Archive for November 16th, 2007

Nov 16 2007

Master B Standings

Published by Mike under Cyclocross

Yes, the race for 306th place is on and it’s gonna be a rumble!

Here are unofficial, non-sanctioned OBRA standings of the B+35 field..

Place

Num

Last Name First Name Team Points

1

849

vergis john Cyclepath 76

2

802

Rosenfeld Jake   68

3

854

Tauscher Chris Tireless Velo 61

4

892

Szwaya Michael   56

5

873

Goff Wade Half Fast Velo 54

6

900

Brown Steven Portland Velo 52

7

880

Johnson Ben Portland Velo 51

8

805

Barker Scott   50

9

920

Standish Jeff Therapeutic Associates Inc 49

10

856

Crago Jason Lakeside Cycling Team 49

11

874

Rouse Gregg Peak Sports 47

12

806

Thompson Kevin Half Fast Velo 41

13

909

Alligood Mike   35

14

904

Gapay Hugh   30

15

931

Jacobs Bob bicycleattorney.com 29

16

893

Limbaugh John Chinook Cycling Club 29

17

812

Rabinowitz Michael Tireless Velo 29

18

860

Harris Derwyn   24

19

818

Burkhart Rob   21

20

855

Knight
Terry
North River Racing
21

The places in italics are those who, to the best of my knowledge, have moved up to A+35. The bold numbers are the top 16 active B+ spots that may get called up Sunday.

Because of upgrades there are 6 racers between 61 and 47 points, a difference of just 14 points. For the double points race, a 1st place by one of the top 5 will win the series.Gregg Rouse in 11th has a shot with a win but only if Chris Tauscher places at or below 3rd. Kevin Thompson, with 41 points, also has a chance but he needs a win and people in 5th place on up to finish out of the top 3 . Below that, there needs to be a lot of bad days in the top 10. But hey, it’s cyclocross – anything can happen.

5 responses so far

Nov 16 2007

Will it ever rain again?

Published by Mike under Cyclocross

There’s a number of us, myself included, that have been lamenting the lack of rainfall this year. You could make a (valid) argument to shut up and just ride but let’s face it – riding in the mud is much more interesting than on dry ground. I won’t necessarily say ‘fun’ but just different, and in my opinion, challenging.

After what looked like a promising start to the water year (defined as Oct to Sept), it’s been basically dry. But historically though, each year has it’s ups and downs. I compiled the rainfall data for the past 4 years, loking at rainfall depths over a 24-hour and 7-day period.

2004 is the first year I have any reference to, having started in the beginners that year. With the exception of Barton Park on 11/6 and Nationals at the end of the season, it was a fairly dry year.

2004 Rainfall

2005 was more interesting. We had an off-week during the most intense period of rain but it kept Barton and Estacata pretty well saturated for the rest of the season. I didn’t take the data past the end of the year, but as you can see, the late December rainfall was pretty intense.

2005 Rainfall

The 2006 season had the epic rainfall during November. For those in the water resource business, we have classified the November ‘06 event as a 5-year event – which is to say there’s about a 20% chance of something like this occurring each year. We peaked out at nearly 8 inches of rain in the week before Estacata.

It’s interesting to note though that the USGP finals was really where the rain and mud took it’s toll although the really intense rain had died down for a week. There’s another term we use – antecedent conditions – that generally describes how saturated the ground is. Rainfall during dry conditions tends to soak right in, which is why big early season events typically don’t cause much flooding. Depending on the soils, it can take days or weeks for an area to get fully saturated. But once fully wet, even a little rain can cause problems. By the time the USGP finals rolled around everything was good and wet and that weekend rainfall was like icing on the cake. Whatever rain fell had nowhere to soak in.

2006 Rainfall

This year, by most accounts, is a hydrologic dud. We’ve had some good stretches of dry weather and whatever rain that did fall in early October is long gone. Shifting the schedule to get a more muddy Barton Park race unfortunately didn’t work. Even the Rainier race which took place after our most intense rain of the season wasn’t all that bad. Failing an intense storm from the Pineapple Express, Hillsboro may look more like the early-season race we had there last year instead of the epic mudbath.

2007 Rainfall

One response so far