The Final Tuesday Night Club Ride Of 2019- The Watt King Pulleth- Online

Mark stands up. It is not a violent gesture, but a regal one. He unzips his wind vest (a power move, signaling he is already overheating from the wattage to come) and drifts to the front. The group, instinctually, falls silent. The only sound is the whir of freewheels and the thump-thump of suddenly terrified hearts.

See you in April, Mark. We will be stronger. And you will still be the King.

My computer reads 490 watts. I am breathing in the key of despair. My front wheel is exactly four inches from Mark’s rear tire. I look down at his cassette. He is in the 13-tooth sprocket. He is climbing a 6% grade in the 13-tooth sprocket. He is not a man; he is a Danish time-trial robot sent back in time to make me regret every rest day I have ever taken. Mark stands up

“Good pace today, boys,” he says.

And that is the cruelest pull of all. Not the watts. Not the gap. But the grace. As the sun finally sets on the 2019 season, we bow our heads. The King has pulled. The legs are hollow. The segments are conquered. We zip our vests, click out of our pedals, and drive home in silence, knowing that for the next six months of indoor trainers and base miles, we will be haunted by the sound of a single, merciless freehub. The group, instinctually, falls silent

The ride begins deceptively. As we turn onto Old Mill Road, the pace is chatty . Mark sits third wheel, hands on the hoods, looking almost bored. He is a shark circling the ice floe; he is simply deciding which seal to eat first. At the three-mile mark, the KOM segment appears—a two-mile rolling drag that spits on the concept of a flat road. This is the throne room.

There is a specific, sacramental dread that descends upon the peloton in late October. The sun, once a generous benefactor, now flees the sky by 5:30 PM. The temperature hovers precisely where sweat meets shiver. And on this particular Tuesday, the air in the parking lot of the Daily Grind Coffee is thick not with humidity, but with the unspoken truth: the King is about to pull. We will be stronger

This is the sermon of the Final Tuesday Night Ride. The Watt King pulleth not to win, for the segment is his by birthright. He pulleth to remind us of the hierarchy. In the church of the road bike, there are tourists, there are racers, and there are Kings. The King does not pull to break your legs; he pulls to break your spirit. He pulls to teach you that no matter how many intervals you did on Zwift, no matter how expensive your carbon wheels, there is always a sales manager from Akron who can ride you off his wheel while holding a full conversation with the ghost of Eddy Merckx.

When he goes, he goes like a dispensation of justice. The wattage spikes not from 250 to 400, but from 250 to a number that cannot be displayed on a standard head unit without an error code. His pedal stroke is a piston; his back is a flat table of cruel intention. For the first thirty seconds, we cling to his wheel like drowning men to a life raft. Then the elastic stretches. First, the weekend warriors pop, their legs turning to balsa wood. Then the crit racers, who thought themselves fit, begin to gurgle and fade. Finally, only three remain: the Watt King, his faithful lieutenant (who will be dropped in precisely 47 seconds), and me, clinging to the ragged edge of my anaerobic capacity.

For fifty-one weeks, the Tuesday Night Club Ride has been a democracy of suffering. We have rolled out at a civilized 6:00 PM, clipped in with our plastic fenders and blinking taillights, and pretended that cycling is a hobby of leisure. We have soft-pedaled through the neutral zone, told jokes about saddle sores, and dutifully pulled turns at 240 watts. But tonight is the Final Ride of 2019. The rules change. The veneer of civility is stripped away like an old tubular tire. Tonight, the Watt King pulleth.

Then he does the unthinkable. He looks back. Not with malice. With pity . He taps his power meter. He shakes his head, almost sadly. And then he accelerates.