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there's no skill in downhill ridding, lol what an idiot!
there's tons involved I'm off road but even on road it takes both skills and balls to do 40/50mph and around counters, slightest bit of sand / grease anything and its game over! you need to look for and avoid these were possible, you need to balance your weight on the right place so you don't slide out in a sharper comers ect ect! oh so its a KOD not a KOM its still a skill, ask any pro rider they will say the same, I know for a fact I can't descend as fast as a pro rider even if I was twice as for and had the same level of bike! |
You guys, if you're taking segments that seriously, you're doing it wrong. Just go out and have some fun. Who cares if it up, down, or flat, just hammer as hard/fast as you can and hope for the best.
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Originally Posted by DGlenday
(Post 16099988)
Got my response from Strava:
"Segment contains multiple stop signs many riders are ignoring." :mad: ?!? So I've made another identical segment. Let's see how it works... |
Originally Posted by bhikkhu
(Post 16101055)
Not to judge, but that sounds like a reasonable case for a "hazardous route", if it encourages cyclists to blow through stop signs at speed. In my area there are just a few like that, but its generally avoided - its bad form, and makes everyone look bad. Making segments from stop-to-stop is the easy answer.
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Originally Posted by bhikkhu
(Post 16101055)
Making segments from stop-to-stop is the easy answer.
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Originally Posted by SpeshulEd
(Post 16100745)
You guys, if you're taking segments that seriously, you're doing it wrong. Just go out and have some fun. Who cares if it up, down, or flat, just hammer as hard/fast as you can and hope for the best.
...says the guy with a Strava link in his sig line. |
Originally Posted by Brian Ratliff
(Post 16101409)
Yes, because having performance and training goals is bad...
...says the guy with a Strava link in his sig line. |
Originally Posted by SpeshulEd
(Post 16101427)
I never said that...having performance and training goals is a good thing...using strava to obtain those goals is a good thing. I don't mind segment hunting or sniping or whatever, let the fast guys have them...but if you're flagging segments because someone stole your KOM or if you're complaining about downhill or flat segments not being KOM worthy or "wussy" or whatever, it just seems to me that you're taking a social media platform a bit too seriously. That's all.
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Originally Posted by Brian Ratliff
(Post 16101463)
Fair enough. I agree with that.
I just started riding in March, I'm not fast, but I'm getting better. Strava has been great for me - almost every person I ride with now, I've met through strava. It lets me keep track of my rides, shoot the **** with new friends, and adds a bit of healthy fun competition. I know several of the guys that go out and hammer segments, thats their interval training...I can respect that. It also means a lot to me when they invite me to go ride with them. For me, thats what strava is all about. |
skill + cojones = fast descending
Lacking either might make one dismissive of it. |
Originally Posted by rebel1916
(Post 16100541)
Why do some (wussies perhaps) act like descending is not a skill.
Also, the key word here is skill. Riding your bike up a hill doesn't take much skill. It takes stamina, fitness, and perseverance, but not skill; a descent full of switchbacks doesn't take a lot of cardio fitness, it takes finess. And this forum likes to focus on the ra ra meat-head mentality you find in the weight room at the gym. So technical descents don't get much love here. |
But even a straightforward descent can reward subtle differences in aero position. Which I know is a skill, cause I see people my size walking away from me on non tech descents with some regularity. Despite my best attempts to get aero.
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Originally Posted by bhikkhu
(Post 16101055)
Not to judge, but that sounds like a reasonable case for a "hazardous route", if it encourages cyclists to blow through stop signs at speed. In my area there are just a few like that, but its generally avoided - its bad form, and makes everyone look bad. Making segments from stop-to-stop is the easy answer.
Originally Posted by DGlenday
(Post 16093044)
...It's just 0.6 miles long, in a business park that is almost 100% deserted during the weekend and at nights, the road surface is excellent, and the corners are wide and safe. A crit is run around this circuit, and quite a few crit racers use it as for training precisely because it's safe and fast...
ANYWAY - I created a new (identical) segment, and all the performance stats are back :lol: |
Originally Posted by Seattle Forrest
(Post 16102357)
Depends. Some downhills are like roller derby and don't take much more skill than watching a toy roll away, others have tight corners that separate the men from the boys. It's definitely not true that all descents take a lot of skill.
Also, the key word here is skill. Riding your bike up a hill doesn't take much skill. It takes stamina, fitness, and perseverance, but not skill; a descent full of switchbacks doesn't take a lot of cardio fitness, it takes finess. And this forum likes to focus on the ra ra meat-head mentality you find in the weight room at the gym. So technical descents don't get much love here. Descending quickly can take a lot of skill, which the average recreational cyclist is not likely to possess. Turning it into a race is asking for serious injury. Now I'm cool with it. Serious injury is loads fun, to be sure. The analogy is that anyone can put down some cash and buy a high performance auto, but putting him on a racetrack is just asking for an injury unless he knows how to drive the thing. Putting someone with a dentisr bike on top of a steep chicane-riddled descent, intent on winning a Strava segment, is just asking for trouble. Again, I don't want to be a kill-joy. Trouble is gnarly, especially if someone tapes it and posts it on youTube. |
take it to A&S, folks
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Originally Posted by Brian Ratliff
(Post 16102734)
take it to A&S, folks
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I'm going to take a wild guess and say that if the descent is worthwhile any dentist and their bike won't have a chance at getting the kom and will likely tap the brakes most of the way down the hill. That doesn't mean the segment should be flagged for being dangerous or isn't worthy of being a segment. It just means that dentist has to ride more.
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Originally Posted by Dudelsack
(Post 16102437)
people aren't likely to get seriously injured on a climb, unless it makes them blow through a red light or something.
Descending quickly can take a lot of skill, which the average recreational cyclist is not likely to possess. Turning it into a race is asking for serious injury. |
Originally Posted by rebel1916
(Post 16101135)
It's an office park.
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Originally Posted by rkwaki
(Post 16100073)
In the 33 it would be.
We have a lot around here that purposefully go after KOMs to take them from [strike]guys[/strike] little girls on tricycles they don't like. |
Originally Posted by Dudelsack
(Post 16093596)
If it requires blowing through a stop sign, it will and should be flagged.
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Originally Posted by Seattle Forrest
(Post 16102357)
Depends. Some downhills are like roller derby and don't take much more skill than watching a toy roll away, others have tight corners that separate the men from the boys. It's definitely not true that all descents take a lot of skill.
Also, the key word here is skill. Riding your bike up a hill doesn't take much skill. It takes stamina, fitness, and perseverance, but not skill; a descent full of switchbacks doesn't take a lot of cardio fitness, it takes finess. And this forum likes to focus on the ra ra meat-head mentality you find in the weight room at the gym. So technical descents don't get much love here. How about a 1-2% downhill that's a 3-4 miles long? KOM on that is going to go to someone who can put out a pretty decent effort. Probably on some day with a 35 mph tailwind, too. Yeah, I could have gone faster, but I was too busy laughing my ass off. :-D |
BTW, to clarify: it honestly is fine for you to do what you want on the streets as long as it don't scare the horses.
And I hate the nanny state. One might hope appeals to exercise a little common sense out there would not fall upon deaf ears. But if it doesn't, and deaths due to people devoid of common sense trying to win Strava segments continue to receive publicity, the nannies will come and pass a bunch of stupid laws and/or sue Strava out of existence, and that would be a shame. Now go on with your bad selves. |
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