I guess we all got the news last week that the previous ceo of usa cycling made a rather hasty departure from his colorado springs suite. thought there is a brief communication to be found here, he has already disappeared down the memory hole and is gone from the staff directory at the usac site. a conference call was held last friday between the usac exec-utariat and all of the local cycling associations. the call was straightforward, and the people from usac basically communciated the same thing you got in your email from them yesterday afternoon.
i have not asked any questions to see if there is something interesting behind his sudden exodus, and to be frank, i don't care a whole lot. there are two reasons for this. the first is that i'm not a big fan of drama. the second is simply that from most of our perspectives, it simply does not matter. local associations do most of the work that you see on saturday and sunday so virtually nothing will change. yes it's true that this situation is surreal, like you awoke in some parallel universe to find yourself surrounded by wierd objects, and very, very disoriented.

but the truth is that if there's drama, it just doesn't effect us in a practical sense. races will still be promoted, officials will still show up and handle protests over who got 37th place. racers will still show up and put in 100% and have fun with their comrades. the reason for this is that a lot of people who you may know do a lot of work behind the scenes. they don't talk about it, they just do it.
i am constantly amazed by the amount of actual work that goes into trying to keep mabra organized and running as efficiently as possible. i don't always agree with the decisions that are made, or how they are made, but i have come to see that the people who make these decisions do it for sincere reasons and a laudable commitment to moving things forward. and this is how i view the usac by extension. i don't care for a lot of their initiatives, i don't agree with their view of how to grow cycling here in the states, and the cost of an annual license galls me. but i know from experience that they work long hours and they want to see cycling move forward. they have a practical monopoly on road racing in the states and i worry a lack of competition can lead to complacency.** but some of their recent improvements, most notably the web site, are really aimed at improving the user experience. they seem to understand that customer service is not a platitude, a nice thought to hang on a wall.
so don't sweat the drama. thank the officials and the mabra people who make it all happen. focus on the priorities: people, power, pedals.
- - posted by scott
** (there are groups that are working with a mission to change that and i will address that in a subsequent post)