Category: TickerTape

  • TickerTape Summer Series 2011

     


    That’s right, the BCC TickerTape Summer Series is here!
    We’ve made some slight tweaks that we think everyone will like; every round is on a Sunday afternoon, they’re slightly shorter too and courses won’t be announced until the day of the event to prevent people racking up hundreds of practice runs.
    Also, as with last series, we’re being looked after by Rose Bikes who will be providing trophies and prizes at every round…they might even bring some demo bikes along for a play too.

    All this for £2 entry and some help setting up and packing away, not bad ey?

    See you Sunday, beans!

  • TickerTape Retro DH – Results

    Sunday’s race was a bit special, firstly it was themed a Retro Race, and secondly it was the last in the winter series, meaning that final standings and pride were at stake. The track was different from anything else we’ve raced so far, although it shared about 40meters of BBMS the two couldn’t be further appart in terms of flow or feel. Based on MCC (the Dinner ’til Dusk descent) the track was marked wide to encourage line choice, and drawn out to make pedalling a necessity. With no real features to speak of we were pleased to be able to allow riders with open face helmets meaning that the event was accessible to many who otherwise wouldn’t have take part. A featureless track may sound a bit tedious, especially one with no bermed corners on a track that consisted of a wide loamy channel, but I can honestly say that it generated some of the most fun riding and close racing we’ve had all series.

    Now, as for the theme and dress code, well, lets just say that some people got more than a bit scared of lycra, peakless helmets and generally not looking super cool. It’s funny but this race also showed just how many riders we have who consider a non carbon v10 to be retro and their oldest kit is newer than any of mine!

    Thankfully the vast majority got into the spirit of things and took off their peaks and donned the funkiest looking riding gear they could find. Worthy of a special mention are Chris smith who was sporting the saggiest lycra bibs I think I’ve ever seen, (if he’d have worn his Rock Shox beanie I would have wee’d a bit) Dan Irons who looked like a pro GT rider from the 90’s thanks in no small part to the best looking bullet helmet ever made, the giro madmax, and Garry Newton who managed to make us laugh even more than normal by riding in both retro lycra and on a pair or Red Ritchy Zmax tyres that made him look like he was riding in different (far wetter) conditions to the rest of us. Hero.

    Now for the racing.

    Sam Chedgy managed to put in an good early time that meant he was fastest for the first quarter of an hour, but it wasn’t long before some more riders started penning up their times and the board started to fill up… Curtis Saunders struggled to get to grips with the idea of non-bermed corners as he managed to come off his bike on almost every run due to his kamikaze like corner commitment. Ben Irons suffered a mechanical right at the start meaning that he was reliant upon the generosity all day so had his work cut out. Chris Smith put in some fast times right from the start, but then decided to play cat and mouse rather than over exert himself, something he may now be regretting. Liam Arkell was, as has come to be expected, flying up the leader board with his Pocket Rocket style and ability to chip away every run. I was off the pace except for one flying run, only to find out that the watch hadn’t recorded a time, gutted, Steve Corner impressed on his first ever TickerTape, looking to improve and learning fast. Andrew Armstrong also managed to put in a great performance in his first TickerTape taking 15 seconds off his time and giving his son a run for his money too. Chris Marsland put in some fast runs and looked suitably retro (as always) before racing Simon Truelove in a pump race in tribute to Chris’ home from home, Bath BMX . Ric Mclaughlin chickened out of wearing the MBUK skin suit but seemed to be having a great time racing his test Moerwood. Ric’s done two TickerTape special events now (Triple Crown and Retro) so he was familiar with the set-up and soon managed to take over 7 seconds off of his time. With over 30 riders competing the board managed to fill up pretty quick and has become an almost unreadable mess (hence the lack of results spreadsheet from me so far), thankfully Calum’s groupies didn’t want to race or else we would have needed to use the blackboard too.

    As for the results, well…

    Chris Smith was pipped to the win by Curtis who has owned every race he entered this series and Liam wasn’t far behind in 3rd. Steve Corner was awarded the King of the Hill T shirt for an awesome first attempt, and Curtis was awarded the Rose Bikes RAD award for his all out committed style over the day.

    As for best dressed, well I awarded that to myself for being more french that almost anyone could deal with.

    Thanks to everyone who helped set up and pack away, to Shimano for the race tape and Rose Bikes for the prizes.

    The Series round up and overall results will be published shortly…

    Check out the ace photos taken by Dan Irons of Facade Photography there’s also an awesome video by Liam Arkell showing the track in full, and some footage of lycra clad messing about taken after the race.




  • Retro DH – dress code.

    So, tomorrows event will have a dress code, which is; “as retro as you can manage”. If you don’t have anything retro to wear don’t worry, you’ll be asked to remove the peak from your helmet instead. That seems fair.

    See you tomorrow!


  • Puppet School

    Saturday was set to be wet and gloomy. The allotment had suffered more rain in the lead up to the 2nd round of the TickerTape Winter series than it had done in ages, the trails were soft and roots were slippery.

    Over the past few weeks a few die-hard members have been practising Puppets in an effort to put in some good times on the day. To be fair, most people have a couple of ‘practise runs’ in the lead up to any of the TickerTapes, but this was different, this was a display of more than a whimsical semi effort, this was all out dedication, and boy did it pay off…

    Within moments of the track being open Curtis Saunders marked up his first time, a time that would only be beaten by himself all day long. To put that into perspective Curtis was riding against Steve Geall, Chris Smith and Rob Lewis – all bloody quick but not in the same league on the day, Curtis was on fire.

    The track was a real mix of ground conditions with a sloppy start into an almost sandy mid section before some glassy roots then full on slop and corner ruts by the bottom – it was a real test, and one that evolved as the track was ridden.

    Liam Arkell showed the continued progression that he’s become known for, and a great attitude of getting back up and trying again when ever he came off. Tom Dunford was another rider that impressed; Tom rode the mid section with a really attacking style that looked fast and on the edge, a real step up and one that didn’t go unrewarded. Tom won the coveted Beans trophy while Liam was awarded a “king of the hill” T shirt both courtesy of Rose Bikes.

    Chris Smith made a brief appearance, taking a break from being a proud farther to ride his bike in the interest of keeping the “overall” in reach. Despite a pretty impressive effort given the lack of sleep and clear zombie look about him, Chris was off the pace placing 6th leaving him needing a pretty special performance in the last two rounds.

    Steve Geall was rocking an XC / Retro tyre mix with a Paneracer Trail Raker on the front and a Michelin DH Mud on the rear, but it worked well even with that poncey mudguard he’d bodged on the back. Steve rode well but got distracted by the urge to pull super-tweaks on the “WEEEEEEBOING” berm and lost valuable time.

    Jason Southam popped his TickerTape cherry, James Richards made too many excuses, Ben Lovell’s mum made the best cookies ever, Rob Lewis looked like he’d been sleeping rough for the past few days and rode like he had too, Jamie and Pip were hardcore (or stupid) riding to and from the event and racing in jeans, Keith seemed to get a little frightened of a big tree, Simon actually got to recored a time, Bob should have spent less time worrying about other people’s times and Ben Irons was seen riding a full sussseerrrrrrR.

    All in all it was a great day, one that had everyone wishing they’d shown even half the commitment that Curtis and others had in the lead up to the race. Sure if we all rode it on the same terms the times might have been a little different, but not the result, Curtis schooled every one of us.

    Thanks to everyone who helped set up and pack away, especially Ian Crook who came out early despite not being able to ride, to Rose Bikes for the great prizes and to Shimano for the race tape.

    (Click on the poster at the top of the page to see the overall standings)

  • TickerTape Winter Series – Rnd 2

    So after the last round was cancelled due to snow it’s fair to say that everyone is chomping at the bit. The series will be 4 rounds now, and so that we don’t miss out, this round is Puppets.

    Is Chris Smith going be a good dad and look after his newborn son, or is he going to “pop out for a bit on the bike…”?

    Will Ben Irons ride his new DH bike?

    Is Steve Geall gonna bunny hop really really high (we all want him to)?

    Can Curtis, Mark and Liam ride puppets with their eyes closed now that they’ve ridden it over 97 times each practising for this event?

    Saturday, 11:00 – 15:00

    Remember it’s members only, £2 suggested donation towards the timing equipment.

  • A new TickerTape champion is Crowned!

    Autumn is the best time of year by far, only in autumn do you get the perfect mix of soil conditions, light and temperature for all day riding with your mates. Not too hot, loads of grip and stunning colours everywhere you look. On sunday we were all lucky enough to be soaked in oranges and greens as we took part in the TickerTape Triple Crown, a special DH race event that we throw once a year. The format isn’t that different from the monthly TickerTapes we run, just that instead of one there are three tracks, only one run can be timed on each, and its the overall that counts, nothing else.

    For the first time ever we charged for entry so that we could raise some much needed cash to pay towards our new Freelap Timing equipment (5 more watches), at £10 a pop we raised over £300.

    With the promise of sausages, prizes and the chance to ride with some well known faces the day was well attended and the excitement clear to see. Ric McLaughlin (from MBUK), Chris smith (from every cover of MBUK), Jim Davage (from just about every DH race in the South West), his brother (from Jim’s roost) and Grant Fielder (from anywhere but a DH race) came along to sample the delights of some homegrown rider run DH racing, and I think it’s fair to say each one of them loved every minute of it.

    BBMS was the first track on the menu and it certainly tested people with its tight, almost annoyingly rooty and off camber stop startedness. But that’s the point, it’s a test and IT’S a hard one – no time for razzmatazz just precision and an ability to flow where there’s little on offer. Grant Fielder took the win by a good margin over the rest of us, he seemed just as surprised as he was happy but then this was his first ever DH race – a great start and one that made everyone else refocus – none more than Mr Smith who was trying to remember why he’d bothered to invite Chopper after all. It should be noted that although not successful, Ben Batt managed to ride BBMS faster than anyone else, BY FAR, and although not fully comprehendible he had a flat rear tyre. Jim Davage was the first to raise question over Ben’s mental stability, which was definitely in question for most of the afternoon. Neil Cousins looked slow but in a quick way, riding accurately on his trail center bike but then being slowed on his race run, knocking him out of contention for the overall.

    On to SPOONS and the all new line into the newly extended rock garden. There was little being said other than “that’s flipping lush now…!” and it’s times like that when all the hard work that goes into dig days is really appreciated – the rock garden was a raving success. The change in track type was also very welcome; riding the fast and jumpy SPOONS was ace, we were warmed up and dialled-in. The step-down is always impressive to look at and drew quite a crowd by this point, something that really adds to the atmosphere and race like feel.

    Puppets next and is a very different track, it’s actually pretty simple (top and bottom), the middle is totally different though – it’s tech and steep and feature filled, to ride it fast you need strength and full commitment, you need balls! As you’d expect there were a few spills on Battery Hill none more impressive than Marjory’s over the bars as she approached the infamous weeeeeboing! berm. But she got straight up (well almost) and finished her run to loud claps, and cheers of “PEDAL!!!” from every one of the other riders. It was Marjory’s first ever DH race and, like her, the other DH newbie (Grant Fielder) managed to crash on PUPPETS ending his hopes of the overall win with a frustrating DNF. Jim Davage and Chris Smith had put in fast runs, but both knew that it was out of their hands, with all eyes on Rob Lewis would mr SouthernDownhill.com be able to hack it?!?! The answer was yes – ragged but very quick thanks to death grip and determination Rob took the win by a margin of around a second giving him the overall title to boot!

    Beans went to Marjory for being harder than the rest of us, to Ben Batt for his disturbingly aggressive riding style, Ben Irons for being far too quick and frustratingly smooth on a hardtail, and to Liam Arkel for being the fastest of the rippers by some way. The wheels were won by…um….cough, cough….well, me. I managed to guess closest to the overall time and given the fact that I did the same last year but gave the wheels away – well I figured that for once I would take something away from a TickerTape, after all we all had as much chance as eachother! ; )

    So that’s it, The BCC TickerTapeTriple Crown DH Jam – a day of racing bikes in the woods with friends.

    Thanks loads to Ben Irons for making all the number plates and timing sheet, to Andrew Grace for cooking all the sausages, to Keith Jepson (Max Bikes PR) for donating the wheels, Finlay Paton (ROSE Bikes UK) for providing demo bikes and all the other prizes, Madison for giving us all the race tape, and to everyone who helped set up and pack away.

    what now? Well we’re about to launch a 5 race TickerTape winter series (starting this November) so watch this space…

    Supported by:

  • Triple Crown Prizes

    There’s already plenty of reasons to take part in tomorrows TickerTape Triple Crown, but we thought we’d add to the excitement with a prize or two…

    Once entered, each rider will have to guess what the day’s overall fastest combined time will be (all three tracks added together) – the person who guesses the closest will win these awesome LIMITED EDITION Transition 32 wheels.

    Simple.

    Oh and only non pro / sponsored riders can enter this “wheely cool prize comp”, after all they get enough free stuff as it is!

    Revolution 32 Wheelset

    The Revolution 32 wheelset is our freeride/DH wheelset. Strong enough for punishing trail conditions like Whistler but light enough for your all mountain bike as well. Revolution 32s are a versatile wheelset you can throw on just about any bike.

    SPECS:
    Size: 26″ front and rear
    Front Hub: 20mm thru axle (20mm, 15mm, QR compatible) (15mm & QR conversion kits available seperately)
    Rear Hub: 135mm rear hub spacing, 10mm or 12mm interchangeable axle system. Wheelsets come standard with 10mm QR axle but nutted axles are available.
    Freehub: Steel, 3 pawl system Bearings: Sealed Cartridge (2 front, 4 rear)
    Rims: Alloy 6061 with eyelets, double wall pinned, 32mm width, 32 hole
    Spokes: 14g stainless steel black
    Nipples: Black Brass
    Limited Edition Color: Polished w/Black Hubs
    Weight: 2510g

    Remember, members only, £10 entry fee paid on the day, cash.

  • TickerTape Triple Crown

    It’s going to be the best TickerTape of the year!