Baloney. You invite the scumbags TO YOUR OWN HOUSE!You'd see a lot more of me if I wasn't so terrified of driving around Vancouver with a truck full of expensive bikes.
Baloney. You invite the scumbags TO YOUR OWN HOUSE!You'd see a lot more of me if I wasn't so terrified of driving around Vancouver with a truck full of expensive bikes.
Was wishing I cold have made it last night. Would have been a good time.I dig watching DH at the WC level, but at the grassroots level it's struggling and going to see dark times before any chance of numbers increasing.
Grassroots enduro on the other hand is going off. We had 143 riders out last night to our first Toonie of 2014. We switched up the format to enduro last year and our participation numbers have sky rocketed.
That is the biggest reason I haven't been riding/racing DH in the last year. I used to spend well over 200 dollars a race weekend and 7-10 hours of driving for maybe a total of 1-1.5 hours on the bike. And that doesn't count all the money on a specialized bike that only goes downhill. It's easier for me to justify going to an enduro race where I'll spend at least 3x the amount of time on my bike and I can use the same bike that I ride on my local trails. I didn't get tired of racing DH, I just got tired of everything that came along with riding DH. If I lived closer to DH trails or resorts and/or my income doubled I would probably get back into DH.I guess the obvious reasons that would explain a downturn in numbers at DH races would be:
-the cost of racing ($100+ for entrance fee, plus fuel costs getting there etc.)
-tracks are pretty intense these days, people are probably more reluctant to part with a lot of moolah just to ride B-lines
-the 'enduro scene', with its better cost vs. ride time ratio, has captured a decent chunk of the DH market, especially people who still like riding their bikes downhill but don't want to fvck themselves up
-'local factors' e.g. access to decent tracks, number of up-and-coming riders
Anyone recall when DH really hit it's high point in the 90's. Plenty in the XC world just calling it fashion.(I'm not too up on fashion related biking)
I know. What an unlawful, godless, chaotic inferno.You'd see a lot more of me if I wasn't so terrified of driving around Vancouver with a truck full of expensive bikes.
God I wish a guy who used to post here under DRB was still paying attention.I know. What an unlawful, godless, chaotic inferno.
I don't know what planet she grew up on but this pretty much describes the casual expert/semipro masses that I used to hang out with who were at a dh race pretty much every weekend there was one.It seems as though we've all forgotten one thing: downhill mountain biking never was and never will be an 'every man' sport. It's not an activity taken up by the masses in an effort to feel good and enjoy their lives.
"Enduro is the new crossfit"Where I used to race DH we'd get up to 130 entrants, I think they're at 30-40 now but Enduro at the same place had to stop taking entries at 250, Enduro is the new crossfit(but much much better)!
Yup same here, bought a big bike just for racing and didn't enjoy it and I'm now back on a hardtail loving life..
tl;dr - smaller bikes brought the buzz back for me.
he he.. gotta admit, when I clicked on the link and read the author was a chick I didn't bother reading it at all.We're 4 pages deep and no one is reading anymore, can we make fun of the girl who wrote that piece now?
Did you look at her profile picture on pinkbike id let her read her article to me if she was wearing a wet t-shirtWe're 4 pages deep and no one is reading anymore, can we make fun of the girl who wrote that piece now?
That's definitely a big factor for me. When I got really serious about mountain biking the most technologically (fun) products were mostly in the big bike/DH category. Slowly all the tech has made it's way into shorter travel, lighter and better fitting trail bikes. Mid-level Trail bikes today have better geometry and technology than top of the line DH bikes did 10 years ago.tl;dr - smaller bikes brought the buzz back for me.
bingo. you cant be a good DH rider without the small bike for fitness and you cannot be a top "endurpo" rider without the DH skillz. (note Remy Absalon has gone down the ranking re enduro events lately, or is that due to injury etcBoth Enduro and DH has their places and complement each other. With two bikes I cover the places I want to ride.
We get more coverage of DH wc cups in media than before.
Like this?inspire all DH riders everywhere, steep, rough, long and most of all technical the whole way down. we need more of these. UCI please listen!!!!!!!!
hells yea! given that a helmet cam takes 20% of steepness/dfficiulty off it that route would work! the fact that it has blinki screaching says enough about bits of it.... add in the fact the kiwi track builders wouldnt use most of that for a WC track and go nastierLike this?
Red Bull should just take over. Half the riders are already sponsored by them anyways haha
Well said.At the very top end it won't die, it is the f1 of mountain bikes. There will always be someone wanting to be the absolute fastest, and in the right conditions that is a full blown Dh bike, there will always be someone who wants to watch, and someone who wants to emulate them.
At the grass roots - Dh will take a hit. It's been the only game in town for people who liked going fast. Being able to go 99% as fast, on the bike you ride all the time, picking the best bits of trail - even when they have a flat bit or a climb has an amazing appeal.
But also at the grass roots are the people who are going to get demolished by being half fit. They can get away with it in a club level Dh - but not in an enduro. And the supremely fit have no problems racing Dh and enduro. So in a couple of years it will settle out, maybe club level Dh will lose 10% of their numbers, and enduro will carve out a niche of their own. Don't forget, all the shops are saying how the bikes they sell the most are trail bikes, and they are selling them to people who don't race at all. This is the untapped market that means enduro won't kill off anything, just add more options to the riding and racing calendar.
Was coming back with the same sentiment every time I'd read the thread....the untapped market that means enduro won't kill off anything, just add more options to the riding and racing calendar.
We're 4 pages deep and no one is reading anymore, can we make fun of the girl who wrote that piece now?
I don't know what planet she grew up on but this pretty much describes the casual expert/semipro masses that I used to hang out with who were at a dh race pretty much every weekend there was one.
She seems to be confusing what goes on locally with what gee atherton thinks about the next wc round.
I think the main point everyone is failing to see here isn't really whether DH is cooler than enduro or if the courses are too gnar, it's simply the economic hell hole that most folks < 30-years old are in. The unemployment rate in the US for those under 30 is extremely high, and for those under 25 (the prime age to be getting into the sport) is even worse. There also has been virtually no real wage growth in the USA over the past two decades to help fuel the purchase of expensive things like DH bikes, race entries, gas, and lodging. They're putting that hard earned money towards paying down huge student loan debt or are forced to work weekends at basically minimum wage just to afford the one bike they can ride for fun.
http://www.governing.com/gov-data/economy-finance/youth-employment-unemployment-rate-data-by-state.html
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/04/29/1839682/chart-of-the-day-us-vs-uk-median-real-wage-growth-since-1988/
I looked into some of this about a year or so back when I compared some race data and participant data from USAC. Basically the conclusion I came to is there aren't a whole lot more/less racers out there, they're just getting older. When they get older they participate in less risky forms of the sport, or get bored and try another aspect of it (road, enduro). The new racers are at the very young age groups (growth in youth mtb & bmx). But, I think that's fueled by racers who are in the 35-45 bracket having kids coming into racing age. Due to the economy we've basically lost a generation who are able to afford to race bikes.
-ska todd
part of his point is that it's more apparent in DH than other disciplines.Every amateur cycle racing discipline is only contested by the affluent Todd. Wouldn't really have thought that needed pointing out. Especially here.