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Home > Inline speed skating


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Inline speed skating is the sport of racing on inline skates. It is often called inline racing by participants. Although it primarily evolved from racing on "quad" roller skates, the sport is similar enough to ice speed skating that many competitors are now known to switch between inline and ice speed skating according to the season.

1 The skate

An inline speed skate is a specialized version of the inline skate. The boot or shoe is close-fitting, without padding and made of leather and/or carbon composites. For best performance the boot must conform closely to the shape of the foot, so most inline speed skating boots are heat-moldable so that the user may to some extent re-shape them.

The frame (sometimes called the chassis or plate) which holds the wheels is made of aircraft-quality aluminum and traditionally held five polyurethane wheels of between 78 mm and 88 mm diameter. 80 mm has traditionally been the size of choice for racers, though larger sizes are now becoming available and popular. Although clap skate frames similar to those used in long track ice speed skating have been designed for inline racing, they have not proven so superior to the normal fixed frame that the majority of inline speed skaters have switched to them. In the early 2000s, many inline speed skaters have instead been using so-called "big-wheel" skates. The frames of such skates hold only four wheels, but the wheels may be from 84 mm to 100 mm in diameter.

A somewhat different form of inline speed skate uses a monocoque design. The boot and frame are made as one piece of carbon fiber material and offer noticeable savings in weight. They are, however, not widely used because they cost about four to five times the price of a high-quality standard boot-frame combination.

Inline speed skates usually do not have any sort of braking mechanism attached, and skaters use the T-stop and other techniques to slow down.

2 Race venues and formats

Inline speed skating races are held in a variety of formats and on a variety of surfaces.

Indoor races are held at roller skating rinks on coated wood floors and are common primarily in the United States, which has a long tradition of roller skate racing at rinks. The track is about 100 m in circumference. Events, or meets, are typically structured so that members of numerous age groups race in three or four distances. At the shortest distances, there may be a number of heats. To some extent, indoor inline races are similar to short track speed skating.

Outdoor races may be held on regular pavement on city streets or park roads, or they may be held at specialized venues similar to velodromes, sometimes called patinodromes. A patinodrome is generally about 400 m in circumference and may be surfaced with asphalt, concrete or similar material. The curves may be banked. Such specialized skating tracks are relatively common in Europe but rare in the United States. USA Roller SportsUSA Roller Sports is recognized by the International Federation of Roller Sports (FIRS) and the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) as the National Governing Body for Competitive Roller Sports in the United States. USA Roller Sports has its headquarter is the official national governing body recognized by the US Olympic Committee.

Race formats include:

Time trials: Held "against the clock", each skater races individually or in pairs over a distance of 100 m to 300 m, attempting to establish the best time. Time trials are occasionally held over longer distances, but they are very physically demanding and not popular.

Sprints: Skating in small groups of about a half dozen over a distance of 500 m to 1500 m, skaters advance in a series of heats to a final round.

Elimination races: In these moderate-distance races, also known as last man out, the hindmost skater is eliminated from the competition each time the skaters complete a lap or when they complete certain specified lap numbers. At one or two laps to before the finish, the group has usually been pared down to about five skaters.

Points races: In these moderate-distance races, the first, second and third skaters to cross the start/finish line at certain specified laps are awarded points. Laps late in the race are worth more points, with the final lap worth the most points of all. It is possible to win a points race without actually being the first to cross the finish line at the end.

Points-elimination races: A combination of elimination races and points races.

Relays: Typically include three to four skaters per team.

Criterium races: Instead of racing a specified distance or number laps, the skaters skate for a certain amount of time, then plus a (small) number of laps. The time is typically between 15 and 45 minutes, after which a bell is rung and the skaters informed the race is over when they skate one or two more laps around the course.

Distance races: Although events such as points-elimination races and criteriums may cover a distance of 10-25 km, a distance race usually refers to a race over a set distance of about 5 km or longer and without specialized points or elimination rules. The event may be truly point-to-point or may held on a repeating course with a circumference of at least 1 km. Distance races are often marketed to the general populace and not just to members of inline racing clubs.

In the early days of inline racing, sponsors of distance races were often also running event organizers, and the races they organized were commonly the same distances as those of running races, about 5-10 km. By the mid-1990s such events were proving to not be very popular and in the United States, where sales of inline skates were also beginning to slip, there was a decline in participation at races. However, at about that time in Europe, where inline skate sales were beginning to rise, race sponsors began to regularly organize longer events, particularly inline marathonA marathon is an athletic event and the town in Greece (and site of a battle) for which the sport was named; the name of a village and a town in New York; an island in the Florida Keys; until 1990, the name in the United Kingdom for a Snickers bar; a comps. Such events proved to be enormously popular among fitness skaters, with some events such as the BerlinBerlin [ bɛrˈliːn ] is the national capital of Germany and its largest city, with 3,387,404 inhabitants (as of September 2004); down from 4. 5 million before World War II. Berlin is located on the rivers Spree and Havel in the northea Inline Marathon and the EngadinLej da Segl and Lej da Silvaplauna, Upper Engadin Fuorcla Surlej The Engadin is a high-lying east-west valley in the south of the Inn River in the canton of Graubunden in Switzerland, famous for its sunny climate and beautiful landscape. In the west, it e Inline Marathon in St. MoritzMoritz Sankt-Moritz is a popular resort town in the Engadine valley in the canton of Graubunden, Switzerland. Popular pastimes include skiing and hiking, nearby there is also the world famous Cresta Run toboggan course. The year round population is 5,600, Switzerland, regularly attracting over 5000 skaters each year.

In about 2000This page is about the year 2000. See 2000 AD for the UK comic book, Number 2000 for other uses. 2000 is a leap year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar), and also the International Year for a Culture of Peace''. Events Y2K passes without the seri American event sponsors followed suit, and inline half-marathons and marathons were scheduled more and more frequently around the country. As in Europe the events proved a big draw with fitness skaters looking for events which would give their training a focus. In the United States the most popular inline marathons have been the NorthShore Inline Marathon in Duluth, Minnesota and the Long Beach marathon. Also popular is the 142 km Athens-to- Atlanta Road Skating Marathon, first held in the early 1980s as an event for quad roller skaters.

Dryland triathlons: Occasionally organized by triathlon sponsors, these events substitute inline skating for the swimming component of the race.

Downhill races: An event most popular in the Alpine countries of Europe, these races are timed events down a steep course. Racers usually skate alone and the event commonly uses the best time of two heats to establish the winner. Downhill inline racers usually wear skates much more like "regular" inline skates than inline speed skates, along with extensive body covering and protective gear, and strong helmets. They may reach speeds of up to 75 km/hour.



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