Cyclo-Cross: A New Dawn | END
|
TheManxMissile |
Posted on 22-04-2015 19:42
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 18187
Joined: 12-05-2012
PCM$: 0.00
|
I am dissapointed a Continental Champion is below a rider who has zero official results
|
|
|
|
Ian Butler |
Posted on 22-04-2015 19:44
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 21854
Joined: 01-05-2012
PCM$: 400.00
|
TheManxMissile wrote:
I am dissapointed a Continental Champion is below a rider who has zero official results
It wasn't subjectively chosen, though.
I established the UCI number based on the UCI ranking 3 races before the season ended
New riders just get added to the bottom.
Ah, but indeed, the U23 riders who managed to score UCI points have not been included in this ranking. They're seen as new riders and are added to the bottom.
Though if I'm not mistaken, Bakari even had more UCI points than the U23 riders joining now
Edited by Ian Butler on 22-04-2015 19:51
|
|
|
|
TheManxMissile |
Posted on 22-04-2015 19:46
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 18187
Joined: 12-05-2012
PCM$: 0.00
|
But he's a Continenal Champion! You should also give Power the TX after USA
|
|
|
|
Atlantius |
Posted on 22-04-2015 20:22
|
Team Leader
Posts: 6795
Joined: 21-07-2010
PCM$: 200.00
|
Name: Iban Etxeberdea
Nationality (region): Spain (Euskadi)
Date of Birth: 1995-05-01
Height: 179
Weight: 68
Specialty: Fast start
Weakness: Impulsive rider
Biography: Iban is born and raised in San Sebastian, Basque Country and have been riding a bike pretty much since before he could walk. He rides everywhere. To the beach, into the city, up in the forests. Not a lot of cobbles in the area though.
In contrast to many of his compatriots he prefers shorter more explosive races than what the regular road race has to offer. Thus he challenged his friends to ride on smaller more technical curcuits where his lacking stamina on the biggest mountains didn't become an issue.
Stats: [Choose between: very low, low, medium, high, very high]
Bike Handling (technical): high
Sand: high
Uphill: high
Cobblestones: very low
Sprinting: low
Explosiveness: high
Flat (TT/riding hard): low
Power: medium
Running: low
Snow/Ice: very low
Jumping: medium
Stats meant as relative to each other. I assume you'll make sure he's overall at the right level.
Edited by Atlantius on 22-04-2015 20:23
|
|
|
|
Ian Butler |
Posted on 22-04-2015 21:06
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 21854
Joined: 01-05-2012
PCM$: 400.00
|
Iban is in
And to answer your question (I'll put it in a general statement for all new players) :
Remember that your rider's stats are determined by your involvement. You can expect your rider to fight for some top 20s initially. Your role-playing after those first races will either increase stats gradually. So don't be afraid after the first couple of races. Keep up your game and you'll be rewarded soon enough Inactivity will not lead to better results, of course.
Also note that quantity is not the biggest factor. Quality matters most. Stay a regular poster and you've nothing to worry. Stats are alternatively decided by pm, depending on your preference. Some people might not want a (sub)top rider.
In any case, we can talk about what level you want your rider to have, by pm.
Edited by Ian Butler on 22-04-2015 21:08
|
|
|
|
Ad Bot |
Posted on 22-11-2024 07:16
|
Bot Agent
Posts: Countless
Joined: 23.11.09
|
|
IP: None |
|
|
trekbmc |
Posted on 22-04-2015 22:07
|
Team Leader
Posts: 7366
Joined: 11-07-2014
PCM$: 700.00
|
Pierre will compete in the national series, as you suggested. |
|
|
|
Scorchio |
Posted on 23-04-2015 00:59
|
Small Tour Specialist
Posts: 2073
Joined: 14-09-2013
PCM$: 4500.00
|
Name: Camilo Osorio
Nationality (region): Colombian (Medellin, Antioquia)
Date of Birth: 22/09/1995
Height: 169cm
Weight: 61kg
Specialty: None (yet)
Weakness: None (yet)
Biography: Camilo is a Colombian street-kid from Medellin, Antioquia. He has had a pretty tough life; never met his father, and his mother passed away when he was a young teenager. Since the age of 13 he has had to fend for himself, living high up in the favelas, doing whatever jobs he can to put food on the table. He has scavenged for scrap metal, run errands, picked and packed fruit and vegtables on the farms in the hills above the city, before finally maintaining a basic steady existence working on a market stall. Even now as a young adult, he lives in what most people would describe as a pile of corrugated sheets, cardboard and wooden battens. At the age of 8 or 9, his mother had enrolled him in one of Medellins many 'cycling academies', as many Colombian children are, like European kids join football teams, or US youngsters play in Little League; her intention was mainly to try and keep him away from the gang culture that is unfortunately rife in the city. At least in this she was succesful. Camilo immediately fell in love with all things cycling, and the academy and the various coaches have become Camilo's replacment family and support network.
Early days learning basic skills at the Robledo cycling school
As he was growing up, Camilo desparately wanted to be a mountain goat as is the archetypal style of all the heroic and honoured Colombian cyclists, and although he is of the right build, and puts his heart and soul into training whenver possible, does not stand out in the mountains and hills as well as his strongest peers in his age group. He did however demonstrate an early aptitude for tremendous handling skills and excelled at mountain biking when introduced to it by his coaches. Developing through his teenage years, Camilo has previously been Junior and is current reigning U23 cross-country mountain bike champion in Colombia. Although his dreams of Tour de France victories and King of the Mountains accolades have already been extinguished, he continues to nurture ambitions to raise himself up out of poverty by riding as a professional road racer. Since he was 16, Camilo has been coached by Hernan Dario Munoz through the cycling academy. Hernan himself had a successful professional road career including spells in Europe riding the top races. Under his tutelage and guidance, Camilo has come to recognise that he could develop his skills to become a reliable road domestique at the top level. Together they have plotted a course for Camilo to take the necessary steps.
First, Hernan has used his contacts to find Camilo a family to stay with in Belgium and through the cycling academy and various government grants, they have scraped the funding together to cover his travel and (very) basic living expenses for one season. With his mountain biking background, Hernan has managed to interest an obscure cyclocross team in taking a chance on Camilo for the 2015-6, and he will then spend the summer on the kermesse circuit in Belgium. Hernan has assured Camilo that if he can continue to develop his existing handling skills in the cyclocross environment, adapt to the harsh coarses, varying weather conditions and road surfaces (in particulat the cobbles) and work on his endurance and sprinting in the summer road season, there is every chance in one or two years that he will fill a niche as a Colombian rider that will be of interest to the top road squads in the country like Alpina - Avianca or Grupo Nutresa.
Spoiler If application successful, please suggest a suitable low budget, probably struggling team that would cover Camilo's travel expenses to races and provide a bike and a jersey (at this point, Camilo has never even seen a proper cyclocross bike before!)
Stats: [ Choose between: very low, low, medium, high, very high]
Bike Handling (technical): high
Sand: low
Uphill: medium
Cobblestones: very low
Sprinting: medium
Explosiveness: low
Flat (TT/riding hard): medium
Power: medium
Running: low
Snow/Ice: very low
Jumping: medium
Manager of ISA - Hexacta in the MG
|
|
|
|
Avin Wargunnson |
Posted on 23-04-2015 06:36
|
World Champion
Posts: 14236
Joined: 20-06-2011
PCM$: 300.00
|
Ian Butler wrote:
UPDATE: I'm entering all new riders automatically into the NES competition. It's a good way to gain experience and perhaps ride a nice result early on. If you really don't want him participating, let me know.
Also adding Guido Visconti, Mustafa Moli, Alinejad, Vermeulen and Faizullah.
I am really fine with it, first season (or at least majority of it) is all about learning to ride with actual people for Karol.
If it is possible, i would like to use Nosek Soucek as the full contract rider for team Bauknecht-Author instead as U23rider, as old chap Blažej would be forced to ride alone in some races, or only with Karol Konva, who will be probably not the best teammate for the start. Maybe Shonak would like to say something to this, as he is controlling Blazej?
Nice to see another bunch of people joining, all of them good lads.
|
|
|
|
Shonak |
Posted on 23-04-2015 07:45
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 15615
Joined: 16-07-2013
PCM$: 350.00
|
I think Ian has already set Nosek as a pro rider and wanted to use Blazej a bit as his mentor? Anything is good really for me.
Edited by Shonak on 23-04-2015 07:45
"It’s a little bit scary when Contador attacks." - Tommy V
|
|
|
|
Ian Butler |
Posted on 23-04-2015 07:49
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 21854
Joined: 01-05-2012
PCM$: 400.00
|
Camilo is in.
Ittehad Chemicals has only one rider, Faizullah, and might be desperate to look for a team mate for Faizullah. Their low budget doesn't allow them to attract a pro, so they might take the risk to give Camilo a place with his lower wage and hope he will be a good team mate for Faizullah (an upcoming talent. A 2nd place last year in a race)
Interesting character, too. Will be fighting to survive more than for the glory, I like it |
|
|
|
Ian Butler |
Posted on 23-04-2015 07:54
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 21854
Joined: 01-05-2012
PCM$: 400.00
|
Avin Wargunnson wrote:
Ian Butler wrote:
UPDATE: I'm entering all new riders automatically into the NES competition. It's a good way to gain experience and perhaps ride a nice result early on. If you really don't want him participating, let me know.
Also adding Guido Visconti, Mustafa Moli, Alinejad, Vermeulen and Faizullah.
I am really fine with it, first season (or at least majority of it) is all about learning to ride with actual people for Karol.
If it is possible, i would like to use Nosek Soucek as the full contract rider for team Bauknecht-Author instead as U23rider, as old chap Blažej would be forced to ride alone in some races, or only with Karol Konva, who will be probably not the best teammate for the start. Maybe Shonak would like to say something to this, as he is controlling Blazej?
Nice to see another bunch of people joining, all of them good lads.
Shonak wrote:
I think Ian has already set Nosek as a pro rider and wanted to use Blazej a bit as his mentor? Anything is good really for me.
I had put him back with U23 for another year.
But I'll add him to the team. Though it's a bit of a shame that nobody claimed him, he seemed to have a big potential. Can't put him with too high stats as a bot
Added to Bauknecht. |
|
|
|
Avin Wargunnson |
Posted on 23-04-2015 08:09
|
World Champion
Posts: 14236
Joined: 20-06-2011
PCM$: 300.00
|
Ok, Ian, you persuaded me, i would like to claim Nosek Soucek as my second rider, if that is somewhat possible. Still , i will concentrate mainly on Karol Konva and give less frequent updates about Soucek, if that is viable for you.
Shame abou that terrible name as i wrote you in the PM, i dont know anbody called Nosek as firstname in Czech Republic.
|
|
|
|
SportingNonsense |
Posted on 23-04-2015 08:40
|
Team Manager
Posts: 33046
Joined: 08-03-2007
PCM$: 200.00
|
Too young to have a mid-life crisis and go for a legal name change?
Should Soucek really be such a big prospect anyway Ian? Winning the U23 Worlds in a year when so many U23 riders turned pro, plus with the American duo also riding the Elite race, isn't much of an achievement!
Edited by SportingNonsense on 23-04-2015 08:43
|
|
|
|
Ian Butler |
Posted on 23-04-2015 08:59
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 21854
Joined: 01-05-2012
PCM$: 400.00
|
You do have a point there
@Avin, you can still claim him, no problem. If the name troubles you, let him enter CX with his middle name?
Sign him up here later. Though don't feel obliged, only take him if you want to |
|
|
|
TheManxMissile |
Posted on 23-04-2015 09:04
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 18187
Joined: 12-05-2012
PCM$: 0.00
|
You did make a big thing about Markson and Goldenberg not racing the U23 WC, so really they are the big new, and relatively proven, talents joining the ranks for the 15/16 season So perhaps move them off the last starting row
|
|
|
|
Ian Butler |
Posted on 23-04-2015 09:07
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 21854
Joined: 01-05-2012
PCM$: 400.00
|
Stop trying to get Markson and Goldenberg off the last row
Actually, that's a big reason why the NES are there. With 50 UCI points to be earned for the race winner, young riders can move up a few places easily there.
And either way,
That's the law of cyclo-cross. You start at the back, so only the big talents are able to move up to the front and race for the win. Or get consistent top 20-15 finishes and gradually move up in the UCI Ranking
One big advantage: the UCI ranking is reset each season, it's not like CQ ranking. So 1 good result early in the season can put them at the front immediately!
And, indeed, Markson and Goldenberg are perhaps the biggest new prospects at the moment, together with maybe Listerijn
However, Soucek's advantage is (with SN's U23 race and the Worlds) is that he has come out of nowhere, so he is practically new to the international scene. And then to become WC in first international year, is not bad)
Edited by Ian Butler on 23-04-2015 09:08
|
|
|
|
TheManxMissile |
Posted on 23-04-2015 09:14
|
Tour de France Champion
Posts: 18187
Joined: 12-05-2012
PCM$: 0.00
|
TMM Sports Management is just out to get the best possible chances for its riders
|
|
|
|
Scorchio |
Posted on 23-04-2015 09:18
|
Small Tour Specialist
Posts: 2073
Joined: 14-09-2013
PCM$: 4500.00
|
Ian Butler wrote:
Camilo is in.
Ittehad Chemicals has only one rider, Faizullah, and might be desperate to look for a team mate for Faizullah. Their low budget doesn't allow them to attract a pro, so they might take the risk to give Camilo a place with his lower wage and hope he will be a good team mate for Faizullah (an upcoming talent. A 2nd place last year in a race)
Interesting character, too. Will be fighting to survive more than for the glory, I like it
Thanks for accepting my entry. Your proposed team solution looks good thanks. I'll try and read back through a bit to get an idea of the teams and Faizullah's backstory to see what roleplaying that offers up for Camilo Going forward.
Will be a couple of days before I post my first in game thread post (travelling).
Manager of ISA - Hexacta in the MG
|
|
|
|
Avin Wargunnson |
Posted on 23-04-2015 09:19
|
World Champion
Posts: 14236
Joined: 20-06-2011
PCM$: 300.00
|
Now, i would like to claim Soucek for sure, when i know he is an U23 champ.
I will sign him up today or tommorow. Maybe you can call him with his nickname he has since juniors, because of his hoping ability and how inconspicuous he is, "The Rabbit".
|
|
|
|
trekbmc |
Posted on 23-04-2015 09:21
|
Team Leader
Posts: 7366
Joined: 11-07-2014
PCM$: 700.00
|
Wanted to give season reviews and introductory posts today, unfortunately, my computer had some issues and I won't get it back until tomorrow. So, sorry if I'm not active and can't post today, it's just that even this post takes almost 2 minutes to write. |
|
|