“Are you havin’ a dig at me?” It’s a good old phrase that one. I hear it occasionally, usually in response to some jest, part of the banter that me and my friends enjoy on a regular basis. It can be used as an off-the-cuff remark, clearly meant in a jocular way, or can carry with it a more sinister edge, a way to make a point that just needs to be made, but wrapped in enough humour to soften that edge but still prick the skin ever-so-slightly and deliver the message. “You sure you’re not havin’ a dig at me?”
The Dig is a beautiful thing when it’s employed in Cycling. Every ride will contain a dig. No matter if you’re out on a supposed cruisy lap, or a long and hard slog, there will always be a dig waiting to be unleashed, or perhaps unfurled. The way it is delivered can be predetermined, even conspired with another, or it can be completely desultory and spontaneous, taking everyone by surprise, even the schlepper making the despatch. It can be timid, or tumultuous. It can be the most subtle of moves, gracefully administered from the saddle with nary a hint of movement or sound to indicate that it is even happening, or it can be more apparent, yet never a violent, aggressive action; that would be an attack.
The Dig is meant to test rather than defeat. It’s a way of saying “there’s more to come, suckers” or to find out what others may have in reserve. Or it’s just a way to niggle, to tease and tempt, to draw a comparison between you and your comrades, who could at any time transform into adversaries, either by your or their doing. It can be one of your most valuable weapons when deployed correctly, or, like holding the grenade and throwing away the pin, a dangerously inept move should you not treat it with care and respect.
All you need to do is pick the right time. Tactics, a trump card for the smartest if not strongest rider, come into their own here; looking for the right opportunity to throw in a Dig is as important a skill as the Dig itself. Most will expect that if the gradient goes up even a small amount, that someone will be willing to Dig. Most though will, all too predictably, want to attack. You can nullify the attack through vocalisation, using the mouth rather than the legs. “We should just take it easy today” is an age-old and proven nullifier. “I’m not getting involved in that” as the first accelerations come. When you’re sure that your comrades have taken the bait, don’t make it blindingly obvious that you are going to up the pace… just a slight increase in tempo will do the trick, and even if only one or two are sent scrabbling for the last wheel, then the Dig has been successful. That small amount of energy used to get back on is a withdrawl from the V-bank, yet leaving just enough to instill a belief that there’s sufficient to cover any more bills that may need to be paid later. It’s a false sense of security that will be the downfall of the economy when further Digs are deployed. And like shareholders in Lehmann Brothers, they won’t see it coming until it’s too late and the coffers are empty.
After a rolling series of Digs, then it’s allowable, and advisable, to pick the last bits of rotting flesh from the carcasses, and hammer the final nail into the collective coffin. If you’ve dug properly, you will have much more Essence of V left than your now tiring and mentally confused adversaries. You can attack. But if you’ve not been absolutely discerning with your digging, then all you will appear to be is an asshole who couldn’t cash the cheques you were so willing to write at will earlier, and you’ll be left desperately scrabbling on the ground for the fives and dimes scattered at your feet.
*One of the best examples of The Dig employed by Bjarne Riis at Hautacam in Le Tour 1996. The way he torments his rivals, goes back to check them out three or four times, then delivers the killer blow is classic Digging.
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Sounds like someone has been spying on our club rides; that's pretty much the way it goes down every weekend. The earlier comment about the early head bob being an indicator of imminent pain is absolutely right. I've spent a lot of this winter practising laying down the V with a rock-steady upper body for exactly that reason.
@ChrisO
Seconded. I went looking for this Rule last night and was a bit alarmed not to find it.
@KW
I'm kind of in the same spot. He's been around a lot longer than I and everyone likes him so I don't find it my place to correct his riding. I do what I can to stay away, usually moving up does it.
@KW The chap at our club that likes to ride in a central position rather in the left or right column is also a long term member and club stalwart.
[Mental resolution to self: Apply V and tell him to stay in line next time. Second warning to be a gentle elbow nudge whilst the third will be a "directional correction" per Scaler's advice.]
[Mental note to self: find some form so as not to look like a complete cock when getting dropped after telling said club stalwart to behave himself]
re: the rider who's 'half-wheeling':
my old school solution while riding mtn. bikes (& top-mounted thumb shifters), when they get close enough, just reach over & shift for them. or a gentle nudge on their brake lever. they won't ever get close enough to you again.
When riding two abreast if there is an odd man out the best place is in the middle so the two behind can get a better draft. They should move to the right if someone comes up next to them.
@Ron
I spent a couple of days in Far North Queensland last year on a media junket, and Tommo was MCing the Croc trophy race. He is a funny guy to hang out with, totally aware of his reputation as being a bit of a bumbler (at least in his early days) and was very self-effacing in his humour. And he dished it out as good as he copped when we were on the drink and talk turned to the Pharmy years... I even told him how I'd contacted SBS TV on a number of occasions asking for his job, and he just said "well, you didn't get it!" A good guy.