PICKING A COURSE

This is the fun part—scouting triathlon venues. Last weekend I heard from a Southern California native, "All the venues are drying up." Hogwash. In fact, it's the contrary. We have so many new triathletes that any new race has a much larger chance of financial success. This means the more far-flung venues, which had never been seriously considered, now have a shot at making it.

The important thing is to pick a venue and a course that'll provide you a race that won't cost much to produce. That in turn will mean you can start small, and let your race have a chance to grow (and your abilities as an RD can grow with it).

Throughout California I see venues all around me in which there are no races. Has the accessibility of the venue been tested? When I hear that someone has "already checked out [this or that] body of water," and you can't put a triathlon on there, I rarely take that as a firm "no." I'd want to know to whom the presentation was made, and how strong was the sales job.

Just because you can put a race on in a certain location does not, however, mean you should. I have two questions in my mind which are paramount: will the course be safe? will it be cheap to produce? Usually, the two go hand-in-hand. "Safe" means very few intersections, extremely sparsely traveled roads or, failing that, roads with wide shoulders. You want bike courses which are easy to marshall, meaning that you'll need few marshalls, and if they're straightforward intersections—especially rolling right hand turns—you may be able to get away with using quasi-official traffic controllers (instead of expensive, time-and-a-half sheriffs or highway patrolmen).

Here is a short checklist for choosing the right venue and the right course:

1. It goes without saying, the water needs to be clean and safe. It would be reassuring to know there's a vibrant inlet and outlet, and it's not out of line to ask the appropriate person charged with the water quality whether the water's safe for swimming, and what sort of testing might they do to know that.

2. There has got to be a good spot for a transition area, and a way to easily get from the water to the transition. Most often it's the boat ramp, and there's usually a parking lot close to the ramp.

3. There have got to be good, easily-managed roads and intersections. Best is if there's a loop made out of right-hand turns (Wildflower's bike course is a good example). Out-and-back courses are often problematic, because they require double the road width for bike travel. The alternative to this is an entire road closure, which might be workable if the road is rural; and if no one, or almost no one, lives on it; and if there is an alternate route for a detour.

4. If you've got all of that, you're usually able to figure out some place to run.

5. Are there places for people to stay? Motels? Camping spots? Is there electricity on site? And running water? Is the water potable, and does it taste good? Otherwise, you've got to bring water in for aid stations.

6. Is this course going to cause a lot of displacement among the locals? Are you making a church inaccessible for parishioners on a Sunday morning? Are you closing off commercial concerns from being able to do business?

7. What time of year will you be holding your event? Is the weather conducive? Will it be Africa hot? Or, if it looks like a great spot in August, and you want to have your race in May, are there seasonal road closures that will still be in effect? If the swim venue looks great in May and you want to have your race in September, will the water level still be high? Are there times of the year—usually during high runoff—when the water is less likely to be clean?

Be creative in your thinking. Don't necessarily assume that problems with the above checklist result in deal breakers. I put on a race in which I hemmed in the bait shop—making it impossible for it to do business on race day—and to make matters worse the boat ramp was to be closed at 7AM. The bait shop owner complained to high heaven. I proposed a solution. We'll put signs up at the bait shop weeks before the event, and have the newspaper run a story, saying that fishing boats need to launch by 7AM. To compensate them for launching early we bought each fisherman a free bucket of bait per boat. I then asked the bait shop owner how much bait he'd expect to sell. "Three hundred dollars worth," he said. Fine. We agreed to make up the difference to $300. Problem solved."

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