Aston Hill Black Run Downhill
Race March 2011
Event Review
Black Run Race, 27th March at
Aston Hill
After our XC Group Ride on the Sunday we all
headed over to Aston Hill on the sunny afternoon to witness the downhill racing
on the infamous Black Run Track. The attendance and atmosphere was incredible,
with over 250 riders racing on the day and a hugely busy pit area and heaving
car parks and camping area this event went down a storm.The track looked to
be riding well, and myself included had never seen the Black Run so dry and
dusty. The course had once again been altered for the race, there by trying to
remove the home advantage from the locals and fair up the competition between
locals and visitor riders.
Now I didn't see the whole event, so I will hand you over to Neil from the
Aston Hill team for his report and full low down on the weekend of racing...
Best Wishes
Scott | BucksMTB

Words and images - Neil Cain / Aston
Hill
In its 14th incarnation, the gain of an
hour over Saturday night didn't appear to discourage riders from coming to race
Aston Hill's Black Run on the 27th March. Year on year the race has gained in
popularity and 2011 was no exception with riders from as far a field as
Yorkshire rubbing shoulders with locals, some even braving the near freezing
March temperatures camping overnight to ensure an early start. 261 made it to
the race (after a few unfortunate pull-outs leading up to the event) which meant
that the field was very nearly full and provided the base for a great day of
racing

After a dry week the Black Run was running incredibly well for the time of
year, and even a typically Aston Hill grey and misty start didn't deter late
registrants turning up before 8am. Plucky racers were soon practicing on the
course, but at 8.30am in late March they needed to do something to keep warm! It
wasn't long before the sun soon broke through, and despite it being a hugely
competitive field with at least three World Cup racers in attendance, the
atmosphere throughout the day was very friendly, relaxed and upbeat. There was a
fantastic turnout of spectators, whose innovative use of everyday products
(kitchen pans, drinks cans, bike frames) to make some noise was quite amazing!
The atmosphere and support clearly helped encourage racers, as the dry
conditions and sheer talent combined to produce some outstanding times.

The first of the day to take advantage were the masochist/Hardtail category
riders. Despite his suspension disadvantage, previous Aston Hill winner Daniel
Jarey flew down the track to take the win in an insanely quick time of 1:37.440,
closely tailed by Max Power's Tim Kemp and Dees Cycles' Mark Phillpott.
The Juvenile category followed which Alistair Warrell blitzed through, winning
by over three seconds and beating Dan Hartwright and RBR's Archie Walton, who
were split by less than half a second

Youth rider, Aston Hill local and Madison/Saracen sponsored Phil Atwill razed
the course to the ground in 1:30.67, a time which put him 13th overall and over
four seconds in front of Bill Farrington of Gravity Project and Matthew Goode,
who were split by under half a second respectively; the battle between second
and third was fiercely contested.
Jono Jones pleased his sponsors Surf Sales, Transition, Dakine and Trick X who
were supporting the race by taking first in 1:26.61 - the fourth fastest time of
the day. Watch this rider for the future! Aston Hill regular Sam Wakefield was
hot on his tail though, taking 1:27.08 to complete the course (the fifth fastest
time of the day), and Brandon Love closed the top trio in 1:31.48.

The over-30 Masters category was the next to race, and with nearly 50 riders
was highly competitive. Chris Spooner of Mulisha plummeted down the course in
1:27.79, nearly three seconds quicker than Bikeactive.com's Jamie Smith. Anton
Columbo came in another second back to complete the top three.
The over 40s Veterans category is still sharp, with experience making up for
youthful recklessness! Trevor Harvey of Harveyboysracing.com proved this in a
time of 1:32.41, Rich Simpson of Foes/Balfa/Iso2 following over two seconds
later and descent-gear.com owner and British Downhill Series organisor Si Paton
showing that he still had what counts by placing a solid third.

A good turnout in the Ladies category meant that the racing was fast and
furious! Amie Wills of rootsandrain.co.uk made the course look far easier than
it was, beating second placed Aston Hill local Nicky Belton by several seconds.
Third place Mulebar Girl Anna Glowinski deserves an extra special mention for
finishing third in her first downhill race - well done Anna!
The 19-29 Senior category was next; with over 100 riders it was also the biggest
category of the day. The racing was unsurprisingly close, with Josh Lane, Nick
Geogehan and Nick Cornwell all finishing within a second of one another giving
credence to the standard of the racers.
The final category of the day was the Expert/Elite, which included World Cup
racers Harry Molloy, Olie Burton and Nathan Vials. However, today was Jack
Geoghegan's day of the Madison/Saracen team. In his first season racing as an
Elite on the national downhill circuit, local rider Jack stormed down the Black
Run in 1:25.05 earning him first place and fastest time of the event. To put it
into context how fast the rest of the field were though, Steve Peat Syndicate's
Nathan Vials came second in 1:25.24 and Harry Molloy also of Madison/Saracen
finished one second back at 1:26.07. Very fast, and insanely furious

It was a classic day of hard racing in a wonderfully relaxed and fun
atmosphere where families cheered on world-class riders, who in turn were mixing
it up with grassroots racers. Everyone who raced should feel very proud of their
efforts. Mikrotime have a full results list at
http://www.mikrotime.com/mtb/ast2011/ast1101.html,
results with photos are available at
roots and rain,
there's plenty of shots on Aston Hill's Flickr page:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/rideastonhill/pool/.

As ever, a massive thanks must go to the incredibly generous people and
companies who contributed to the race. Madison.co.uk (Aztec), Ison Distribution
(Gusset, Identiti, Halo), Fisher Outdoors (Rock Shox, Truvativ, Troy Lee
Designs), Surf-Sales (Dakine, Kali Protection), Abarth UK, Mountain Mania of
Tring, Beeline Bikes of Oxford, Dees Cycles of Amersham, Duffbag, descent-gear.com,
IMBikemag.com, Haven Distribution and Monster Energy all provided prizes and
support which, in tough times, is nothing short of amazing.

A huge shout as well to Mikrotime, BC commissaires, David Price Osteo,
Extreme Medics, Café in the woods and SimonSlaterPhotography.com for keeping
people timed, safe, moving, fed and inspired.
Finally, a massive hats off needs to go to the race backbone; the marshals and
sign-on staff did a sterling job at an incredibly busy race. Thanks guys.
The clocks have now gone forward, which means that the evenings are brighter and
it's time to get evening rides in. The park is open a little later now and it's
dry - do you really have an excuse?
The next race is the Eastern and Central Championships in September - keep an
eye on
www.rideastonhill.co.uk for
this!
Words and images - Neil Cain / Aston Hill

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