Entries For: October 2007
2007-10-31
Three racers missing
We'll be without a number of round 1 racers
Eddie Wilson, who convincingly won A grade in round 1 and leads the aggregate, is absent this round, as he's racing up in Wagga. Nathan Larkin is stuck at work on Sunday(!) and Leah Patterson is recovering from a nasty crash on her roady which saw a bone or two broken. Leah, on behalf of all of us at the TSSS, I wish you a speedy recovery and hope to see you riding again soon.
For the rest of you, the races are wide open and missing round 1 doesn't mean you can't win the aggregate etc. Come race with us!
2007-10-29
weather and riders!
We need good weather and more riders!
It's a week out, so it's not worth worrying about, but the BoM says showers on Sunday. I'll be worried if it still says that on Thursday. 7 day forecasts are wild guesses.
We need more of you to race this series. Eddie Wilson's going to be in Wagga so A grade is wide open, it remains to see who shows up. I've spoken to Barry "The Wizard' Woods and he's keen, as is Brett Curren, and hopefully John Lewis will show up, and maybe even the Mighty V-Train (Stuart Vaughan).
Rain, we need you, but not on Sunday!
2007-10-10
Cycling News ...
I've submitted the results to cyclingnews.com
I thought we probably should ... hopefully cyclingnews will put a link to the series on the results page. Might drum up a few more entrants for the next round.
Does anyone want to write a race report for the day? Can I delegate this to one of you? Hands up please!
UPDATE results are now also on Cyclingnews here.
2007-10-07
Round 1 thoughts
We've run round 1, what did we learn?
Round one had perfect weather - cool, mostly sunny, light wind (we had a windsock!). The only thing missing was riders. We had 9 (and one had to withdraw due to an unrelated injury). In some ways this was probably a good thing. We have a few parts of our race procedures that need fine tuning.
Firstly, some positive feedback from one of the riders who raced on the day :
Carl,
Well done on today. It worked exceptionally well. The riders will come....
Interesting to see Nicko there he just loves it!
Ten reasons to race SSS:
1. Dedicated sprint racing. All day. No handicaps or points races or motor-paces....
2. After your flying 200 time is recorded, you get a printed draw which states your start time and who you are riding against. No being late to the line. Compact racing. Finishing on time. Where else do you get sprint races like that?!!!
3. Red hot racing. Everyone across all grades earns their wins. 3 races minimum...in a real race environment, complete with 'fire me up' music!
4. A chance to learn sprint tactics. Real tactics. On a forgiving track which isn't 43 degrees steep.... great for newbies or experienced alike
5. Coaches and feedback available to help you improve your race style.
6.A chance to get race ready for the Metros, States and your club championships.
7.A chance to see how your opposition in the above will ride, learn their strengths and weaknesses....hone your skills.
8. Racing lots of different riders, all with different styles and tactics. makes you a smarter rider......
9.A excellent race organisation, where everything pretty much just works. thanks to aboc and BBN...
10. The post race BBQ, where you get to sit around with other sprinters and tell them how good you are!
Possible changes:
Average each grades flying 200 times. winner of overall aggregate is the rider who betters the grade average by highest %. This will hurt A grade riders as their times will be closer. Rewards lower grades.
5 min slots instead of 10, depending on number of riders.
Simplify the logistics.
More as I think of them, but honestly you don't need to change anything yet.
Well done.
So at least one of the riders was very happy, and some of the suggestions made were our default anyway - because we only had 8 riders racing we made the races 3 laps instead of 2 and allowed 10 minutes per race instead of 5. When we have more riders, we'll need to tighten that up to the original plan, but if we have low numbers, we'll keep the quality of the racing high. I think that the standard of racing was good. We had two quite clearly deliniated grades using F200 times and as a result I don't think anyone had a walkover race, there was a couple of very close finishes and certainly in the B grade racing the flying 200 times didn't reflect the final outcome, which meant that the tactical side of the racing played an important part.
We had an issue with doing the draw (my mistake!) and we had to re calculate it and reprint the draw for everyone, and we need to find a way to do the draw more quickly. As we only had 8, in 2 grades, it was easy, but if we have the full 30 riders and 3 grades that we want to be able to cater for we need to make our draw work faster. Dino and I will spend some time on it in the next couple of weeks.
Other things we need to remember :
- Have a coin at the start line. Can you believe that none of us had a coin?! I got to be the tosser for the day!
- On the draw, have numbers as well as names. While we got away with it as at this round there was only two people we didn't know by name already, we'll need this information at the start line and for the commentator.
- Have a marshal roving around making sure (or at least informing) riders of when they need to be ready. We didn't need it for this round (low numbers so easy logistics) but again, if we get more riders, we'll really need to get riders ready and going on time.
- Make sure we have two people at the scoring desk. The original plan was to have one, but it seemed to work a lot better with two. Sanity checks and general efficiency. Our scoring system worked perfectly, which was great. Very easy to see who won what and how many points they had etc.
I'd personally like to thank all the volunteers that helped out, Bev and Nathan doing the scoring and entries and general paperwork (and Bev making the salad rolls for everyone's lunch, they were great!), Pat, Tabatha and Nicko for being our commisaires and race jury (not required! No crashes, no protests, good clean racing), Merv and Richard for being our start line holders, timers and finish line judges, Dino for the software and much of the paperwork and Tyler for holding the fort in the cafe for the day and generally helping out, and Lucie for taking the photos. It's important to thank Trek for their support too, we had the Trek tent at the start line giving us some shade, and of course the daily aggregate prize (Bontrager Race-Lite tyres) which were well received.
We have four weeks 'til the next round. I can't wait!2007-10-06
Round 1 welcome
A flyer we'll give to everyone racing
I've written a welcome page that explains a bit about the rules and who we are and how we hope the races will go. Feel free to have a read of it here.
2007-10-02
It all comes down to two things now ....
We need racers and fine weather
And the BoM says :
Sunday Mostly fine. Min 10 Max 19So we're in with a chance of good weather. We have a team to run the races, (we have hats!) - we have practiced our systems, all we need now is 30 sprinters!