Penced my Pants wrote:
Wise One wrote:1. You logic makes George Bush look smart.
2. If you are in a pack in the swim, you are drafting. The draft advantage doesn't just magically disappear at the toes of a particular swimmer. As that swim study shows, the avatar is in all directions and for quote a distance. And what kind of idiotic thinking it's going on in your head to think that you can only take advantage of the swim draft by staying on the toes of ONE swimmer? Do you even draft, bro?
3. Drafting in a group or a single swimmer in triathlons is dangerous. You can't see anything and the officials can't see how many of you there are our if you drown because of all the wave action and churn. Tell me why there are so many preventable drowning deaths in triathlons?
Here is where your logic breaks down.
The man that drowned in the swim would have gone under whether he was by himself or in a pack. He may have been SEEN easier if he were by himself, but nothing about the action of swimming in a pack is more dangerous than the action of swimming by yourself.
By contrast, riding on a TT/Tri bike in a pack of competitors is exponentially more dangerous than riding a TT bike by yourself or riding a road bike by yourself. Riding TT bikes in a pack actually contributes to the danger of crashing (as it is much less stable and you don't have immediate access to your brakes), whereas swimming in a pack doesn't make the action of swimming any more dangerous.
The swimmer was going to go down regardless (although he may have been saved). The crash doesn't happen, and it doesn't take out 20 folks around the culprit, if they don't ride in packs. (This also explains your original question: good cyclists don't want to get taken out and wreck their bike/body because of the actions of a less experienced cyclist doing something that is illegal in the first place.)
What you are saying is akin to "why do they let multiple people into waterparks at the same time? It would be safer if only one person could be in the lazy river at a time."
You are totally wrong. If you get into some trouble on the bike, you don't die. If you get into some trouble on the swim, you die. You think little crashes on the bike because tryathletes don't know how to ride a bike is "exponentially" more dangerous than dieing on the swim? Unreal.
That guy didn't need to die on the swim leg. He may have gotten tired and tried to signal for help but he couldn't because he was surrounded by other swimmers drafting. What likely happened is that he got a bit tired and just started treading water to try to rest, bobbing up and down near the surface. But since he was drafting with the other swimmers, everybody just swam over top of him forcing him under water and causing him to drown. The drafting was the cause of his death.
And bike handling is an essential part of cycling. If you are dumb enough to closely draft tryathletes that can't ride a straight line, then maybe you deserve to crash a few times before you learn. Good cyclists will increase the space between them and wobbly tryathletes and draft towards the outside so they have an escape route should somebody go down. And good cyclists will tell at wobbly tryathletes to get to the back of the group if they ride like that.