Folks,
I have just opened my upgrade folder and discovered it
quite full of an ongoing dialog/exchange about which races
should/should not count for upgrades, how combined fields are handled,
etc... I have had some conversations already "off-line" with Mr.
Vaughn and Jeff about Greenbelt and my overall philosophy about the
race. But first, I must set the stage with how I approach this process.
I
have been racing and riding in this district for some 15 years or so.
I have raced since the mid-80s. Much like Bill L or Jim P., I've seen
just about everything and been in districts (back when those existed)
and time periods, where/when it was totally unclear what constituted a
legitimate upgrade, to today, where a policy has been fleshed out and
works pretty well to ensure overall consistency across the local
associations. I also still compete fairly regularly and officiate and
have a familiarity with the events and riders that helps quite a
bit--particularly as riders move up on the category scale.
OK. The most important point I would like to make is that I try and handle every request as an individual
request. Each person's experience is different. Each rider brings to
their request a different set of skills/background that I try to also
take into account--particularly on "borderline" requests where the
rider is maybe a couple of points/races shy. As an example,
"experience in 10 mass start events" sounds pretty simple to execute
for 5 to 4 upgrades--do 10 races, get to be a 4. Yay. Well--what if
cat 5 road racer is a cat 1 MTB racer and has won 5 straight cat 5
events out of the first 7 he/she has entered. Would I deny that
upgrade request. Not likely. MTB riders are incredibly skilled bike
handlers--so they can probably ride a straight line. How does doing
another 3 races benefit the rider in terms of experience? What about
everybody else in the cat 5 field being beaten up by this guy/girl? An
another example--what if out of 10 mass starts listed, the rider has
DNF'd 7? or 8? That sort of information gives me pause. As in most
aspects of life, it is usually not as black and white as we would like
it to be.
As for points, the current system is one I had been
kinda employing anyway for a while--a sliding scale system, so to
speak. The rider cannot control the field size, for instance. The
rider can only control, to a point, how well they do in the field that
shows up. So, previously, if a race was short on field size, but the
rider got in the top six, I counted the event for points, but not the
full allocation. The current system formalizes this with the varying
field sizes. Frankly, and I guess we can have a continuing discussion
on this, I will do the same for events that don't make the distance,
like Lost River for some fields. If you win, maybe you won't get 10
points for that RR win, but only a portion based on how far short the
race distance was from "qualifying distance." And, keep in mind it
isn't any one event that makes or breaks an upgrade request--I do try and consider the whole
resume. Combined fields are more difficult and, frankly, I dislike
them. I dislike them from all angles: as an official, as a rider, as
an upgrade coordinator. Even as a promoter. I have no way of
verifying for upgrades how many of which category was in a combined
field. Who was the competition? If you are requesting an upgrade to a
2 with a resume dominated by combined 3/4 races, did you earn your
points by beating up on a bunch of 4s or your actual racing peers? I
have no idea and it would be too hard to gather that information.
Sometimes, promoters provide the info to USAC and I can see the
breakout in the rider's results or on the race webpage. Often not. In
any event, a combined field is one field for racing purposes (riders
work together, different category riders influence others, etc...) and
I consider only your overall placing for upgrade points. This effects women mostly, as there are a lot of combined 3/4 events.
Now
training series. Greenbelt. Don't get me wrong--I love Greenbelt. A
great venue, low key, fast training. Combined fields that are not
broken out by category, except roughly (see above). So--we're dealing
with combined fields where 1s and 3s can be "competing" against each
other. Every week the composition is different. Results are called by
the officials and are not as regularly accurate as those called and
verified with a camera, or vice-versa. And it's training. Generally,
I consider Greenbelt/Cold Toes/Tradezone/etc... as great experience to
move up from 5. After that, I would like the rider to compete on the
weekend against clearly-defined peers and garner easily-verified
results. The only time I've made any exceptions is if the rider has
extenuating circumstances that preclude regular participation on
weekends--military service, work demands, etc... And then we have an
e-conversation about the merits of the request. Feel free to include
Greenbelt in the resumes--that helps me get a sense of the overall
picture. There may be other training series in other parts of the
country where there is more structure--the rulebook makes accommodation
for those types of series.
Lastly--thank goodness, since it
is way past my bedtime and I should have been spending time working
through my upgrade cue, since I'm behind, not to mention watching
today's Tour stage--the best way to upgrade is to race your bike. For
4s--you can move up on experience, not just points. Do 25 mass start
events, get at least 10 top ten placings or 20 field finishes (easy to
do with the races here) and you will be a 3. Depending on how often
you race, that's a couple of seasons. It's harder for 3s moving to 2s, but I don't think that is a bad thing. There should be more discrimination as you move up the food chain.
It is a balance. Interests of an individual rider versus interests of the entire community. As an official/administrator, I see part of my role as ensuring as level a playing field for all the competitors as possible. That means trying to keep the sandbaggers moving up when they should and not sending someone up before they are really ready. And also downgrading riders who clearly have been out of touch for a while and are trying to come back, or vice-versa. There are the rules and there is reality. And special circumstances. And exceptions. And whatever. My bottom line is to try and keep my eyes on the big picture as well as I can. It ain't perfect; sometimes not pretty; and sometimes (gasp!), not "by the book."
Done. Who won the stage today, anyway???
Flame away,
Tracy
P.S.: I am getting to my backlog. I swear.