SalsaMTB
06-06-2007, 05:35 AM
I'm racing in our local off-road point series and doing really well. This is my first year racing so I selected the beginner women 19-29 group. In my class though, there isn't much competition. There is basically myself, and one (maybe two) other girls that are doing the actual series. For each race, a couple other women will show up, but they're never the same people and they aren't doing the series.
So, here's the situation. I've completed 3 races and got 1st, 2nd, 1st. The second place finish was to a random girl that races for the local university and not doing the point series. It's very unlikely that I'll see her again (she's on the other side of the state, where that one race was), but it was great competition, she beat me by 14 seconds. The one girl I keep beating I beat by about 7-10 minutes on a 10 miles course. At the last race, when I got to the starting line, I looked around and saw there was no new competition and knew that I had the race, so I didn't have to push myself that hard.
When I look at the results for the beginner women 30+ group, I would have good competition. The top couple girls have times similar to mine, so if I was a couple years older, it would be a totally different situation. Because of this, I don't think I'm necessarily in the wrong class, it's just there are a lack of racers for my age group, so there isn't much competition. Does that make sense? I've been checking out the next class up, Sport Women, and there are more consistent racers and more people doing the point series (5). The top three would smoke me in a race, the bottom 2 I might be able to hang with. Sport class does double the distance though (beginner will do 1 lap, sport does 2) so I can compare lap times, but they are doing 2 laps so it's tough to know if I could keep the pace consistent for another lap.
If I were to move up to sport, my points will transfer and I would be in 4th place. I know there is no chance in getting top 3 (those girls are smokin fast) but it could be a good challenge for 4th. I'll basically be handing over 1st place beginner to the other girl I was racing, double my mileage for each race and have major competition.
Most of my teammates think I should stick with beginner and just be happy I did well, enjoy the medals, and race sport next year. DH thinks I should move up, as does one guy on my team that's racing expert this year. Me, I sort of think I should move up, it will motivate me to train harder. The one thing that's killing me though is the next race...it's a marathon XC race on a trail with the most climbing. For beginner, it would be 28 miles, for sport 42!!! Yikes...42 miles! I don't know if I can handle 42 miles of off road riding. That is a TON of distance that I've never even come close to doing.
So, what would you girls do. Take the challenge, give up the awards and move up to sport? Or, enjoy the rest of your first year racing in beginner and be proud of your accomplishments?
Oh, one last thing. To qualify for the point series, you have to compete in 5 races. There are a total of 8 races in the series and your top 5 finishes will count. There have been 3 races so far, so there is still a chance more people could enter the series, but unlikely because the next race normally doesn't have high turnout due to the distance.
So, here's the situation. I've completed 3 races and got 1st, 2nd, 1st. The second place finish was to a random girl that races for the local university and not doing the point series. It's very unlikely that I'll see her again (she's on the other side of the state, where that one race was), but it was great competition, she beat me by 14 seconds. The one girl I keep beating I beat by about 7-10 minutes on a 10 miles course. At the last race, when I got to the starting line, I looked around and saw there was no new competition and knew that I had the race, so I didn't have to push myself that hard.
When I look at the results for the beginner women 30+ group, I would have good competition. The top couple girls have times similar to mine, so if I was a couple years older, it would be a totally different situation. Because of this, I don't think I'm necessarily in the wrong class, it's just there are a lack of racers for my age group, so there isn't much competition. Does that make sense? I've been checking out the next class up, Sport Women, and there are more consistent racers and more people doing the point series (5). The top three would smoke me in a race, the bottom 2 I might be able to hang with. Sport class does double the distance though (beginner will do 1 lap, sport does 2) so I can compare lap times, but they are doing 2 laps so it's tough to know if I could keep the pace consistent for another lap.
If I were to move up to sport, my points will transfer and I would be in 4th place. I know there is no chance in getting top 3 (those girls are smokin fast) but it could be a good challenge for 4th. I'll basically be handing over 1st place beginner to the other girl I was racing, double my mileage for each race and have major competition.
Most of my teammates think I should stick with beginner and just be happy I did well, enjoy the medals, and race sport next year. DH thinks I should move up, as does one guy on my team that's racing expert this year. Me, I sort of think I should move up, it will motivate me to train harder. The one thing that's killing me though is the next race...it's a marathon XC race on a trail with the most climbing. For beginner, it would be 28 miles, for sport 42!!! Yikes...42 miles! I don't know if I can handle 42 miles of off road riding. That is a TON of distance that I've never even come close to doing.
So, what would you girls do. Take the challenge, give up the awards and move up to sport? Or, enjoy the rest of your first year racing in beginner and be proud of your accomplishments?
Oh, one last thing. To qualify for the point series, you have to compete in 5 races. There are a total of 8 races in the series and your top 5 finishes will count. There have been 3 races so far, so there is still a chance more people could enter the series, but unlikely because the next race normally doesn't have high turnout due to the distance.