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by nradov 3356 days ago
Beyond the doping, some Strava.com users take insane risks chasing "King of the Mountain" awards on segments. If they don't have the legs to win on climbs they ride the descents in a reckless manner, risking crashes and car collisions. And this is purely for bragging rights.

http://road.cc/content/news/84948-judge-dismisses-lawsuit-ag...

2 comments

As someone who has KOM'd a ~10 minute descent in a heavily-trafficked area of the French Alps (adjacent to Alpe d'Huez), I'll say the experience of doing so was sobering. I hadn't set out with an explicit intent to beat the record, but I love descending and was just having a phenomenal time of it. When I uploaded the ride and learned that I'd gotten the fastest time, something sort of clicked that maybe I didn't need to push things so hard and so fast. Surely some component of doing that was skill, but another unknown component was recklessness.

I've never descended quite so aggressively since.

I thought I was a great descender until I rode with a group of retired pro. They're not just following amazingly fast lines (they know most of the Alps like old friends) - their first-class handling skills allow them to do things that'd get me killed. Things like crossing the centre line into a blind turn on a busy road, bunny-hopping a fallen log at >90 kph, cornering whilst unseated on the top tube. Stuff no amateur should even consider. When they are in trouble (e.g. that blind corner had an oncoming car) they get out of it faster and more precisely and intuitively than I could ever hope to.

It might seem reasonable when you consider they spend kilohours riding, moreover in the company of other world-class athletes, but it's astonishing and terrifying to watch.

Of course, most of them also have war stories to tell, and all of them have shattered ribs, clavicles, vertebrae, pelvic bones at some point in their career. Because beyond the envelope there's nothing but injury and pain and occasionally and very tragically, death.

The very best bicycle descender of my personal acquaintance is a former Moto GP competitor. He has lightning reflexes and an amazing feel for the dynamics of any two-wheeled machine. I'm glad to say he shares his knowledge and occasionally runs free cornering workshops. My ability to read a corner has been greatly enhanced by his teaching, I think he saves lives.

I was always amazed at how little my heart rate went down on the descent.
They're not only putting themselves at risk.

Strava cyclists have also killed innocent pedestrians by sprinting through red lights in their attempts at bragging rights.

http://road.cc/content/news/89218-us-cyclist-who-killed-pede...