2017 Race Plans
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2017 Race Plans
I didn't see this thread already so stating here.
Anyone doing Hill Climb National Championship Aug 12, 2017 is interesting as I *think* it is the only NC that combines Pros and Amateurs. They are in their 3rd year and it is getting some interest.
Gaimon posted he's doing it. Should be fun seeing all in one group.
"3. This event is open to all Pro riders including members of Women’s UCI Teams, Continental Teams, Pro Continental Teams and Men’s WorldTeams. "
RULES 1. BICYCLE REGULATIONS: In general, the regulations for bicycles are those of USA Cycling. Please refer to section 1I – Bicycles, in the USA Cycling rulebook:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/USACWeb/for..._Chapter_1.pdf
The main points are: a. Bicycles may be no more than 2 meters long and 75 cm wide. b. There may be no protective shield, fairing, or other device on any part of the bicycle, which has the effect of reducing air resistance except that spoke covers may be used. c. Wheels may be made with spokes or solid construction. d. The handlebar ends shall be solidly plugged. e. Handlebars with ends, features, or attachments that extend forward or upward or that provide support for other than the rider's hands are not permitted.
Per USA Cycling regulations, the following UCI regulations will be in effect for the event.
For Mass Start Events: a. Bicycle frames must be of double triangle construction b. Wheels must be of the same diameter between 550 and 700 cm.
Other UCI regulations, including minimum weight, saddle and handlebar placement will not be in effect.
Registration
Anyone doing Hill Climb National Championship Aug 12, 2017 is interesting as I *think* it is the only NC that combines Pros and Amateurs. They are in their 3rd year and it is getting some interest.
Gaimon posted he's doing it. Should be fun seeing all in one group.
"3. This event is open to all Pro riders including members of Women’s UCI Teams, Continental Teams, Pro Continental Teams and Men’s WorldTeams. "
RULES 1. BICYCLE REGULATIONS: In general, the regulations for bicycles are those of USA Cycling. Please refer to section 1I – Bicycles, in the USA Cycling rulebook:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/USACWeb/for..._Chapter_1.pdf
The main points are: a. Bicycles may be no more than 2 meters long and 75 cm wide. b. There may be no protective shield, fairing, or other device on any part of the bicycle, which has the effect of reducing air resistance except that spoke covers may be used. c. Wheels may be made with spokes or solid construction. d. The handlebar ends shall be solidly plugged. e. Handlebars with ends, features, or attachments that extend forward or upward or that provide support for other than the rider's hands are not permitted.
Per USA Cycling regulations, the following UCI regulations will be in effect for the event.
For Mass Start Events: a. Bicycle frames must be of double triangle construction b. Wheels must be of the same diameter between 550 and 700 cm.
Other UCI regulations, including minimum weight, saddle and handlebar placement will not be in effect.
Registration
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Seems the Masters NCs were able to race with these rules: https://s3.amazonaws.com/USACWeb/for...quirements.pdf
"Per USA Cycling regulations, the following UCI regulations will be in effect for the event.
For Mass Start Events and Individual Time Trials:
a. Bicycle frames must be of double triangle construction
b. Wheels must be of the same diameter between 550 and 700 cm.
Other UCI regulations, including saddle and handlebar placement, will not be in effect."
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I just registered for the Chico Stage Race, 4/5 field plus the Thunderhill race. Anyone got some tips for an east coaster who has nobody around to talk to about it?
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For Thunderhill circuit race, positioning is key - there's a short corkscrew-type climb that's maybe 15%, but 20 seconds, and people on the back will be track standing while waiting to get over the top - so be up front for that, especially in the last lap.
In the RR the gravel is ~12 mi in to the race, and everyone wants to hit it first. Lining up front is key here, and staying up front. The road leading up to the gravel is small and rough too, I found it hard to move up. When you first hit the gravel it's a slight uphill, and guys will be in the wrong gear and maybe putting a foot down - don't be behind them! The gravel was pretty loose, at least a few years ago, but ridable on 23's. Also there's a climb right after the gravel, that will pop guys, don't be one of them.
The crit is pretty technical but a good one.
My experience from Chico is from the 1/2's field, with 160+ riders - it was crowded! Hopefully your field is smaller than that. Good luck!
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Fun race ... if you're doing the 4/5 the road race is one lap of Paskenta. That will include some rollers leading into the gravel section. Gravel section is the meat of the race depending on wind. Gravel will be 15 minutes or so of surging riding with guys losing wheels, taking bad lines, etc. After the gravel, there is a 90-120s climb that will kill anyone off that struggled in the gravel. That leaves the long run into the finish. If the wind is from the north, it'll be a miserable gutterfest. If it's not, well, it won't be as bad. After you turn off Paskenta Road and are heading into the finish, there will be some rollers in the closing kilometer and a stairstepped finish.
Crit is great. Fun course, wide roads, 6 turns. Finishing sprint is SHORT.
TT is a straightforward 10 miles two turn, course. Wind will determine how miserable you'll feel.
Last edited by hack; 01-19-17 at 02:13 PM.
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I know right!
Last time I did Chico I cursed the gravel the whole time, promised myself I'd never go back... how easily we forget. I'll probably go back this year.
Last time I did Chico I cursed the gravel the whole time, promised myself I'd never go back... how easily we forget. I'll probably go back this year.
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Both of the major stage races here (KSR and GMSR) have these short un-paved sections in their Road Races. Every year we hit them and freak out, by the time we get around to them the next year somone inevitably says "Hey isn't there a dirt section?" and everyone collectively goes "Oh crap, I purged that from my memory...".
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The gravel (4-5 miles?) at Chico is really the major feature of the course ... well, aside from the bombed out road leading into it. Wind can be killer, too, but last year the cross wind section was all tailwind.
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I had planned to do Chico; my brother just moved up there so I will do it next year if he doesn't relocate again. I've been itching to do a real stage race, they're getting rare these days.
#12
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Oh and is reg open? Last I checked a couple days ago I didn't see any info for this year.
Edit: In the 3/4s the hard part about the gravel was passing all the dudes who dont seem to understand that they can still hold a wheel in gravel. Then you're finally near the front when another dude opens a gap, you hit a climb, and you have to go extra hard to catch on. I assume this would be even worse in the 4/5 group!
Last edited by aaronmcd; 01-19-17 at 04:11 PM.
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Yeah the road leading up to it (crap pavement and no centerline so everyone ignores centerline rule) and the climb out of it (I recall more like 5 minutes but not too steep for a flatlander under extreme duress) really makes the gravel a bigger deal than it would be otherwise.
Oh and is reg open? Last I checked a couple days ago I didn't see any info for this year.
Oh and is reg open? Last I checked a couple days ago I didn't see any info for this year.
We just lost the Madera Stage Race ... not a well attended stage race, but a stage race nonetheless. That just leaves Chico (not sure how the new Red Kite one will shakeout as a stage race/omnium).
#14
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Shorter crit is fine by me. By the time I do the crit my legs are heavy and I'm just tailgunning to hang on and move up to a midpack finish. I may do the race if I have a few teammates to race for. I'll be close to last place in the TT even if I give it everything, I bet. It's all about the RR in my book.
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Shorter crit is fine by me. By the time I do the crit my legs are heavy and I'm just tailgunning to hang on and move up to a midpack finish. I may do the race if I have a few teammates to race for. I'll be close to last place in the TT even if I give it everything, I bet. It's all about the RR in my book.
#16
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I got that new Hensley RR to add a lap and get up over 80 miles on the same principle! Now I better show up and race it.
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It is odd that they'd drop it below upgrade duration, but maybe they're thinking by rolling it into a stage race the points are out there somewhere. For comparison, at Cascade 2's did 45 min last year and we're down to 35 this year.
Edit ... is Hensley new?
Last edited by hack; 01-19-17 at 05:05 PM.
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Looks like there was a college race at the same location with the same name but a different course back in 2013
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I don't like the race as the tires that best handle the gravel are not the best for the RR.
If there were one best tire for that RR I'd think Veloflex Vlaanderen but the rocks can cut any sidewall.
I bought a set for my son last year and he was rowing instead. Since he uses those tires all the time on gravel and single track (instead of his MTB) and they are fantastic. Not good for glass.
The race track is super smooth. So ideally you have a couple sets of wheels.
Last edited by Doge; 01-19-17 at 06:55 PM.
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Both of the major stage races here (KSR and GMSR) have these short un-paved sections in their Road Races. Every year we hit them and freak out, by the time we get around to them the next year somone inevitably says "Hey isn't there a dirt section?" and everyone collectively goes "Oh crap, I purged that from my memory...".
KSR stage 2... i asked people 'when is that dirt section they spent so much time warning us about in the tech guide?'
we'd passed it a few miles before.
it was smoother than the roads last year!
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This was my experience at Battenkill the first year I did it. The dirt roads were in better condition and smoother than some of the paved roads!
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In the RR the gravel is ~12 mi in to the race, and everyone wants to hit it first. Lining up front is key here, and staying up front. The road leading up to the gravel is small and rough too, I found it hard to move up. When you first hit the gravel it's a slight uphill, and guys will be in the wrong gear and maybe putting a foot down - don't be behind them! The gravel was pretty loose, at least a few years ago, but ridable on 23's. Also there's a climb right after the gravel, that will pop guys, don't be one of them.
Yeah the road leading up to it (crap pavement and no centerline so everyone ignores centerline rule)
...
Edit: In the 3/4s the hard part about the gravel was passing all the dudes who dont seem to understand that they can still hold a wheel in gravel. Then you're finally near the front when another dude opens a gap, you hit a climb, and you have to go extra hard to catch on. I assume this would be even worse in the 4/5 group!
...
Edit: In the 3/4s the hard part about the gravel was passing all the dudes who dont seem to understand that they can still hold a wheel in gravel. Then you're finally near the front when another dude opens a gap, you hit a climb, and you have to go extra hard to catch on. I assume this would be even worse in the 4/5 group!
Also, the weather leading into the race plays a role: lots of rain = more packed down & smoother. When it's a dry winter, it will be more loose and the rider has to just be OK with some loose steering to match.
I agree with the tubular part, simply because tubulars are more resistant to pinch flats (hitting stuff you can't see in a big field -- also exacerbated if it is dry/dusty....less visibility). however, i think most riders will be fine on normal road tires here.
it IS a road we're talking about, and road tires are actually fine with dirt and gravel.
there is always the chance of hitting something and flatting, and beefier tires will help with that, but this is true on the road was well. you'll pay the price for it on the remaining 90% of the race that is NOT gravel.
i'll disagree about the sidewall part; beefier sidewalls generally help with real severe stuff. the FMB tires you see with reinforced sidewalls are used for Paris-Roubaix. If you've been there, you know that the cobbles are so wide that a tire can get in between them and the sidewall will shred. This just doesn't happen anywhere else, really. (I'm sure someone has an example to prove this wrong.)
Normal gravel won't shred a sidewall in most cases.
The notion of Battenkill (or Chico, or wherever) being *anything* like Paris-Roubaix (some folks throw around that comparison) -- and therefore requiring those tires is way, WAY off-base.
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what you have to remember is that they are trying to jam all the groups on the course in a limited amount of time. they have to make cuts somewhere.
and USAC will often let things slide for upgrade points -- e.g. if you win that crit in a solo break, i bet your points will count.
doubt you'll hear anyone complain.
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Agreed. I always ran my fastest and lightest race tires at Battenkill. I recently started doing all my racing on wider (26c) tires, so I will likely do the same for Chico.