, given a few other people ahead of me scratching, I could realistically aim for around 30th, similar to where I came in 2016.
I'd got to the stage where pains I'd had earlier in the ride, like saddle sores and sore feet, had pretty much gone away, and I was feeling stronger as the ride went on. My plan of early starts and early finishes was working well, with 100km before breakfast setting me up for the day.
If I'd not done tcr before I'd be more disappointed and tempted to continue.
why did it happen? Two reasons