Television doesn’t do
track racing justice, but it’s possible to get hooked as a live
spectator. Just lean against the balustrade in turns one or three when
there’s a long pace line warming up before a race. The lead rider,
instead of following the curve, goes straight up the banking at the turn,
floats a moment at the top, and dives back to the bottom perfectly placed
at the end of the line, all in the space of 30 meters or less. Or stand
outside a wooden track next to its superstructure during the sprint lap of
a points race or Madison. It’s something like standing next to the
Gemini when both coasters go by–minus the screaming passengers. Better
still, if you’re able to beg, borrow, or buy a track bike, all it will
take is one time around. But you won’t stop there, just rolling along
the bottom. No, the lure of the higher realm is much too great a force to
resist. At the top of a steep track the transitions are intense, a
mini-roller every 100 meters. Once you feel comfortable in the
transitions, you’ll wind it up there at the top and take a flyer from
the peak of turn two, aiming for the bottom of the track in turn three.
Try and hold it in the sprinter’s lane going around; the G’s push you
up the track. Now you’re hooked.
The Velodrome
Non-Profit Corporation reports at its website
that the Mike Walden Velodrome in Rochester Hills is scheduled to open
3 June 2001.The velodrome directors include Frankie Andreu, David Young,
and Dale Hughes. The track itself is being prefabricated by the same
company that built the EDS Superdrome of Plano, Texas and the Stone
Mountain Velodrome used in the Atlanta Olympics and is being assembled
with volunteer help. It will be 200 meters around at the measurement line
and 6 meters wide with 12 degree banking in the straightaways and 45
degree banking in the corners. The surface will be a wood/resin composite
with a steel undercarriage supported by over 300 concrete footings. The
manufacturer rates this surface as having a 10 year "premium"
outdoor life span. The velodrome is scheduled to be open daily during
daylight hours. User fees will cover costs like insurance and general
maintenance.
Forty-five degrees is
steep. Major Taylor in Indianapolis, which is 333 meters around, has 28
degree banking in the corners. Kenosha, Wisconsin and Northbrook, Illinois
are slightly smaller and both less steep. The old Dorias track up in
Detroit was about 28 degrees before it crumbled, and Dale Hughes’s old
plywood portable track had 48 degree corners. Knowing these angles, the
new drome’s directors and their Walden/Wolverine persuasion, it’s safe
to say that there will be some sort of required orientation for neophytes–say
those who are less than a cat 4 or 3 on the track. And, I bet, track bikes
will be mandatory.
I thought that I’d put
this ditty out while everybody’s 2001 cycling budget is still in the
planning stage, knowing some of you hard-cores out there are assured of
finding yet another ultimate cycling rush on the track. Especially this
track; it’s steep and state-of-the-art. It’s making me feel a bit
born-too-late, reliving all of those 462-mile round-trip Friday night
trips to Indy, but don’t ask me to sell. No, I’m dusting off my trusty
Bianchi Pista, going over my wheels, cogs, and chain rings.
David Teall And now
see the rest of the story here.