T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1400.1 | What's the difference? | HUB::FORBESM | | Fri Jan 05 1990 13:01 | 8 |
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(Moved from 1396.4)
What's the difference between a road race, criterium, and time trial?
I've heard the terms but don't know what the difference is.
Thanks,
Mark
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1400.2 | 1st cut at it... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | | Fri Jan 05 1990 13:27 | 25 |
| > What's the difference between a road race, criterium, and time trial?
Very briefly (there's also some overlap possible in these categories)
Time trial - individual or team (eg 4-man). Race is against the clock,
riders are started at intervals (usu. 1 min - team goes together, of
course). No drafting allowed (except within a team). Course is almost
always an out-and-back to eliminate bias due to wind, hills. Best time
wins. Many riders ride these as a competition against themselves from
week to week ("I improved my time in the 25 mi TT by 44 sec. this
week!"). Distances are commonly 10 miles and 25 miles, but longer and
shorter are seen as well.
Road race - mass start, drafting OK. Course may be point to point,
circuit back to starting point, or LONG laps on a course (e.g. 10 mile
laps). Pack riding, drafting and tactics very important. Frequently ends
up with mass sprint at end. Distances typically range from 20 miles to
120 miles or more.
Criterium - As Road Race, but on short course (usu. no > 2 miles). Many
laps, lots of corners, lots of sprinting (accel. out of corners
important) - bikes usu. very stiff to get max. acceleration. Lapped
riders common and are usually DQ'ed. Distances often in the 20-50 mile
range.
ken
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1400.3 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Greg LeMond - Sportsman of the Year | Fri Jan 05 1990 15:55 | 7 |
| Here are two I've always wondered about:
What's a keirin?
What does SAG mean (as in sag wagon)?
Scott
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1400.4 | Sag = slump/exhausted/fed up.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | | Fri Jan 05 1990 17:25 | 7 |
| > What does SAG mean (as in sag wagon)?
Not generally related to bike racing, except as DNF (Did Not Finish).
Sag, as in, your spirits/muscles/will-to-live sag in the middle of a
ride, then the wagon (can really be van/car/whatever) comes along, you
jump in, ride back to start/finish/ice cream shop.
ken
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1400.5 | SAG? | DRFUSO::SHROYER | | Fri Jan 05 1990 19:53 | 14 |
1400.6 | Sag Wagon = Broom Car | KAOFS::W_VIERHOUT | I is a school of high grad | Mon Jan 08 1990 13:38 | 4 |
| Sag Wagon - Also known as Broom Car which sweeps up the remains of
crashs, broken down and dropped out racers.
Wayne
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1400.7 | 6 Day races | VERVE::BUCHANAN | Bat | Mon Jan 08 1990 15:33 | 9 |
| Could someone give a short description of a 6-DAY RACE?
I read about them in Winning each winter and have never really been
able to figure them out.
Do they really run for 6 days?
How long do they go per night?
How are points scored?
They seem to have 2 man teams, how does this work?
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1400.8 | keirin racing | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Mon Jan 08 1990 17:10 | 8 |
| (.3) > What's a keirin?
It's a Japanese race where the contestants start as a single
pack and race to the finish line along a straight course.
It seemed to be sort of a drag race for bicyclists.
Anyway, the above paragraph was the explanation I heard at
the demonstration keirin at a Coors Classic several years ago.
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1400.9 | Milionairs with Leaset Respect | OSTV14::YOSHIKURA | | Thu Jan 11 1990 05:55 | 25 |
| > What's a keirin?
Let me add some more trivial info. to -.1
Original ( Japanese style ) Keirin is competed by 8 racers each of whom
wears numbered jersey and helmet ( HUGE ! ) over football style
protecters. They need those protections. Imagine track sprint with
8 people ! The race is individual based though most of racers make
friends ( training partners ) and play like a team. A pacer leads
the racers for several laps and with 1 or 2 laps to go he let the
racers go themselves. The pace is very slow except for last 1 or 2
laps. The last 1 or 2 laps are very fast and brutal. I'd say that's
a boxing on bicycles. The most important part of Keirin is betting.
That is one thing that Keirin racers are never respected in Japan.
They are never considered as athletes. That's what it's like to be a
bike racer in Japan. ( People don't know the difference between road
racers and Keirin racers )
Bettors can make $100 from $1 while a racer can make up to $2 milion
or more a year. Interested ? You can go to "Keirin School" to be a
Keirin racer. It's a half year ( I think ) in the Hell. If you want an
application form, let me know. :-)
Tak
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1400.10 | it was a good story | SQLRUS::FISHER | Pat Pending | Thu Jan 11 1990 09:14 | 10 |
| Japanese Keirin is different from Keirin as done in the World
Championships. One of the Japanese Champion Keirin Racers went to the
World's every year for 10 year and won a gold [almost?] every year but
I don't think it was in the Keirin -- does anyone recall who it was and
what his event was? The interesting things here were that he
sacrificed earned income to race in the worlds and his medals were not
particularly appreciated in Japan -- as Tak said, he wassn't an athlete
he was a bike racer.
ed
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1400.11 | It's Nakano | OSTV14::YOSHIKURA | | Fri Jan 12 1990 00:23 | 26 |
| > Japanese Keirin is different from Keirin as done in the World
> Championships. One of the Japanese Champion Keirin Racers went to the
> World's every year for 10 year and won a gold [almost?] every year but
> I don't think it was in the Keirin -- does anyone recall who it was and
> what his event was? The interesting things here were that he
> sacrificed earned income to race in the worlds and his medals were not
> particularly appreciated in Japan -- as Tak said, he wassn't an athlete
Yes, the format of Keirin race is very different according to Japanese Keirin
racers. I think that's very good for them to have this sort of execuse for
not winning a Keirin in any World's ( Maybe once before ? ). Otherwise, they
HAVE TO win and dominate in Keirin in every World's because they are racing
Keirin races up to 5 races a week.
The guy you mentioned is Kohichi Nakano. I thought everybody who follows
bike racing knew the man. I have seen quit few articles on Winning mag. and
other bike mags. He is a 10 time world SPRINT champion. He dominated pro
sprint event in the Wolrd's for 10 years ! ( Though I think his time never
was better than the amatures from Eastern bloc countries ( dead word ? :-))
He spent his own money to go to every world's to win the Rainbow jersey
which very few Japanese know the meaning of it. I recall him saying he is
losing money to win the jersey because he has to give up about an week of
Keirin races which he can earn millions of Yen from.
Tak
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1400.12 | Thanks | BANZAI::FISHER | Pat Pending | Fri Jan 12 1990 10:50 | 5 |
| Thanks, Tak, for filling in the details. Kohichi Nakano was, in my
opinionm, a man who did something for love of the sport instead of the
money. Most who have the chance for the money go for it instead.
ed
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