Question:Sitting Rules
- Sitting is only permitted in stage races (prohibited for one-day races).
- Never share your password with any other team.
Should we limit Sitting in stage races?
For me, being sitted each and every stage of a stage race is at least as unfair as Sitting in a one-day race. Consequently, we should either remove the first rule, or limit Sitting in stage races. My suggestion is to only allow Sitting if the team manager is online at least one stage himself. A little more stricter would be to give a percentage, e.g. Sitting is only allowed if the team manger is online at least 20% (or 30% or 50%) of the stages. For example, if you are online 1 stage in a 5-stages tour, it's enough. But in a Grand Tours, you need to be online at least 4 stages, etc... right percentage to be calibrated (including rounding up or down).
This was my main concern, but whilst I am at it, more ideas
Should we make the password rule more precise?
We could make it more clear and say: "It is prohibited to share your password with another team. Any case of password sharing will be treated like a multi account case." Why so strict? We have the Sitting tool now, and one of the reasons is to make it easier to identify multi accounts.
Should we re-think the offline rules?
For one day races the 60% offline limit seems mostly fine to me, but for stage races, I am not sure if it is a balanced rule. I understand the rule is you can be offline max. 60% of the stages. I think excluding ITT/TTT. And I think being offline again means 60% of the race? Not 100% sure about the exact rule actually. I haven't seen this exact snippet of code. But if there are suggestions, it would fit into this discussion, too.What if I cannot be online for a race?
In one-day-races, you cannot be offline for more than 60% of the race. For example, if you miss 120 consecutive km in a 200km race, your riders will abandon.
In stage races (tours), you can be offline for whole stages, but there is a limit. If you miss more than 60% of the race in more than 60% of the stages, your riders will abandon.