T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
969.1 | Watch out Lon! | ICBB::JSMITH | Bikes Spoke_n Here | Thu Jan 19 1989 17:44 | 4 |
| What....I didn't even get an honerable mention ?!? Forget my dues
for next year! Hope they'll at least send me a copy of the Who's
Shmooz.
Jerry
|
969.2 | details PLEASE | FSTVAX::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Mon Jan 23 1989 20:42 | 5 |
| C O N G R A T U L A T I O N S.
tell us all the details of what it says (modesty NOT allowed)
~Mike
|
969.3 | UMCA NPC whos-who detail{ | ATLAST::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jan 24 1989 19:32 | 31 |
| From the November 1988 UMCA newsletter: "Who{s going to be in the
who's who 1988? To earn entry into the 1988 UMCA Who's Who, you
have to be in the top 15% in at least one division. Example: 36
members have participated in the Open Division. 15% of 36 is 5.4.
We round off to the nearest 10th, resulting in the top 5 qualifying
in this division. We do the same for all divisions."
The divisions are (1) the Open Division (self-designed and witnessed
200+ mile rides); (2) the Standard Division (sanctioned/published
200+ mile rides, including the RAAM qualifiers, BMB brevet, etc.);
and (3) the Century division... as well as (4) the Combined Division,
combined mileages from the first 3. Standings of the Digital
colleagues mentioned by Ed:
#2 - 9740 miles - John Lee Ellis, Charlotte NC
#10 - 4716 miles - Ed Fisher, Nashua NH
#29 - 2953 miles - Kevin Klasman, Nashua NH
(#1 had 10258 witnessed/recorded miles.) Note that this is *not*
the rider's year's mileage. As we all know, Ed came in with 10622
for the year, or thereabouts. These are only the combined mileage
for those riders' performances in the three divisions.
The UMCA is thinking of expanding categories to include an Indoor
points challenge, and might do well to go beyond pure mileage to
include the elan factor, with categories such as "most effective
use of Lycra" and "funniest pedals and handlebars." But sincere
hearty congratulations to my colleagues.
-john
|
969.4 | Some more details...and goals for 1989 | NAC::KLASMAN | | Wed Jan 25 1989 08:22 | 25 |
| < Note 969.3 by ATLAST::ELLIS "John Lee Ellis - assembly required" >
-< UMCA NPC whos-who detail{ >-
Add my sincere hearty congratulations to my colleagues, too.
Some detail on my rides:
#29 - 2953 miles - Kevin Klasman, Nashua NH
- 20 Centuries (probably placed me in the top 10 of Century Division)
Included here is the 200k BMB Brevet.
- 2 Open Division double C's.
- 400k BMB Brevet.
- 259 miles ridden during the WISILL 24-hour race in Capron, ILL.
Distance was a disappointment 8^(
Goals for next year:
- Ride all BMB Brevets and BMB itself (total 1674m)
- Ride 2 24-hr races. Goal is 400m in 24hrs.
- A sub 12-hr double C.
- A 4:45 or better C.
- Total miles for year: 10000
- total NPC miles: 4000
|
969.5 | some details | BANZAI::FISHER | BMB Finisher | Wed Jan 25 1989 09:18 | 42 |
| Some detail on my rides:
#10 - 4716 miles - Ed Fisher, Nashua NH
- 10622 miles in '88.
- 44 Century rides in 1988, of which 14 were close to or longer
than 200 miles. About 14 were just for fun, no UMCA points/credits
involved.
- Boston-Montreal-Boston (counts as 4 of the above 14)
- 1 RAAM Qualifier completed- no qualification, but half the field
did not complete. (3 of the above 14 doubles) I finished abotu
4th from last.
-- Career: 153 Century rides in 6 years of which 23 were doubles.
- Goals for '89.
Oh, I don't know. I'm planning a few trips to GEAR and NEAR, anyone
interested?
Eventual goal: I'd like to take a year off from serious cycling
and ride across the country.
- After Yesterday, I'm ahead of that 10622 pace, but it is a long
season.
--- All of this pales in comparison to John's numbers and one cannot,
with a straight face, say that it's because he lives in the South.
Remember, from other notes, John had two bikes die of fatigue last
year.
Would you believe that, after finishing BMB (remember, it was VERY
hot that week) he went out and rode another 40 miles because he
had never ridden 1000 miles in a week. I was wasted.
Would you further believe that Keven rode his first C in 1987?
Spent all summer wondering if he'd make it and training for it.
Then he went nuts and rode a bunch of 'em last year.
Go for it guys,
Gettin' older,
ed
|
969.6 | What this thing be? | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | drywall 'til ya drop! | Wed Jan 25 1989 09:53 | 10 |
| > and I have made it into the UMCA Who's Who for 1988.
I'm suitably impressed by the mileage notes in the last few, but I've
re-read the whole note and have missed bein' able to figger out what a
UMCA is - Ultralight Motor Cycle Association springs to mind (especially
considering the mileages) but somehow, I feel that that's not it...
Could someone explain this FLAN? (Four Letter Acro Nym)... :-)
ken
|
969.7 | Ultra-Marathon Cycling Association | NAC::KLASMAN | | Wed Jan 25 1989 10:31 | 42 |
| >UMCA is - Ultralight Motor Cycle Association springs to mind (especially
Close: Ultralight (21 lbs or less, minus water bottles, seat packs, pumps,
etc)
Motor (2 legged creature that can output 100 rpm when rested, whatever
it can manage after a couple of hundred miles).
Actually, UMCA stands for Ultra-Marathon Cycling Association. This is the
organization that sponsors RAAM (Race Across AMerica), 3 RAAM qualifiers, and
numerous other ultra-distance events (24-hour races, etc). The RAAM
qualifiers are approximately 600m races, ridden as close to non-stop as
possible, with the top finishers qualifying for RAAM. Ed finished one of
these last year.
The NPC is the National Points Challenge, which is a competition to see who
can ride the most miles in any of 3 divisions:
1 - Century Div. Organized rides of 90-124m. These cannot be pick up rides
or solo rides.
2 - Standard Div. Organized rides of at least 200m ridden at a minimum
average pace of 200m/24hr. These include RAAM, the qualifiers, BMB, PBP,
24-hour races.
3 - Open Div. Solo rides with the same qualifications as the Standard Div.
These rides must be verified by the rider getting witnesses every 50m or so
to sign a form which is sent to the club. Witnesses are contacted to verify
the ride.
There is a Miscellaneous Div to collect mileage ridden between 124 and 200m (I
think).
4 - Combined Div. Totals all miles ridden in the above categories.
As John mentioned earlier, the top 15% of all four categories make up the
Who's Who list, and they are listed in the Combined Div order.
BTW, most of John's rides were Open, Ed's were Standard, and mine were
Century.
Kevin
|
969.8 | Not there yet, but working on it. | NOVA::FISHER | BMB Finisher | Wed Jan 25 1989 11:31 | 14 |
| 1 - Century Div. Organized rides of 90-150m.
2 - Standard Div. Organized rides of at least 150m ...
3 - Open Div. Solo rides ... of at least 200m maintianing a pace of
200m/24hr.
No Miscellaneous Div.
---------------------
Hey, 10622 is the only way I could get my bike costs below a buck a
mile.
ed
|
969.9 | 1988 details | ATLAST::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Jan 25 1989 19:39 | 22 |
| Ok, some details on 1988:
#2 - 9740 miles - John Lee Ellis, Charlotte NC
- 43 UMCA Open Division double C's.
- 8 additional non-witnessed (non-UMCA) double C's.
- 0 UMCA centuries (untallied number of "private" 100+ mile rides)
- BMB Brevet (764 miles)
- 27177 miles for 1988 (26400 for 1987, about 30000 for 1986)
Goals for 1989:
- early (February or early March) double C
- Grenoble 240km Randonneur Brevet (June?)
- RAAM Midwest Open
- BMB again
Parting comment: I'm impressed by the accomplishments and expertise
of people like Ed and Kevin - I've ridden with them, so I should
know - good luck with your 1989 goals!
-john
|
969.10 | And the Rest of the Story? | ICBB::JSMITH | Bikes Spoke_n Here | Thu Jan 26 1989 09:30 | 5 |
| What about the Non-Decies from the area ....like Paul and Linda
.....how did they do? Don't know why I didn't get the standings
from the UMCA.....must be due to lack of activity 8^)
Jerry
|
969.11 | | NOVA::FISHER | BMB Finisher | Thu Jan 26 1989 11:58 | 14 |
| Paul and Linda both made the Who's Who. Linda Bousquet is #26,
on the strength of her combined mileage. Paul Morrissette on
the number of Centuries.
I do not have the details here. Notification came in a letter
along with request for biographical information and jersey size
and lettering choice.
27177? John! Amazing! If I were your bicycle, I would have
died of fatigue too.I'm glad I had a chance to show you Adams,
Taconic, Prospect, and that d*****d little shortcut back to
Greenfield.
ed
|
969.12 | details for Linda & Paul | ATLAST::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Jan 26 1989 14:26 | 5 |
|
#26 - 3114 miles - Linda Bousquet, Pelham NH
#37 - 2299 miles - Paul Morrissette, Lowell MA
-j
|
969.13 | what else is there to do, after all? | ATLAST::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Jan 26 1989 19:34 | 10 |
| RE: .-2
I really enjoyed the Taconic, etc., and you'll have to admit
that the *** shortcut wasn't half so bad after the initial 2-3
miles of vertical climb, eh? :-)
It's true, by the way, I feel guilty plaguing these poor defenseless
bikes so much. Thanks for your nice remarks.
-john
|
969.14 | 'nuff said for '88. Here's to '89! | NOVA::FISHER | BMB Finisher | Fri Jan 27 1989 05:55 | 6 |
| John,
Linda says that if she were you she would have died of fatigue.
But, then, who among us would not have?
ed
|
969.15 | What do you do for lances? | ICBB::JSMITH | Bikes Spoke_n Here | Fri Jan 27 1989 08:22 | 9 |
| We'll the good ole US of A Mail finally came thru...got my UMCA
Who's Who edition and found out that you guys are extremely
modest. For example, although John finished second his picture
is twice as big as the first place persons (hmmmm) Also, I didn't
see any mention of the fact that Ed Fisher took the *State* honors
in New Hampshire in the previous notes.....must have something to
do with chivilary (sp) ...... Do you guys ride *White* bikes ?
Jerry
|
969.16 | Who's Who trivia... | NAC::KLASMAN | | Fri Jan 27 1989 08:39 | 25 |
| < Note 969.15 by ICBB::JSMITH "Bikes Spoke_n Here" >
-< What do you do for lances? >-
> is twice as big as the first place persons (hmmmm) Also, I didn't
> see any mention of the fact that Ed Fisher took the *State* honors
> in New Hampshire in the previous notes.....must have something to
> do with chivilary (sp) ...... Do you guys ride *White* bikes ?
Well, lets see what other tidbits I can remember:
There were 4 New England riders in the Who's Who: Ed, Linda Bousquet,
yours truly, and Paul Morrissette.
Linda was 3rd woman overall.
Paul took the Mass state honors.
John Ellis took the Open Category (mentioned before?), as well as the
North Carolina state honors.
DEC riders made up 10% of the top 30.
Can't remember any other stats...
Kevin
|
969.17 | 1989 Who's Who | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Mar 09 1990 21:08 | 21 |
|
The 1989 UMCA Who's Who again included Digital riders Ed Fisher
and myself. GSW noteds Paul Morrissette and Linda Bousquet also
made it into the ranks. Paul Morrissette made a real stab at
winning the Century Division (organized 90-110 mile century events),
but was edged out by a Californian, Stephen Bates, as winter closed
in on New England.
Here are the UMCA mileages (total UMCA-recorded miles, Combined Division):
16494 John Lee Ellis, Charlotte NC
4861 Ed Fisher, Hudson NH
4381 Paul Morrissette, Lowell, Mass (#2 in Century Division)
3640 Linda Bousquet, Pelham NH
Please let me know if anyone's left out or incorrectly reported.
The Century, Standard, and Open divisions are as the previous year,
and the new Indoor Division drew 10 contenders.
-john
|
969.18 | Another banner year | CESARE::JOHNSON | Matt Johnson, DTN 871-7473 | Sat Mar 10 1990 06:56 | 6 |
| Any idea what your TOTAL miles were last year, John? What was your
overall placing in the UMCA totals? (I'm betting either first or
second....)
MATT
|
969.19 | more stats | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sat Mar 10 1990 19:51 | 16 |
|
Matt,
My total 1989 miles were about 26400 (by Cateye; 26700 on the Huret).
I placed first in the Combined division and in the Open Division
(witnessed, free-form 200+ mile rides). The Combined included 1199
miles from the Standard Division (Mt. Mitchell, 400km and 600km Brevets,
and a 24-hour TT) and 3 Centuries, I believe. The previous UMCA
NPC record was 12500, set in 1987 by Kevin Zelenka. (After it looked
like I might win the Combined, I thought I'd try for a new record,
and managed to achieve that.)
It was kinda fun, if you can believe that. :-)
-john
|
969.20 | How many of these were sleep miles? | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Sun Mar 11 1990 18:20 | 26 |
| re: Note 969.17
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Here are the UMCA mileages (total UMCA-recorded miles, Combined Division):
>> 16494 John Lee Ellis, Charlotte NC
>> 4861 Ed Fisher, Hudson NH
>> 4381 Paul Morrissette, Lowell, Mass (#2 in Century Division)
>> 3640 Linda Bousquet, Pelham NH
=======
12882
Hmmmmm. What's wrong with this picture? John Lee does 16.5K/mi
and Ed, Paul and Linda combined only amounts to 3/4 of John Lee's
individual accomplishment. Hope this doesn't get back to the GSW
where some of us have *reputations* to uphold!
_Jerry
BTW: - Congratulations on your accomplishment guys (and girl)
from a mear mortal (1442 Club miles in '89).
P.S. - How many Centuries did Paul do/loose by? Bummer!!!
|
969.21 | for statistic buffs, climatologists | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sun Mar 11 1990 20:11 | 36 |
|
The Century Division ended up this way:
#1 52 Stephen Bates
#2 43 Paul Morrissette
#3 31 Keith Estridge, Middletown OH
... etc.
Lots of people are bunched up in the upper 20's. If I recall
correctly, the gap between #1 and #2 was closer 'til autumn set in.
Interestingly, a newspaper clipping I just received said that Steve
Bates was originally trying for 100 centuries, but just couldn't
find enough (scouring California and Oregon). I'm sure that phenomenon
affected Paul, too.
FYI, here are where our Who's Who guys stood up in the standings
(again kind of an exponential bunching):
#1 16494 John Lee Ellis, Charlotte NC
#2 10471 Terry Wittenburg, Buda TX
#3 7320 Terry Wilson, Pittsburgh PA (#1 in 1988; did RAAM '89)
...
#11 4861 Ed Fisher, Hudson NH
#15 4381 Paul Morrissette, Lowell, Mass (#2 in Century Division)
#21 3640 Linda Bousquet, Pelham NH
Climate (and sanity??) play a big role in all the divisions, although
people like Terry Wilson (Pittsburgh) and riders from Illinois have
won the NPC in the past. New England is clearly both ornery in
climate and terrain, though.
Congratulations to the above... and to you, too, Jerry for those
hard-won GSW miles - I hear the GSW club rides can be ... challenging.
-john
|
969.22 | John's too modest | CLYPPR::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Mon Mar 12 1990 05:08 | 4 |
| John, your modesty set in there. In case it didn't come across, John
SHATTERED the existing UMCA record.
ed
|
969.23 | Where were the Digital women? | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Mon Mar 12 1990 10:14 | 31 |
| re: Note 969.21
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Century Division ended up this way:
> #1 52 Stephen Bates
> #2 43 Paul Morrissette
Incredible. Last I heard (around late October) Paul was either
in the lead or tied.
> #1 16494 John Lee Ellis, Charlotte NC
> #2 10471 Terry Wittenburg, Buda TX
> #3 7320 Terry Wilson, Pittsburgh PA (#1 in 1988; did RAAM '89)
Again, John Lee's 1st is almost equal to two
Terry's (2nd and 3rd) combined....W O W
> won the NPC in the past. New England is clearly both ornery in
> climate and terrain, though.
> Congratulations to the above... and to you, too, Jerry for those
> hard-won GSW miles - I hear the GSW club rides can be ... challenging.
Thanks John, but I suspect that one of the contributing
factors in both my club mileage last year and Paul's number
of centuries is the difficulty of Ed Fishers rides. I still
can't understand why, when there is a perfectly good *flat*
route around a mountain, Ed consistently leads us over the
top. Next year I hope he joins the recumbent division :-)
_Jerry
|
969.24 | Over is better than through! | BANZAI::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Mon Mar 12 1990 12:20 | 4 |
| I leraned a long time ago that people complain after a wimpy ride. I
don't want to hear it so I make 'em tough.
ed
|
969.25 | | ALLVAX::JROTH | It's a bush recording... | Tue Mar 13 1990 07:41 | 4 |
| John, you wouldn't happen to have a couple of extra magnets on that
rear wheel would you? :-)
- Jim
|
969.26 | the secret | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Mar 13 1990 09:07 | 4 |
|
Many of my miles were downhill. :-)
-j
|
969.27 | elusive downhills, Thanks Ed | ENGINE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Tue Mar 13 1990 10:38 | 20 |
| re. last: 'many..miles were downhill' - I was thinking the same
Sunday (warm weather has finally hit New England! Hurray!) when the
freewheel on my diamond frame seized, sheared, and started spitting
bearings about 10 miles from home. After removing the remains, I
started walking (in cleats) the bike home thinking 'at least I can
coast downhill half the time'. NOT SO! Since I was going lots faster
downhill than when I was walking the bike, the time spent was just a
few percent. On the flats, push/riding it like a scooter, I still
wasn't going that fast. And, pushing it uphills in cleats was a
hobbling calf-stretching pain. But, it was a nice day to be outside...
On one stretch, a rider going the other way stopped across the road
and inquired about my problem. I shouted across traffic that I just had
a long walk home and continued on. A couple of mile later, as I was
starting to think about trying to hitch a ride in a pickup truck, one
pulled in in front of me and the rider hopped out of the passenger
seat. He then recognized me and I him - it was Ed Trumbell of CRW and
his son. Ed had ridden out from Boston to visit his son and just saw me
before getting to his place. The ride home was MUCH appreciated!! So,
thanks Ed! (But, if there had been more downhills...) - Chris
|
969.28 | Does the golden rule fit in here? | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Tue Mar 13 1990 11:32 | 17 |
| re; -1
And I promise not to go to far off the subject, but I have
a pick up with a Cannondale truck rack in the back that has
extended numerous support services such as the incident that
Chris talks about. I'm not just talking about extending a
hand to a club rider, I have picked up total strangers with
broken bicycles and gone out of my way to give them a ride home
just because they were bikies like us. After all, isn't that one
of the things that bicycling is all about? Sure hope that people
treat me this way if/when something like that happens to me and
I'm on an unsupported Century ride.
And now a word from our sponsor.....back to you John
_Jerry
BTW - Aren't all UMCA rides Unsupported Century Rides ;-)
|
969.29 | some umca rides are supported | BANZAI::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Tue Mar 13 1990 14:57 | 4 |
| There is an occasional supported ride that qualifies. They just charge
ridiculous fees, often for nothing.
ed
|