Washington Cycle Works

 
Go Back   Sportbike Addicts | Two Wheels... Our Drug of Choice > Extreme Lean Angle > Club Racer
FAQ Members List Member Gallery Calendar Today's Posts Donate
Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes

Making the Jump from Track Days to Racing
Old 11-11-2009, 09:54 AM   #1
Cakes206
The Solution
 
Cakes206's Avatar
 
Cakes206 is offline
Join Date: May 2005
Location: New Joisey
Posts: 8,105
Send a message via AIM to Cakes206
Default Making the Jump from Track Days to Racing

An Interesting read...

http://www.trackdaymag.com/Articles/...to-Racing.aspx

At any track day event, you’ll find a few riders who have taught themselves to be really fast. When such folks compare their lap times to those of the local club racers, a strange thing often occurs. Based on their performance, these track day superstars start going on about the success they’d enjoy if they could be bothered to actually compete. By their logic, the great and indisputable lap timer indicates that they’d win every race they entered as amateurs. Having made short work of the yellow plate crowd, they’d then only need to step it up another few seconds to be victorious as experts. From there, a factory ride would be pretty much guaranteed. As gratifying as it is for these guys to speculate about where their riding abilities could conceivably take them, there’s a basic fact that such riders don’t seem to consider. Although track days and racing may look alike and take place at the same venues, they are two very different activities.

If you’re considering a competition career, it’s important that you base your decision upon reality. There are some ugly truths about the sport that you should understand before you begin. Much of what you’ll read here will go against popular perception but if you doubt the validity of what is written, simply ask a few of the racers in your area for their thoughts. When you’re seeking knowledge, it pays to consider numerous opinions.

The ability to run fast lap times dBrainerd 1oes not make you a racer; competition makes you a racer.

There are those who will be violently offended by the statement above but it is absolutely true. Cutting hot laps merely shows that you have the potential to be a competitor; it does not earn the title for you . Racing is about far more than being quick. If your experience is limited to track days, then you’ve never seen just how serious real racing can be. There is a vast difference between cranking off a few hot laps towards the end of a twenty minute track session and doing it from a standing start, bar to bar with several other highly motivated riders who want nothing more that to beat you to the checkered flag. The racers you’ve ridden with during a track day have never shown what they’re truly capable of, for several reasons. First, an experienced racer is intimately aware that speed is both expensive and risky. In competition, if he can run a pace three seconds per lap slower than his best and still earn first place, he’ll do so rather than ride flat out and take the chance of blowing up or crashing. At a track day, there’s nothing for a competitor to win and everything to lose. Also, racers are painfully aware that they need to be on their best behavior at a track day. Like wolves at the all-you-can-eat buffet, they know full well that if someone’s arm gets bitten off, they’ll catch the blame, regardless of who made the mistake. Unlike racing, the skill level of track day participants runs the full spectrum. In this environment, experienced competitors ramp their aggression levels down to about what would be socially acceptable on the freeway. One thing they’ll absolutely never do is to give you a serious race during a track day. Before that happens, you’ll need to have earned your license, proven yourself as a competitor and earned their trust in close quarters. Then they’ll see you on the grid and you’d better be ready. Try one of these guys in actual competition and he’ll race you far harder for last place than he ever would for the “win” in an advanced session.

Racing is vastly more expensive than track day riding.

If you decide to make the jump to competition, you’ll find yourself paying far more money for substantially less track time. The same cash you’ll drop for eight twenty-minute sessions at a track day will net you a pair of fifteen minute practices and two or three short sprints at a race weekend. Have you ever felt tired or sore at a track day and gone home early? You’ll never consider skipping a race once you’ve entered it unless your bike, body or both are damaged beyond any possibility of making the grid. The mindset when you’re racing is just completely different.

You have no hope of earning sponsorship.

Sorry! You absolutely don’t want to hear this but it’s true. No matter how fast you may be, sponsorship is not in your future. Yes, you might manage to find a company willing to give you a paint job, a free helmet or a discount on parts or labor but no one is going to write a check for you to go club racing. If you doubt this, ask the five most successful competitors in your region who is paying for their program. The answer is that they are. In the rare event that you run across a really well financed club level team, some digging will reveal that the company paying for the show belongs to one of the team’s riders, a very close friend or a relative. Aside from such a golden spoon scenario, there simply isn’t any sponsorship money available to the club racer, regardless of how good he might be. The reason is simple. At a club race, there is no TV, no press coverage and no crowd of spectators. Whatever exposure a potential sponsor might get is basically limited to the competitors in attendance, their families and any other warm bodies who have decided to tag along. Worse, these “potential customers” are all racer-broke! Any company considering sponsorship would need to be selling competition parts or gear to stand any chance of making a buck from them. Such companies do exist but their owners (or the owner’s kids) are almost always the sponsored racers. The bottom line is that if you want to go racing, you’ll either need to burn through your parents’ retirement fund or pay for it yourself.

You’ll never score a factory ride.

So what about that factory ride? Surely you could get there if you’re really good, right? Well, maybe. If you’re just getting started then you’d better be five years old. These days a pro prospect needs to have ten years of competition under his belt before he turns fifteen and if he hasn’t made it at least as far as a satellite team by the time he’s twenty, the rider’s future is beginning to look less like MotoGP and more like Mc Donald’s. Obviously, kids that young aren’t paying their own way. This type of career building is a family affair and for every clan named Hayden or Bostrum, there are dozens of others whose prodigy fell short of the brass ring. The going might be easier if your dad is named Rossi, Roberts or Duhamel but even then you’d better measure up or you’ll be gone in a hurry. Sure, if you really do well as a club racer you can qualify for an AMA license but even when you get to the big leagues, you’ll most likely be paying your own way as a privateer. To quote a very old and very true saying, “You can make a small fortune in racing. You simply need to start with a large fortune.”

The dark side of racing.

Track days are all about the fun of riding fast and challenging yourself. You’d think that racing would be the same, right? Well, that is how it starts out but things become far more serious in a hurry. In the free-for-all environment of track days there are a million built-in excuses for being slower than the next rider, such as bike type, skill level and equipment. If a guy on a 1098 Ducati with top-shelf Ohlins, Marchesini and Brembo everything smokes past your tired, bone stock old 600, you don’t feel so bad. In racing though, you’re grouped for competition by displacement, level of machine prep and rider experience. Not only has the playing field been leveled but there will be trophies and contingency for the winners. At this point, either you win or you suck.

Racing tests not only your ability to win but also your ability to lose. Can you handle being beaten? What lengths will you go to for the top spot on the podium? If your opponents show up with all the best equipment and throw on new tires for every eight lap sprint, will you accept that this is beyond your financial means or will you find a way to get the things you need to step up? People have been known to lie, cheat, steal and deal in order to stay in the game. Longtime racers can tell you horror stories of competitors who’ve ruined their lives trying to stay in the sport. Personal relationships suffer when everything else becomes secondary to one’s racing obsession. The divorce rate in this sport is high. People have driven themselves to physical or financial ruin. Many have lost jobs or thriving businesses. More than a few have turned to supporting their racing budgets by illegal methods and have eventually traded their leathers for prison jumpsuits.

The justification for such behavior may elude you now but can easily begin to make perfect sense once you start to compete. It’s simply a matter of weighing how much time, money and personal risk you’ve already invested into racing against the additional amount which you perceive will be needed to achieve your goals. The deeper you go, the easier it becomes to make ever more irrational decisions in order to continue. At some point you’ll find yourself suiting up as the sutures from your latest collection of plates and screws seep blood intAlone with the demonso your Under Armor or pulling a borrowed helmet on over a concussed brain. Seeing double? Aim for the middle! Racing can actually make decisions as bad as these seem perfectly logical.

Finding a happy compromise

If you’re beginning to think that racing sounds more like a narcotics addiction than an enjoyable pastime, you’re catching on. It can literally become so bad that you hate racing with every fiber of your being but can’t bring yourself to truly care about anything else. Racing doesn’t automatically become an obsessive, destructive force in your life but will happily go there if you let it. Most folks can drink socially while others become raging alcoholics. Many people buy lottery tickets but some gamble until they’ve lost everything and a loan shark is looking to cut off their fingers. Maintaining a healthy attitude towards racing requires controlling desires which can easily consume you if you’re not careful. This sport can grant you the highest of highs and the lowest of lows. It is often stated that the average racer stays in the game for two and a half years. By then, he’s been financially, physically or spiritually broken. Most likely, all three will have played a part in his desire to quit.

If this article reads like a cautionary tale, then so be it. Racers will tell you that there’s nothing better than their chosen obsession but then so will cocaine addicts. Can you remain happy and satisfied if you never venture beyond the safe haven of track days? There are a thousand good reasons to do exactly that and absolutely no dishonor if this is your choice. On the other hand, if competition is something that you simply need to experience then do it, if only so that you won’t have regrets later. Racing can be the grand adventure of your lifetime or it can be the thing that destroys you. The choice is yours.
__________________


Character is who you are when no one is looking.

The more you sweat in practice, the less you bleed in battle.
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-11-2009, 10:33 AM   #2
Ant
Kung Fu Panda
 
Ant's Avatar
 
Ant is offline
Join Date: May 2005
Location: NJ
Posts: 2,049
Default

I only read the beginning but that is so right. I thought my lap times meant top 10 no problem. More like top 20. Racing is a whole other animal.
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by mike295
i figer i got about 20 more pounds till i can't see my dick
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cakes
That'll make ya crap where ya stand
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimmy
gixxer...cage....it's like kicking me in the balls
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-11-2009, 11:11 AM   #3
CBRChick
Short Shifter
 
CBRChick's Avatar
 
CBRChick is offline
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 146
Default

Great article! Thanks for sharing... it's amazing all the different things you don't think about when going to racing from track days. It was a shock to me how much money I ended up spending just to not come in last Track days are definitely a cheaper hobby!
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-11-2009, 12:52 PM   #4
Ant
Kung Fu Panda
 
Ant's Avatar
 
Ant is offline
Join Date: May 2005
Location: NJ
Posts: 2,049
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by CBRChick View Post
Great article! Thanks for sharing... it's amazing all the different things you don't think about when going to racing from track days. It was a shock to me how much money I ended up spending just to not come in last Track days are definitely a cheaper hobby!
Like the amount of down time. It's tough sitting around for 3 hours then go racing for 15 min all out.
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by mike295
i figer i got about 20 more pounds till i can't see my dick
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cakes
That'll make ya crap where ya stand
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimmy
gixxer...cage....it's like kicking me in the balls
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-11-2009, 01:08 PM   #5
ffejtable
Shoutbox Killer
 
ffejtable's Avatar
 
ffejtable is offline
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 1,241
Default

Damn, and I thought I was a pessimist!

I go to the track because its fun. I'm not very competitive, so I never even considered racing, it would just take all the fun out of it.

This isnt unlike any other profession though. To be among the elite, many of the same rules apply...
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-12-2009, 01:25 AM   #6
NYCSTRIPES
Meatball's Daddy
 
NYCSTRIPES's Avatar
 
NYCSTRIPES is offline
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 1,754
Default

Great post Joe.
__________________
2003 TL1000R #489
1998 Valkyrie cruiser

No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session....-Mark Twain
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-12-2009, 09:42 AM   #7
Drew13
pharmacodical sukamocadodo
 
Drew13's Avatar
 
Drew13 is offline
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 246
Default

This is the classic "Racers vs Track Day Enthusiasts" mentality. I would argue that Regional Novice Club Racing isn't THAT different from your average Int/Adv Track Day.

If a guy runs quick lap times during a track day, he'll probably run them in a race, and he'll probably get faster in a race, and he'll probably do well in a novice race. Some will prolly thrive more in a race setting and some less.

I do agree that what makes racing different is the competition. There is a start/finish line. The start and the last lap race to the finish line are my personal favorites, neither of which is experienced during a track day. If you want to see what you are truly capable of, you have to race at some point.

It's absolutely more intense, way more aggressive, and more expensive. It's also significantly more rewarding (regardless of where you finish) and a life experience I'd recommend to everyone.

Still at the end of the day it's Regional Novice Club Racing.
__________________
CCS/TPM/NESBA #717

GSXR-600
Husky 510 SM
Ninjette 250

Winchester, VA
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-12-2009, 09:56 AM   #8
Jake
Foot Fetish Guy
 
Jake is offline
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Dirty Jerzy
Posts: 1,001
Default

sniffing coke off a hookers ass is a life experience i'd recommend to everyone
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-12-2009, 10:32 AM   #9
pillaka
Stiffy Pooh
 
pillaka's Avatar
 
pillaka is offline
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Middletown, NJ
Posts: 410
Send a message via AIM to pillaka
Default

That article is absolutely spot on but if anyone is looking to get into racing I hope it doesn't discourage them. Racing has taught me a lot about digging deep and pushing yourself to be better, and when you do this and get results, words can't describe what that feels like.
__________________
-Brian

2009 Yamaha R6 Racebike R.I.P
WERA expert #360
CCS/ASRA #360
TPM Coach #360

2009 Sponsors

Team Pro-Motion
Woodcraft CFM Motorsports
Monmouth Cycles
Rider Insurance
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-13-2009, 02:46 PM   #10
lateapex
Skid Mark
 
lateapex's Avatar
 
lateapex is offline
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Wilson, PA
Posts: 446
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pillaka View Post
That article is absolutely spot on but if anyone is looking to get into racing I hope it doesn't discourage them. Racing has taught me a lot about digging deep and pushing yourself to be better, and when you do this and get results, words can't describe what that feels like.
I agree too but tracks days fill the huge gap between racers and the street riders that used to be there. Now you can go from the street to a track day club to racing and not be so overwhelmed and lack the basic skills needed to race.

We talked about this after my first race and since it was the first ccs race of the year we realized that for some racers this was the first time they were ever on a track, very scary considering it was Daytona. We lapped riders in a 8 lap race there because they had no idea what they were doing.
__________________
George B.
Team Pro-Motion Coach #929


"It's so much better goin' nowhere fast"

Stickers: See Chris at http://www.drippinwet.com
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-14-2009, 11:18 AM   #11
JimRBlue
Throttle Lock
 
JimRBlue's Avatar
 
JimRBlue is offline
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Phillipsburg
Posts: 1,590
Send a message via AIM to JimRBlue Send a message via MSN to JimRBlue Send a message via Yahoo to JimRBlue
Default

Interesting read..
__________________




[Today 07:41 PM] John217: wait till next season when i BLOW YOU ALL!

[Today 08:28 PM] Jase: i would put my fav. strap-on around the triples and hold on for life

[Today 08:39 PM] landshark: if you are confortable putting your head on someones leg then go for it

2003 Yamaha FZ1
Micron Scorched Titanium Slip-On
Sport tech blue Chrome
Greggs's Flushmount LED
JMV Bodyworks Undertail


2006 YZF R6
Dr X Kit X-treme Undertail
VFX Pivot Plate kit
Pazzo Shorties - black/gold
Puig Race Screen - Black
520 Conversion
  Reply With Quote

Old 11-20-2009, 12:19 AM   #12
I Ride
Short Shifter
 
I Ride is offline
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Ocean
Posts: 147
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jake View Post
sniffing coke off a hookers ass is a life experience i'd recommend to everyone


you said it brotha..fond memories
  Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:56 AM.
 

vBulletin skin developed by: eXtremepixels
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.