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View Full Version : Have we ever considered grouping practice by times?



mkdiehl
June 23rd, 2012, 09:16 AM
.....so not worrying about novice or expert, but put like speed people out together instead?

Someone mentioned this to me at the last race and it sounded good to me.....I would guess this idea isn't new but didn't know the pros/cons.

There are some pretty big speed differentials even as they are grouped now.

Just curious, and trying to keep myself occupied instead of buying a ninja 250....must resist.

Jon
June 23rd, 2012, 09:36 AM
What? But you would crush the little self esteem I have left as I would no doubt be forced to practice with the novice slow group?
Seriously though I like the idea but I beleive at this point individuals who are misplaced or have misplaced themselfs in practice sessions either need to look at how their laptimes differ from the others within their chosen sessions or J Brown can address the issue which I beleive he does on occasion.
Matt I beleive you should move up as you're fast safe and by god we like you :lol:

gsnyder828
June 23rd, 2012, 11:46 AM
Matt I beleive you should move up as you're fast safe and by god we like you :lol:

Exactly. Seems the simplest way to solve the speed differential is to run expert fast.

mkdiehl
June 23rd, 2012, 12:48 PM
yea....was afraid it would turn into this type of thread again.....i think the novice class is pretty entertaining this year.....some pretty close racing with about 5 different people capable of winning (more as people get faster and catch the lead group)....3 winners in Nov u in three races. One of the fastest novices hasn't won yet as he has had some bad luck so far....

I actually don't have an issue with it really, but twice i have heard others come into the pits scared or mad at the differential out in the expert slow practice.

I know there has been talk about time differential in the expert fast as well.

I also do think that some of the faster novices would benefit from being able to ride with some of the experts....so that we could learn better lines etc.

Again, just thinking out loud.

loujr
June 23rd, 2012, 04:31 PM
I also do think that some of the faster novices would benefit from being able to ride with some of the experts....so that we could learn better lines etc.

The amateur and endurance races provide a platform for this. I think combination of novice/expert practice by speeds is a good idea however if riders never get on track with faster riders would that slow down their progress?? If we are all out there with people the same speed how are we going to see "better lines". Or "faster lines"???


If a slower rider signs up to race against faster guys do we suggest they try a different class? Or buy a different bike?? Just playing devils advocate....

Some people are fast some are slower, getting by people is part of racing. I think a great example is being on track with 250's is hard because they could be great riders but the speed difference of the bike is huge. Same can be said for any bike that has a different power band than yours. I think this subject has come up and our practice schedule works for most, can't make everyone happy all of the time. :shock: :)

NossLou
June 23rd, 2012, 06:07 PM
I agree with what you are saying and completely understand the time differences. I think its a riders responsibility to judge their practice times with what session they are in. If they can't do that then maybe someone can drop them a word about moving up or what not. It sure is not the clubs responsibility to place riders in sessions, more of an individual responsibility

I also think that it needs to stay in the same structure as expert and novice sessions...just like any other club out there. Mixing the two really makes me think there will be issues.

One session that may make this difficult is the expert slow session... yeah there are 250s/ vintage bikes/ supermotos/ 600 and 1000's all out there at once.. But to be quite honest riding an endurance race is 10 times more difficult than practice with closing speeds and what not.

Another thing to consider is there are a lot of riders that go out and run anywhere from 3-6 seconds a lap slower in practice than at race pace...

Its seems pretty simple. If your passing everyone the entire session then move up... if you are riding up a class and are getting your doors blown off maybe bump down a class.... I do not understand what is so difficult about it. Practice should be just that, time you can go out and work on what you need to for the day. And if there are people that are quite a bit slower, than you can practice your lap traffic timing...most races have it...

Yeeker
June 24th, 2012, 12:45 PM
I'd agree with Matt that I hear slower riders mentioning the speed differential just as often as faster riders. Yes, faster riders can work on passing the slower riders, but we are talking about the extremes here and passing significantly slower riders doesn't take that much practice. It seems to me that the underlying question is: Does the Novice/Expert classification impose unnecessary restrictions on practice?

If a faster rider is passing everyone easily and startles slower riders, he/she isn't permitted to move up (we don't currently have a group faster than Expert Fast and novices aren't allowed to practice with experts). In this situation, self-policing for the faster rider is not a very good option. It's likely that the combined sessions have the greatest speed differential as this grouping includes slower riders (nov or expert) that cannot bump down to a slower group.

If sessions were grouped by speed, then there would ultimately be four groups to choose from, rather than two. If it worked, it seems as if the speed differentials for each group would be lower. I think that Matt was curious about the pitfalls of mixing these groups (primarily Novice Fast and Expert Slow). Note that I haven't seen him have trouble passing many novices :wink: )

One argument for the current system is that it could provide encouragement for fast novices to move to expert. I personally personally would find this to be a very small incentive as I would not want to throw away a half-season of work to move to expert, nor does the fastest novice often have trouble passing the slowest.

Although I'd guess that the the current system works well for the majority of experts, I feel that at times we could make small personal sacrifices to make the club more enjoyable for all because retaining more riders makes the club stronger. I'm not yet suggesting that we change the practice rules, but I haven't heard many strong arguments against it.

rybo
June 24th, 2012, 04:17 PM
As a rider who has practiced in literally EVERY group we offer I can offer the one strong reason for keeping the system we have. It basically works.

Novices practice with novices (yellow plates, easy to police)
Experts with Experts (white plates,again easy for our track personnel to police)

Slow / Medium / Fast - again easily identified colored stickers that are simple for a our track personnel to see as riders are filtering out on to the track.

Self assigning also basically works, so much so that almost every race club and trackday org uses it.



I'm not opposed to hearing a proposal to change the system if riders feel it's fundamentally broken, but in that proposal consider the logistics - how does the person at track entry know if you should be in that group or not?

Also, how do you break the groups up? Riders and bikes are continually getting faster, so how often would we have to review the break out times? What if a rider is having an off day, do they have to bump down that day? What if it's raining? I like the designations of "slow, medium and fast" because they aren't purely objective like lap times. Who becomes responsible for policing it when a rider falls off the pace for a couple of laps?

Again, I'm not against a proposal for a change, but want to consider the operational aspects of the change in addition to the proposed benefits.

S

gsnyder828
June 24th, 2012, 06:17 PM
I know there has been talk about time differential in the expert fast as well.



I hear ya - and agree. I run expert medium b/c I'd get in the way of the truly fast guys. That means I practice in Slow/Med combined a lot and go through a lot of slow traffic. And yet there are folks slower than me who practice in expert fast... I guess there's no perfect system. 8)

loujr
June 24th, 2012, 08:57 PM
I personally think expert medium rocks because there are so few people in it, you can really break the track apart and work section by section to put it together in the race. The expert slow/medium combined really does help with setting up passing . I ran expert fast once and learned that I brake wayyyyyy to early, back to medium to work on it.

d_mob
June 24th, 2012, 10:47 PM
I went out in Exp M last round and almost cornholed someone coming in/out of 3a/3b. I would guess there was a 20sec per lap time difference.

I'm sure I've been the cornholee on a couple of occasions in Exp F as well. :?

At minimum we should at least post recommended group time slots.

For example (HPR)...

Exp F - 1: - 1:57
Exp M - 1:57 - 2:05
Exp S - 2:05 - 2:

PS... Rename it A, B and C like other clubs to not have riders feel criticized for being "slow" (i.e. 250's, NOVs, etc).

PPS... Other orgs like NESBA and WERA make people earn "A" status by running/qualifying with a certain time and being added to a list. FWIW.

loujr
June 24th, 2012, 11:16 PM
That's a great idea!!! However with as busy as the Mra staff is on race day, if someone doesn't follow the "recommendation" do they have the time to have that talk? How can we enforce a recommendation, as its not a rule? I think the fast/slow thing is fine we shouldn't be so sensitive it is really not that big of a deal is it? A, B ,C , still means fast, medium, slow no matter what you name it.

mkdiehl
June 25th, 2012, 12:54 AM
I like Mobley's idea.....but maybe extend it to all 5 (?) practice sessions....meaning don't have it as novice/expert but even more brackets of suggested times.

I say that because I believe there are some experts that may be more comfortable/run similar times to some of the novices....this would get rid of the 20 sec difference between expert slow riders, maybe?

It would also allow the faster novices to learn from the experts that are slightly faster. In my case, for example, I would like to opportunity to follow Mobley, Nick, etc around a little more than the first 4 corners of the AM races to see if I can't pull myself up to them a little more (although still quite a gap). But as Ken suggested, not at the expense of abandoning the Novice season at this point.

Lou; your statment about learning you brake too early makes my point. You were able to ride with a faster group and learned something.....that is my point with mixing novices and experts.

As far as policing it, I don't think that is necessary to have the Board spend time doing that. As it has been suggested before, it is practice; nobody wins. If someone wants to run a faster or slower group, so be it....but right now they don't have that choice in some cases at all. Maybe just a friendly reminder during the 7:45 meeting each day.

Nick suggested the difference in practice times for one given person varying....which i agree with. My first sessions on Saturday are sometimes 8 seconds slower than my final practice session......is that typical for most to warm up gradually? Seems to be from what i see. But i would still know which session i should be in.

Nick: You suggested there may be issues with combining novice and experts. This was the argument that I thought would come up first. I can see experts not necessarily wanting to run practice with novices, regardless of speed....just a fact that we don't have the same amount of track time and could make mistakes causing experts some unneeded stress. I completely get that. We did start a race 4 times last round.....

Rybo; you mentioned that it is easy to tell novices from experts and that makes policing practice easier. Policing what? The pre grid people still check the stickers before we go out on the track.....not our number plates necessarily. If you think that people could go out in multiple sessions easier, I could see that. Although there is some of that going on now already, so the current system doesn't prevent that either. And yes, people progress. Especially novices. So as you progress you get a different color sticker....at reach riders' decision. I would have been on the +2:00 club the first race. Last race I would have moved to a faster group....yippe, I earned my green sticker.

5 colored stickers.......done.

Again, not asking for it to change for this weekend or even this year. In fact, this wasn't supposed to be MY crusade. Just giving a perspective and wondering what others' are.

mkdiehl
June 25th, 2012, 07:18 AM
It also just occurs to me why I like this idea. The 250's do this. For qualifying they all go out together. Last year this allowed me to go out with Tony, Tracy etc and follow their lines. It instantly made me faster, instead of running around hoping not to get run over in novice practice.

Yeeker
June 25th, 2012, 08:55 AM
Since its been brought up here as well as other threads, I'd like to emphasize that I don't see why we couldn't self-police group placement in the speed-based system just as we do the current system (with use of stickers to ensure people go put with their registered group). There may be the tendency for new novices to overestimate their capabilities, however.

Also, since the time guidelines are just guidelines, perhaps they could overlap.
Group x: 1:57-2:10
Group y: 1:53-2:00

jeff healy
June 25th, 2012, 08:59 AM
Crap! Lou let the ex med secret out of the bag! Now it's gonna be packed :) lol I just run it cuz the sticker matches my bike :shock:

spideyrdr
June 25th, 2012, 09:50 AM
I'd like to specifically point out frustration I have with the novice combined practices. You've got a ton of riders out there with a huge spread in ability on every conceivable machine. Novices on 1000's and even 600's doing sub-2 minute times at HPR coming up on a new racer on a 250 - scary. On the flip side, if you find yourself coming up on a slower rider and decide it's not time to pass (it's practice, no one's getting a trophy to pass deep in a corner during practice), you might get some superstar on a 250 determined to blow by both of you at an inopportune time, and it can get just as unsafe.

I would love to see all novice practices split instead of just the one split practice session. The morning schedule is super tight, I get that, and there is no solution to make everyone happy, but I would be all in favor of having two novice practice sessions per hour to give everyone a chance to get out without it being an exercise in danger avoidance. I definitely like the idea of suggested lap times to help everyone gauge where they fit best, and leave it up to self policing as much as possible.

Just one guys thoughts on it.

Cheers,
Jamie

d_mob
June 25th, 2012, 10:22 AM
It also just occurs to me why I like this idea. The 250's do this. For qualifying they all go out together. Last year this allowed me to go out with Tony, Tracy etc and follow their lines. It instantly made me faster, instead of running around hoping not to get run over in novice practice.

To clarify, if and when we make the change, it shouldn't be so people can follow others and learn, but to make practice safer and keep 'like' speed groups together.

I'm not showing you anything else Matt. You are getting fast enough as-is!

PS... Maybe you should learn to take your tire warmers off before heading out to pre-grid first anyway. Ooooohhh deep burn (literally)! :)

mkdiehl
June 25th, 2012, 12:12 PM
When we get to moto gp I promise I won't follow you. Until then, I will pick up anything I can from whoever I can.

....and it was practice, not pregrid. :roll:

KFinn
June 25th, 2012, 12:37 PM
I hear what everyone is saying. It took me some time to read the entire thread.

But consider this... We are not new riders to motorcycling. We are more advanced riders. We all have commented about the dangers or being on the track with others.

So a partially rhetorical question for all of you to really think about.... Why do we need to split up the novice practice sessions or change from the current system? We are all adults, we have recognized the risks so don't we just need to make sure we keep our head about us in practice or during a race and always be making good judgements?

I am also not against changing something in the system if it is broke. But we should always keep personal responsibility and good judgements a factor in any process of the system. And I think all that have commented are so I wasn't pointing fingers.

:)

mkdiehl
June 25th, 2012, 01:01 PM
Kevin,
The current system obvioulsy "works" but could it be better and safer.

Better in that you won't have to go through a corner at 60% so that you don't stuff another rider who is significantly slower than you....and can actually use practice to see how changes you made helped or hurt your lap times.

Safer in that there isn't such a large desparity in speed which is dangerous.

Yeeker
June 25th, 2012, 01:11 PM
Why not continual improvement? Would any of us say that the sport is safe enough? If we could prevent a single incident, would the change have been worth it?

It's still not clear to me that there are any disadvantages to the "proposal"other than it works ok for most.

loujr
June 25th, 2012, 01:14 PM
Crap! Lou let the ex med secret out of the bag! Now it's gonna be packed :) lol I just run it cuz the sticker matches my bike :shock:


:shock: didn't really think about that....crap....forget what I said....expert medium is nuts....ninjas with swords, everywhere....stay away from expert medium its a war zone... :D

dave.gallant
June 25th, 2012, 01:20 PM
Classification is based on experience, not lap times.

I feel far safer with the closing speeds in expert practices than novice practice simply because white-plate-riders TEND to hold their line consistently from corner to corner and don't dart for the apex.

Your talent is beckoning you for white plates Mr Diehl. Come to the dark side. We have cookies.

KFinn
June 25th, 2012, 01:25 PM
I feel far safer with the closing speeds in expert practices than novice practice
+1

KFinn
June 25th, 2012, 01:26 PM
We did start a race 4 times last round.....
hehe +1

mkdiehl
June 25th, 2012, 01:31 PM
"Your talent is beckoning you for white plates Mr Diehl. Come to the dark side. We have cookies."


.....most likely won't matter for me next year.....250's are calling me.....so i can't really afford to eat any cookies, too much weight.

loujr
June 25th, 2012, 01:36 PM
I'll take his cookies don't think it will matter too much for me.... :oops:

KFinn
June 25th, 2012, 01:44 PM
I'll take his cookies don't think it will matter too much for me.... :oops:LMAO!!!!

d_mob
June 25th, 2012, 09:08 PM
Well we're off-topic, which probably means the original thread will be forgotten and nothing will change.

And not that it needs to... I propose that we leave NOV and EXP practice sessions separate, but just post recommended grouping times for each as referenced earlier.

Obviously each track would have a separate set of times and could simply be covered in rider meeting and posted on pre-grid board. Simple. Safe. Effective.

PS... For the record, I still think we should race @ Miller. Sorry, off-topic, but more productive discussion than cookies.

loujr
June 25th, 2012, 10:01 PM
Ok we have more cookies available, as Mr. Mobley isn't a cookie fan either....any takers?? 8)

Desmodromico
June 26th, 2012, 08:19 AM
Lots of us unfortunate souls get few if any trackdays so morning practice becomes very important. If I have to spend the session dodging bikes it is hard to concentrate on improving and preparing for the race. I understand Endurance has the same issues, but at least by then you have some track time under your belt.

Saturday practice this weekend will be my chance to learn the new Pueblo configuration, setup suspension, and figure out tires in addition to getting my testicles to drop....that's a lot to do without mixing in people running 1:58's in front of me.

polar x
June 26th, 2012, 10:35 AM
If I have to spend the session dodging bikes it is hard to concentrate on improving and preparing for the race. I understand Endurance has the same issues, but at least by then you have some track time under your belt.

that's a lot to do without mixing in people running 1:58's in front of me.

Honestly, does it reallly matter? You are either "that guy" or you are dodging "that guy" There will never be a practice where everyone on the track is running the same times. It would be nice, (boring) but I prefer to know that the person I am getting ready to strip the paint off of will do what I expect them to and for the person getting ready to rip my paint off I will do what they expect as well. That the biggest reason to have seperation in my opinion. There are plenty of Ams and Novs that hold a line, and not get spooked. And there are some experts who will make you puker when they dive in from out of no where or unexpectedly. But they are the minority. Keep it the way it is... Though its a nice mental exercise for the future.

PS...this is not directed at you....just using your example. :wink:

Sprtbkbabe
June 26th, 2012, 12:19 PM
:lol: Practice is just that, Practice, right?

Expert Slow gets the creature comforts of ya crazy bastids on 250's who are QUALIFYING :lol: :lol:

d_mob
June 26th, 2012, 02:56 PM
So...

What are the recommended practice group time brackets for Pueblo this coming weekend?

EXP-F - x : xx
EXP-M - x : xx
EXP-S - x : xx

NOV-F - x : xx
NOV-M - x : xx
NOV-S - x : xx

mkdiehl
June 26th, 2012, 03:04 PM
U R Dreaming........

Fastt Racing
June 26th, 2012, 04:38 PM
Dmob I like your persistence, so I will help to throw some ideas. There is only enough time for 5 groups in the practice schedule.
Ex Fast <1:37?
Ex Med 1:35 - 1:48?
Ex Slow >1:46?
I can't remember any of the lap times from last season, and don't know how fast the track will be now, so these are just example times!
Nov Fast <1:42?
Nov Slow >1:40

loujr
June 26th, 2012, 06:11 PM
With t10 being a little different I don't know how comparable old times would be, I guess we could look at track records and go from there?

Mforza
June 26th, 2012, 10:09 PM
If I have to spend the session dodging bikes it is hard to concentrate on improving and preparing for the race. I understand Endurance has the same issues, but at least by then you have some track time under your belt.

that's a lot to do without mixing in people running 1:58's in front of me.

Honestly, does it reallly matter? You are either "that guy" or you are dodging "that guy" There will never be a practice where everyone on the track is running the same times. It would be nice, (boring) but I prefer to know that the person I am getting ready to strip the paint off of will do what I expect them to and for the person getting ready to rip my paint off I will do what they expect as well. That the biggest reason to have seperation in my opinion. There are plenty of Ams and Novs that hold a line, and not get spooked. And there are some experts who will make you puker when they dive in from out of no where or unexpectedly. But they are the minority. Keep it the way it is... Though its a nice mental exercise for the future.

PS...this is not directed at you....just using your example. :wink:

+1! :D

Desmodromico
June 27th, 2012, 03:30 PM
Other than feeling like you won the practice trophy I don't understand the allure of practicing in a session with other bikes going 15-20 seconds a lap slower than you, sometimes in groups...it's just a recommendation, if you don't make the time you don't get chewed out.

Seems simple but I guess nothing ever is here...

polar x
June 28th, 2012, 04:04 PM
Other than feeling like you won the practice trophy I don't understand the allure of practicing in a session with other bikes going 15-20 seconds a lap slower than you, sometimes in groups...it's just a recommendation, if you don't make the time you don't get chewed out.

Seems simple but I guess nothing ever is here...

Soooo 8-[ are there any races, expert or otherwise, in which the times from the first place rider is less than 15-20 secs to the last place rider?

And you right, nothing is ever simple in this group. sorta makes it more interesting :wink:

d_mob
June 28th, 2012, 04:17 PM
If I have to spend the session dodging bikes it is hard to concentrate on improving and preparing for the race. I understand Endurance has the same issues, but at least by then you have some track time under your belt.

that's a lot to do without mixing in people running 1:58's in front of me.

Honestly, does it reallly matter? You are either "that guy" or you are dodging "that guy" There will never be a practice where everyone on the track is running the same times. It would be nice, (boring) but I prefer to know that the person I am getting ready to strip the paint off of will do what I expect them to and for the person getting ready to rip my paint off I will do what they expect as well. That the biggest reason to have seperation in my opinion. There are plenty of Ams and Novs that hold a line, and not get spooked. And there are some experts who will make you puker when they dive in from out of no where or unexpectedly. But they are the minority. Keep it the way it is... Though its a nice mental exercise for the future.

PS...this is not directed at you....just using your example. :wink:

To answer your question yes, it does matter. Sam was out in E-Med the other day at HPR running 57's I believe. There was someone on track with him running 1:20+ lap times on a 600cc bike.

I understand that E-Slow has 250 qualifying mixed in, but PLEASE, run that session if it is where you belong. On the flip-side, run E-Fast if you belong there (i.e. don't run Med just b/c there are fewer people).

For the 892nd time, I don't want to change the NOV / EXP seperation. In fact, we aren't changing anything with my proposal. Simply adding "recommended" practice grouping times. Simple enough, even for the EM-ARE-AYYYY!

d_mob
June 28th, 2012, 04:19 PM
I'm going to look at the times on Friday and see if I can come up with some time groupings that make sense. If I can and people approve, I'll print up and post prior to practice on Saturday.

Anyone against this?

Scored51
June 29th, 2012, 12:31 AM
Bring your own paper! :lol:

Here's my suggestion for practice groups...

http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c18/wilmer_alvarez/Harry%20Potter/HARRY_POTTER_SORCERERS_STONE-26.jpg

HAMMER
June 29th, 2012, 03:40 AM
:shock: why ??? go aroud the slow people and follow the fast ... yall need to not worry about traffic ...only ror and ninj cup qualify so whos complaining? only i would crash trying to be on front row ... ( idiot)

polar x
June 29th, 2012, 11:09 AM
Mobley, while I understand your point, I just don't see it as a problem when I am out there. We see it during racing, big lap time differences between first and last. Why should practice be any different?

Now if you are specifically calling out some of the slower 250's then I agree, move them to expert slow, IF they are that slow. But tony, hammer, lars, me and a few others are not in the way in the infield, only down the long straight which I am sure you and the others can pass.

Practice should be like racing, and in every race I run in, (just like you) there is a 20+ sec difference from first to last place riders.

What you are proposing would be better suited to a track day. So guys can work on corners, or brake markers or whatever. We already have in place a means to move slow guys back to slow practice, just use it. Go ask Brownie to move A,B or C or all three to a different group if they pose a percived risk to you or others.

Again not directed at you, just a different point of view and opinion.

d_mob
June 29th, 2012, 01:44 PM
"Not directed at me"??? The first word was Mobley. Couldn't be more directed at me. :?

Saying "not directed at you" when it clearly is, is the equivalent of starting a sentence with "no offense" and then proceeding to call someone a moron.

Meh... I give up. Apparently people are making fun of me for starting this drama anyway (not directed @ Applehans, Gallant and Rose). :)

Scratch that, my newest recommendation is to give everyone their own personal 10 minute practice session. We'll begin Friday night and should be done before Sunday races!

polar x
July 2nd, 2012, 11:06 AM
"Not directed at me"??? The first word was Mobley. Couldn't be more directed at me. :?



So then lets change that to I am not attacking you...Feel better :roll: This was directed at you. 8)

I am done.....should have kept with my current course and stayed out of drama and opinions on this board. Tony gave me good advice years ago, I followed and stayed low.

Bueller999
July 2nd, 2012, 11:27 AM
Tony gave me good advice years ago, I followed and stayed low.
Type out your long reply and get everything off your chest then let it set for a few minutes without hitting submit and then close your browser and your reply will disappear into the cyber void, it makes me feel better. :lol:

dave.gallant
July 2nd, 2012, 11:53 AM
Scratch that, my newest recommendation is to give everyone their own personal 10 minute practice session.

I second this motion as long as I can pick my own 10 minute time slot. (Between my Jerry Springer reruns and my Chinese Massage, my schedule gets a bit tight on race day)

sheispoison
July 2nd, 2012, 12:39 PM
Scratch that, my newest recommendation is to give everyone their own personal 10 minute practice session.

I second this motion as long as I can pick my own 10 minute time slot. (Between my Jerry Springer reruns and my Chinese Massage, my schedule gets a bit tight on race day)
If by Jerry Springer reruns and my Chinese Massage you mean constantly fucking with your bike and every single nut and bolt on it then yeah, I can see that... :P

dave.gallant
July 2nd, 2012, 12:40 PM
Scratch that, my newest recommendation is to give everyone their own personal 10 minute practice session.

I second this motion as long as I can pick my own 10 minute time slot. (Between my Jerry Springer reruns and my Chinese Massage, my schedule gets a bit tight on race day)
If by Jerry Springer reruns and my Chinese Massage you mean constantly fucking with your bike and every single nut and bolt on it then yeah, I can see that... :P

I did not fuck my bike this weekend.

I swear.