Cycling BC 2011 upgrade rules
Cycling BC recently published the rules regarding how a rider moves up through
the categories. This page covers the high points: http://www.cyclingbc.net/road/road-participant-information.
The most important change is that local and regional races will now award
upgrade points. These changes, if they stand, will drastically shuffle the
numbers of riders in the categories and will quickly lead to a very large
category 2
At the start of the 2010 cycling season, category 5
was eliminated. Category 5 had been a true entry level category and 4 had some
at least mildly seasoned racers. At the start of 2010, these two were merged
giving the category a fairly wide breadth of abilities.
In 2010,
the various race series, such as Escape Velocity's Tuesday night
criteriums and Team Coastal's
Thursday Challenge, did not count for upgrade points. This meant that there
really were only about a dozen races that counted for upgrade points. Very few
riders rode that many of the larger events.
Several of those
races had category 3/4 combined fields. Tour de White Rock, Steveston
Sockeye Spin and the Tour de
Delta are three criteriums that come to mind. You were given upgrade
points in a 3/4 race based on your position in your category, so if you
finished 10th in the race, but were the highest category 4 finisher, you would
get 8 points.
In theory, this all works out well. Unfortunately,
in practice, there were a few problems.
First and foremost, there
simply weren't many upgrade points available. Category 3 and 4 each had about
ten people upgrade by the end of the 2010 season. Approximately 60 category 3
riders and about 70 category 4 riders earned points in 2010. (2010
upgrade information) This might be by design. You do not want to push
riders up a category until they are truly ready. However, if there are not
enough points available you end up with a mushroom cloud situation where there
are a large number of people near the top of the category who can earn points
at any given race but since the spread is wide, none of them get enough to
upgrade.
This makes for good, fun racing.
The
failure in the system was that in 2010 many new, inexperienced racers entered
their first 'big' bike race in the category 3/4 field where a hard fought
battle among riders nearly in the 2's was fought. The fitness and experience
gap between a relatively new racer and a rider who was on the verge of
category 2 in the old system is enormous.
This makes for a
terrible and often expensive experience for your new, enthusiastic racer.
So the situation is, with category 4 being the entry level category,
we shouldn't be having them race with riders who are effectively strong enough
to race at a national level. Thus, to improve the situation for the new
racers, the strongest category 3 riders need to be moved up to category 2.
As it stands now, 2011 will have three times the number of available
upgrade points as 2010. Upgrades are immediate so a number of riders will be
upgraded by the time the Escape Velocity Spring Series is over. By the time
the race heavy month of May is over, theoretically 30 riders could be
upgraded. In practice, this number will be somewhat smaller, but we're still
talking about twice as many upgrades in half of the 2011 season as there was
in the entire 2010 season.
Unfortunately, with the sheer number
of weekly races available, I doubt this is sustainable. 40 new riders into the
category 1/2 races this year might be fine once. It's doubtful that BC can
supply enough strong new cyclists to upgrade that many into the top ranks of
the sport every year.
There are two ways this could play out.
2011 runs as is documented. Many 3's move up to category 2. Many 4's
are properly slotted into category 3 with some going right on through to 2
(you know who you are). In 2012, the rules are changed such that local weekly
races count for half points or something like that, slowing the upgrade
flood.
An alternate method, and the way I'd personally do it is
to closely monitor the upgrades. Once the upper eschelon of category 3 riders
has moved up to category 2, slow the tide and count local weekly races for
half points or cap them at the 'races with 5-10 racers' level, regardless of
the total number. (3,2,1 points for 1st, 2nd, 3rd place respectively)
That has the effect of quickly moving up the strongest riders in the
various groups as well as still providing a reward for coming out and racing
hard during the week without making a Tuesday night race as important to a
rider's development as a 100km road race.
The one variable I
don't know is how many people get out of the sport or go on to only race in
the masters categories. Those numbers would have some effect on the outcomes
here.
Either way, it will be interesting to see what actually
happens.