Tour of California Navigators Report Stage 6
"I've seen some crazy things in the pack where you wonder how no one went down.
I've been in situations where I'm leaning on guys with my wheels in the air and
somehow we managed to stay up. Yesterday was mild by comparison,"

By Chris G. Baldwin
Thousand Oaks, California
The work Mark Walters put in yesterday carrying water bottles back into the
peloton was for him routine duty. For his teammates in the race, the effort was
priceless and absolutely necessary.
Coming in to stage six of the Tour of California Walters had 16 days of
racing in his legs this season. He rode the ten stages of Malaysia's Tour of
Langkawi and has been a powerful engine for the Navigators each day in
California. On a Continental Pro team with an intensive worldwide race schedule,
the end of February over the past few years has always been busy for Walters.

Signing in at Stage 7 Redondo
The Navigators Insurance Cycling Team is the
only American Continental Pro squad with an international race calendar and an
international lineup to match. At the Tour of California the Navs have two
Russians, two Aussies, a Ukrainian, the Irish national champion, an American and
Canadian Mark Walters at the start. All eight have made it to the finish in
Redondo Beach and they are the only Continental Pro team to arrive there intact.
Phil Zajicek is the top domestic-based American rider in the race in 15th place.
Walters felt the strain of last week's transoceanic flight from Kuala Lumpur
to San Francisco in the first few stages of this tour. He was flat after the
second full day on the road, jetlag his ghost riding roommate in San Jose's
Doubletree hotel. Day by day he held on, growing stronger as the race moved
south. His normal responsibility as a general classification rider was adjusted
and he sacrificed his personal ambitions for the good of the team, helping Glen
Chadwick back in to the peloton after a flat tire sent him to the side of the
road to wait for a wheel change.
"It's pretty hard, but at this point I'm mostly staying in the pack all day,
so the effort is more like a long motor pacing session. Hopefully I'll come out
of all this racing with the benefits of so much speed work. I came back for
bottles and Glen happened to have a flat at the same time, so I helped him get
back on as well," said Walters, a six-time Canadian national champion.

Navigators reparing for Stage 7 photo c.
www.dailypeloton.com
The bulk of Walters' training in the off-season comes on the snow, as the
Peterborough, Ontario resident uses cross-country skiing to supplement his
cycling. In comparison to his teammates, who in January can put in as many as
3,000 kilometers of base training on their bicycles, Walters instead steps out
into the brisk air near his home and spends his time kicking and gliding.
"I probably did 500 kilometers on the bike this January, whereas the other
guys do a lot more. But I probably did 500k on the skis also. As long as you do
a little bit of pedaling as well, to remind your legs that they are really
supposed to go in circles, then it works just fine. When you are doing the base
training it's all about the lungs and the heart anyway. It's just building the
aerobic fitness, it doesn't matter what you are doing. I have enough years on
the bike that it's not difficult to get used to suddenly doing more hours in the
saddle," said Walters.
The 86 miles from Santa Barbara to Thousand Oaks on Saturday was the final
chance for a shakeup in the general classification, but as overall leader Floyd
Landis' Phonak squad was meticulously protecting his golden jersey, there was
little hope in a high-placed rider getting away.
Instead the teams rode through enormous crowds lining the roads of Southern
California, with just a few ambitious souls flying solo up the road. The
Navigators trained down here earlier in the month, memorizing the routes and
committing themselves to the teamwork needed for a major stage race. Walters
altered his personal G.C. ambitions based on his current fitness and the goals
of the team, and kept his teammates secure in the peloton.

Peloton goes over the last KOM stage 6 photo c. Mark
Adkison &
www.dailypeloton.com
"I worked with the guys and tried to keep them out of the wind and near the
front. We stayed together and I pulled them up and tried to keep then there as
long as I could. If we got separated I went back to the pack and tried to find
them and make sure that they were where they needed to be. There was some pretty
odd movement in the pack coming up to the one-kilometer-to-go sign, but by then
I was behind it and got to watch. I'm pretty glad I was out of it by then.
Everyone's got good bike-handling skills, but I've seen some crazy things in the
pack where you wonder how no one went down. I've been in situations where I'm
leaning on guys with my wheels in the air and somehow we managed to stay up.
Yesterday was mild by comparison," said Walters.
The final stage of the Tour of California is a beachfront circuit of seven
miles. Race organizers are predicting 100,000 fans along the roadside, and the
way this race has gone so far, that estimate might be low. The Navigators will
come to the finish this afternoon with all their guns firing, their heads held
high after a week of intense and beautiful racing down the sunny coast of
California.
Stage Result:
1 Olaf Pollack (Ger) T-Mobile Team 3.26.39
2 Riccardo Ricco (Ita) Saunier Duval-Prodir
3 Fred Rodriguez (USA) Davitamon-Lotto
Overall GC:
1 Floyd Landis (USA) Phonak Hearing Systems
2 David Zabriskie (USA) Team CSC 0.29
3 Bobby Julich (USA) Team CSC 0.34
15 Phil Zajicek (USA) Navigators Insurance 2.32
|