Hi Don.
I think your suggestions re the National Titles are very well intentioned however in particular, reducing grid sizes to make a National Title class viable is not a good idea in my opinion. It devalues the meaning of the title "Australian Champion" in my eyes and would also make running the event even more difficult than it already is.
I have empathy for the older riders having to compete with the younger riders, but I always come back to the view that for the National Titles, which is after all a very serious race event, the emphasis must be on who is fastest, not how many titles we can award on a single day.
Also IMHO, small grids of riders in Vintage race meetings are part of the problem that is causing people to leave the sport. They mean that you get less riding for your dollar, as it's just logistically impossible to run more rounds of racing on a given day when you have 20 classes compared to say, 10. I am a strong believer that like classes should be combined to make large grids and then if necessary, the classes can be scored separately from the results. This would make for better racing overall and also enable clubs to get through more rounds of racing in a single day. This would also be true for the Nationals.
And of course, NO vintage events should be run anywhere in Australia on the same day as a National title, to try and ensure we give the title event the best possible chance of drawing the numbers required to make it viable. Some may see this as being directed at HEAVEN - it is, by the way (sorry Rudi
), but it could easily apply to any other club that runs an event in competition to a national title event. HEAVEN's decision to
reschedule the EVO challenge on the same weekend of the Wagga DT Titles (even though everyone knew that the DT titles were on the calendar) was a poor one indeed.
Notwithstanding the above, the National Titles are not the issue here as far as I can tell. The real issue is the grass roots numbers of riders participating in club events. If the overall numbers of clubs riders was stronger than it is now, it's highly likely that events such as the Nationals would be better attended and the class and cost issues, while still significant, would be less of a problem.
So as this thread progresses, I come back to the idea that we need to have less serious race events and more events which emphasise the FUN aspects of our sport. If we do that, I'm sure the old boys will return...