I think you've missed the point. Having categories is not the problem. Getting beaten by more talented riders, able to skilfully make of drafting is not a problem either.
The problem is that the categories are designed in such a way that heavier riders are allowed to put out more power than lighter riders.
At the limits of what the category allows the lighter riders just can not win. If they do put out more power then they get disqualified and bumped up a category.
Moving up a category does not help you and in most races you are not allowed to race against lower cat riders because of power limits are enforced.
In open category races you'll be racing against Cat A riders and they're going win because they have more power than you.
So if you race in Zwift and you're not Cat A, you either have to be the heaviest in your race or accept that you won't get on a podium. Ever.
> So if you race in Zwift and you're not Cat A, you either have to be the heaviest in your race or accept that you won't get on a podium. Ever.
I think you're missing my point. I mean even if you move to a different classification method, you'll still end up with the same problem. Even if you move to some vague skill-based or prior-results-based classification instead of a power metric or weight class or whatever, any amateur subclassification is still going to have almost everyone get crushed by the people who are just sandbagging or blowing through the lower classification on their way up.
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So what I mean is
Yes what you state is a problem. But I posit that even if you fix that problem, you'll still end up with basically the same underlying problem anyways.
The problem is that the categories are designed in such a way that heavier riders are allowed to put out more power than lighter riders.
At the limits of what the category allows the lighter riders just can not win. If they do put out more power then they get disqualified and bumped up a category.
Moving up a category does not help you and in most races you are not allowed to race against lower cat riders because of power limits are enforced.
In open category races you'll be racing against Cat A riders and they're going win because they have more power than you.
So if you race in Zwift and you're not Cat A, you either have to be the heaviest in your race or accept that you won't get on a podium. Ever.