John, (and other brave ones who rode/wants to ride tech stuff in the future).
Now, in retrospect, many things become clear and apparent. Live and learn…live and learn.
The course wasn’t that technical. You’re right about the “somewhat” part. If you compare the difficulty of this course with a typical Gilmourian course, it’d be 6-7 on a 10-difficulty scale. If anyone wants to ague or question that, just ride JG course at full throttle. I mean, try to ride JG course at full throttle. I know I’ll be breaking 8.0-second barrier on Cyber well before I feel comfy on the high-speed tech stuff. But. It’d be hell if one of your courses were actually a racecourse! 20 cones DQ? Or 19?
The low-tech aspects of the course were:
1. Rhythmic sections
2. Mellow curve
3. Ability to be centered over practically every cone
There was pushing for the greater number of DQ-cones, but the Florida and Plankk-R voted for 6-DQ rule, as we had an equipment advantage. That was not fair to the rest of the field on GS boards and other wrong set-ups, but it was, on the other hand, a wake up call to the industry representatives and it did work in favor of those skaters who find that kind of racing interesting AND keep some stuff for it handy.
To bargain something, it pays to jack up the price, then to find a compromise. When you and Chaput were arguing for 7-8 cones, Tight S guys with the right tools at hand said 5. We then agreed on 6. The rule I voted for killed me at the end, when I was able to make up 1.5 seconds on McCree in our second run, but DQd again. It must have been physical exhaustion, really, I’m not blaming the course or the rules. In retrospect, 7 or 8 should have been a DQ on that course. Not to benefit anyone in particular, but to make that race better for everyone.
1.5 sec. penalty was proposed to compensate for the low number of DQ cones. A good skater with the right equipment should have had no problem whatsoever making up 1.5 sec on this course in case of the first run DQ. So the 1.5 sec DQ was there to balance the things out, and it immediately found great support in the masses. I really loved that rule, but it didn’t help me.
A word on setting that course. I dropped the cones and they “chocked” them. No modifications were made. If the majority of people were to complain about a certain thing, it would have been changed. Chris didn’t like my tribute to the FCR (the last 3 cones) at first, but he ended up skating them MUCH better then myself in the end. His in-sync run with Gareth was one of the highlights of the G3.
The race favored TS set-ups, and the majority of people who voted for this technical TS course were on TS boards.
John, do you suggest to follow ISSA, modified ISSA or some other rules at comps like that (not Gathering in particular, but Tech Slalom in general)?
It would be great if the ISSA and new USSSR(f) rules are very close.
Can I be a head assistant to a cone marshal under ISSA in USA? Or a janitor for USSSF? Or both? I gotta start somewhere
Vlad.
PS It amazes me John, that you being such a huge fan of TS (technical slalom) come to a competition with a GS set-up. Paul Dunn laughed at me and turned away my offer to skate for Plankk-R. If you want, we can talk.