Track cycling
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Track cycling is a bicycle racing sport usually held on specially-built banked tracks or velodromes (but many events are held at older velodromes where the track banking is relatively shallow) using track bicycles.
Track racing is also done on grass tracks marked out on flat sportsfields. Such events are particularly common during the summer in Scotland at Highland Games gatherings, but there are also regular summer events in England.
Many individuals ride a fixed gear or fixed wheel bicycle for regular transport and have adapted the track bike (usually with a front brake added) as an alternative to the multi-geared freewheel bicycle.
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[edit] Riding position
The bicycles are designed to reduce aerodynamic drag caused by the machine itself and the rider's racing position.
Handlebars on track bikes used for longer events such as the points race are similar to the drop bars found on road bicycles. The riding position is also similar to the road racing position.
In the sprint event the rider's position is more extreme compared with a road rider. The bars are lower and the saddle is higher and more forward. Bars are often narrower with a deeper drop. Steel bars are still used by many sprinters for their higher rigidity and durability.
In timed events such as the pursuit and the kilo, riders often use aerobars or 'triathlon bars' similar to those found on road time trial bicycles, allowing the rider to position their arms closer together in front of their body. This results in a more horizontal back and presents the minimum frontal area to reduce drag. Aerobars can be separate bars that are attached to time trial/ bull horn bars, or they can be a one-piece monocoque design. These aerobars are only allowed in pursuit and time trial events.
Formats of track cycle races are also heavily influenced by aerodynamics. If one rider closely follows, they draft or slipstream another, because the leading rider pushes air around themselves; any rider closely following has to push out less air than the lead rider and thus can travel at the same speed while expending less effort. This fact has led to a variety of racing styles that allow clever riders or teams to exploit this tactical advantage, as well as formats that simply test strength, speed and endurance.
During the early 1990s in individual pursuit events, some riders, most notably Graeme Obree, adopted a straight-armed Superman-like position with their arms fully extended horizontally, but this position was subsequently outlawed by the Union Cycliste Internationale, the sport's ruling body. Recumbent bicycles can actually be ridden faster, but are banned from UCI competition. The International Human Powered Vehicle Association is a separate organisation that runs recumbent races, including the human-powered speed record.
[edit] Main centres
Track cycling is particularly popular in Europe, notably Belgium, France, Germany and the United Kingdom where it is often used as off-season training by road racers (professional six-day 'Madison' events were often entered by two-man teams comprising a leading road racer and a track specialist).
The sport also has significant followings in Japan and Australia. It is part of the Summer Olympic Games, and there are UCI Track World Championships as well as circuits of professional events in many areas.
In the United States, track racing reached a peak of popularity in the 1930s when six-day races were held in Madison Square Garden in New York. The word "Madison" is still used as the name for this type of race in six-day racing.
[edit] Race formats
Some of the most common race formats include:
- Individual pursuit
- Team pursuit
- Team sprint
- Sprint
- Track time trial
- Points race
- Madison
- Keirin
- Handicap
- Miss and Out, elimination or 'Devil Take the Hindmost'
- Motor-paced events, such as Keirin racing - cyclists draft behind a derny, sometimes using specialized track bikes called stayers
- Scratch race
- Omnium
[edit] Track records
In addition to regular track racing, tracks are also the venue for many cycling records. These are over either a fixed distance or for a fixed period of time. The most famous of these is the hour record, which involves simply riding as far as possible in one hour. The history of the hour record is replete with exploits by some of the greatest names in cycling from both road and track racing (including, among others, Major Taylor, Henri Desgrange, Fausto Coppi, Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Francesco Moser, Miguel Indurain and Tony Rominger). Originally, attempts were made at velodromes with reputations for being fast (such as the Velodromo Vigorelli in Milan). More recently, attempts have moved to high-altitude locations, such as Mexico City, where the thinner air results in lower aerodynamic drag, which more than offsets the added difficulty of breathing. Innovations in equipment and the rider's position on the bike have also led to dramatic improvements in the hour record, but have also been a source of controversy (see Graeme Obree).
[edit] Links to Individual Velodromes
- See also: Velodrome
Cities that host the Summer Olympic games usually construct a new velodrome for the event. World-class competition quality tracks not yet included in this section are located in Moscow, Seoul, Barcelona, Sydney and Athens.
Country | Velodrome | Location | Notes |
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Australia | |||
Dunc Gray velodrome | Sydney, New South Wales | Constructed for 2000 Summer Olympics | |
Silverdome | Launceston, Tasmania | First indoor track in Australia[1]. Banked. Built 1984. | |
Canada | |||
Glenmore Velodrome | Calgary, Alberta | 39 degree banked, 400m outdoor concrete track. | |
Forest City Velodrome | London, Ontario | 50 degree banked, 138m track constructed in 2005. | |
Burnaby Velodrome | Vancouver | 200m track constructed mid-1990s | |
Juan de Fuca Velodrome | Victoria, British Columbia | 333m track constructed for the 1994 Commonwealth Games | |
China | Laoshan Velodrome | Beijing | Under construction for 2008 Summer Olympics |
United Kingdom | |||
The Calshot Velodrome | Calshot (near Southampton) | Short steeply banked track | |
Herne Hill Velodrome | London | a track in a shallow concrete bowl, constructed in 1891. | |
Manchester Velodrome | Manchester | 250m track constructed in 1994 | |
Wales National Velodrome | Newport | Welsh National Velodrome opened in 2003 | |
United States | |||
Major Taylor Veldrome | Indianapolis, IN | MTV is a 333.34 meter outdoor track with banked turns of 28 degrees and straights banked at 9 degrees. Has been the home for many national and international competitions, including the 1987 Pan American Games. | |
National Sports Center Velodrome | Blaine, Minnesota (near Minneapolis) | 333m outdoor wooden track, 43 degree banking; constructed in 1990. | |
Dick Lane Velodrome | East Point, Georgia (near Atlanta) | 323.4m outdoor concrete track, 36 degree max banking. | |
The Alkek Velodrome | Houston, Texas | 33 degree banked, outdoor concrete track, 333.33m. | |
The Superdrome | Frisco, Texas (near Dallas) | 44 degree banked, outdoor wooden track, 250m. | |
Kenosha Velodrome | Kenosha, Wisconsin | 27 degree banked, outdoor, 333m; constructed in 1927. | |
Asheville Velodrome | Asheville, North Carolina | 4-8 degree banked, outdoor, 500m. Converted race car track. | |
LA Velodrome | Los Angeles, California | 250m track constructed in 2004 | |
Alpenrose Velodrome | Portland, Oregon | 44 degree banked, outdoor track. | |
Marymoor Velodrome | Redmond, Washington | 25 degree banked, 400m outdoor concrete track; built 1974, resurfaced 2005. | |
Kissena Velodrome | Flushing, Queens (New York City, New York) | 400m outdoor; constructed in 1962, resurfaced in 2004.[2] | |
Lehigh Valley Velodrome | Trexlertown, Pennsylvania | 28 degree banked, 333m outdoor concrete track; built 1975, renovated 1996. | |
San Diego Velodrome | San Diego, California | 27 degree banked, 333.3m outdoor concrete track, built 1976 | |
Ed Rudolph Velodrome | Northbrook, Illinois (near Chicago) | 18 degree banked, 382m outdoor asphalt track, built 1959, renovated 2004. | |
Hellyer Park Velodrome | San Jose, California | ||
Penrose Park | St. Louis, Missouri | 28 degree banked, 322m outdoor concrete track, built 1962 (hosted Nat'l Championships in 1962), resurfaced in 1984 and 2005 | |
New England Velodrome | Londonderry, New Hampshire | 14 degree banked, 318m outdoor asphalt track, the track is primarily used for karting, however track events are held twice weekly. | |
Encino Velodrome | Encino, CA | 28 degree banked, 250m outdoor concrete track. | |
Hungary | Millenáris | Budapest | 412m outdoor concrete track, built 1896 |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Velodrome (www.velodrome.org.uk), A home for Track Cycling on the web
- TrackCyclingSA.co.za - South Africa's first dedicated track cycling site
- USA Cycling - Track
- British Cycling track news and information site
- Number one source for Track Equipment, Keirin Cycle Culture Cafe, Berlin
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