Exchanges and Positioning

On the velodrome, exchanges and positioning often decide victory or defeat – sometimes even disqualification. Whether in the spectacular hand sling in the Madison, the precise change in team pursuit, or tactical lane choice in the sprint: those who know the lines of the 250-meter oval and master exchange technique gain decisive seconds. This guide explains the most important rules, techniques and tactical principles for athletes, coaches and spectators.

Why positioning on the track is so decisive

Unlike road racing, there is no free choice of lane over hundreds of meters on the track. The coloured lines define rights, obligations and risks. An incorrect lane change can be penalised as an infringement; a failed exchange not only costs time but also endangers the safety of the entire field.

The UCI essentially distinguishes three zones for positioning:

  • Below the blue line (band): Active racing – this is where riders race, sprint and overtake.
  • Between the blue and black lines: Standard riding line for endurance disciplines and controlled changes.
  • Above the black pursuit line: Recovery zone – only permitted in certain disciplines, e.g. for the resting partner in the Madison.

Track levels on the velodrome

Tree structure from inside to outside:

  • Blue band (inner edge) → Black pursuit line (measurement line, 250 m) → Red sprinters' line (200 m mark) → Côte d'Azur (outer edge)

Colour coding: Blue = recovery zone above, Black = reference, Red = sprint decision

Exchanges by discipline

Each track discipline with a team character has its own exchange rules. What is permitted in team pursuit may look different in the Madison – and team sprint follows its own system again.

Team pursuit: The controlled lead change

In team pursuit, four riders take turns at the front. The active rider typically leads for half a lap (125 metres) before swinging up and rejoining at the back of the line.

  1. The lead rider accelerates on the black line or slightly above it.
  2. After the agreed distance, they swing upward (outward into the banking).
  3. They deliberately lose speed while the next rider docks from below.
  4. The new lead rider takes over without lateral contact – touching is considered an infringement.
  5. The rider who has finished their turn rejoins at the end of the line.
1
Take the lead
2
Hold pace for 125 m
3
Swing up
4
Reduce pace
5
Rejoin at the back

Madison: The hand-sling exchange

The hand sling (hand-sling exchange) is the hallmark of the Madison and one of the most demanding exchanges in all of track cycling. The active rider grabs the partner by the wrist or forearm and catapults them into the race with momentum, while moving up to the recovery line themselves.

Typical sequence of a Madison exchange:

  1. The active rider approaches the partner waiting above the blue line.
  2. Both synchronise speed and position on the straight.
  3. The active rider grabs the partner's wrist or forearm with their right hand.
  4. With a powerful swing, the partner is slung down onto the active line.
  5. The previously active rider immediately moves up and leaves the racing action.

A hand sling that is too early or too late leads to crashes or time loss. Partners must define the exchange point on the straight and automate it in training series.

Team sprint: Positioning instead of a classic exchange

In the team sprint, three riders (men) or two riders (women) start simultaneously. The first riders bring the team up to speed; after a set number of laps they pull upward, and the next rider takes the lead from below. There is no hand sling – the exchange happens purely through positional change and pace transfer.

Discipline
Exchange type
Permitted zone above
Typical change distance
Most common error
Team pursuit
Swing out upward
Yes, after pulling off
125 m (half lap)
Pulling off the line too early
Madison
Hand sling
Yes, for resting partner
After each sprint or tactically
Uneven speed when grabbing
Team sprint
Swing out upward
Yes, after pulling up
1 lap (men's 1st rider)
Lead rider blocks downward
Points race
No formal change
No (mass start)
Lane change below the red line
Scratch / Elimination
No formal change
No (mass start)
Riding on the wrong line in the sprint

Lane choice and tactical positioning

The red sprinters' line

The red line marks the final 200 metres of each lap (on a 250-metre oval). In the sprint and mass-start disciplines: a rider below the red line may not arbitrarily change lane when another rider is already holding that line. The rider on the red line has priority – a decisive tactical advantage in the sprint.

Positioning in mass-start events

In points race, scratch and elimination, position in the field determines race prospects:

  • At the front in the wind: High load, but control over pace and sprint points.
  • In the slipstream: Save energy, but risk being dropped on attacks.
  • At the front before sprint points: Crucial for points in the Madison and points race.

Tip

Pros calculate their position not only per lap but per metre: 250 metres per lap means 200 decision points for lane choice and partner changes in a 50 km Madison.

Recovery position in the Madison

The resting Madison partner rides above the blue line counter-clockwise (usually in higher lines on the banking). They must not obstruct active racing. If they ride too low, they risk an infringement; if they stay too high, they lose valuable time when re-entering.

UCI rules and common infringements

The UCI velodrome and track rules precisely define when an exchange or positional change is considered illegal.

Common infringements in exchanges and positioning:

  • Contact between riders in team pursuit during the change
  • Blocking a rider through deliberate squeezing below the red line
  • Riding below the blue line by the resting Madison partner
  • Premature release of the lead in team sprint without fully pulling up
  • Illegal lane change in the sprint final when the opponent holds the red line
Infringement type
Severity
Example discipline
Contact during change
Warning / time penalty
Team pursuit
Blocking / squeezing
Time penalty / disqualification
Sprint, mass start
Riding below blue band
Warning / time penalty
Madison
Premature pull-up
Time penalty
Team sprint
Illegal lane change
Relegation / disqualification
Sprint

Training exchanges and positioning

Successful exchanges do not happen spontaneously in competition. National teams train changes in fixed sequences:

  1. Single-step training: Each rider practises pulling off and rejoining in isolation at the band wall.
  2. Pair training: Two riders repeat the change at constant speed.
  3. Full team sequence: Four-rider team completes the full pursuit rotation at race pace.
  4. Madison special: Hand sling first from a standstill, then from rolling, finally at race pace.
  5. Video analysis: Footage from track centre reveals timing errors and lane deviations.

Checklist: Perfect team pursuit exchange

  • ✓ Lead distance set before the race (usually 125 m or 1 lap)
  • ✓ Always swing out upward, never inward
  • ✓ No lateral contact when passing
  • ✓ Rider pulling off reduces pace in good time
  • ✓ New lead rider takes over on the black line
  • ✓ Overall line stays compact – no gap over 3 metres

Checklist: Madison hand sling

  • ✓ Exchange point defined on the straight (not in the bend)
  • ✓ Partner waits steadily above the blue line
  • ✓ Speed matching before the grab
  • ✓ Grab on wrist or forearm, not on the handlebar
  • ✓ Active rider swings up immediately after the sling
  • ✓ Change automated in training series of at least 50 repetitions

Time gain through clean exchanges

+0.3–0.8 s

Untidy team pursuit exchange per change

+1–3 s

Madison error with failed hand sling

0 s loss

Optimal change at race pace

Reference: Elite national teams at UCI events

Practical examples from competition

In Olympic team pursuit finals, less than one second often decides gold and silver – and that second is frequently spread across four to eight exchanges. Leading pursuit teams have optimised their changes over years so the line moves as one unit: no jerking, no gap, no contact.

In the Madison, world champion duos perform hand slings that look like choreography from a standstill. The key is communication without words: years of shared training kilometres create timing that spectators find spectacular and opponents find almost unbeatable.

FAQ

Q: Can you push your partner in team pursuit?
A: No, only positional changes – lateral contact is considered an infringement.

Q: Where does the Madison partner wait?
A: Above the blue line in the recovery zone.

Q: What happens with a lane change below the red line?
A: An infringement is possible if the opponent already holds the red line.

Q: How often do teams change in the Madison?
A: Tactically variable – often before sprint points.

Q: Which line counts for official distance?
A: The black pursuit line.

Summary

Exchanges and positioning are not secondary matters in track cycling but core competencies. Those who master the lines of the velodrome, execute the hand sling safely and change seamlessly in team pursuit save seconds and avoid disqualifications. Building these skills requires systematic training – from single steps to the full competition sequence at race pace.

Last updated: 3 July 2026