Granted all rider knew the leg 2 & leg 3 capitol values could go up, but if they went up THAT much I'd be a bit annoyed if I'd gone to Hyder. A competitive rider should be able to use some form of logic to plan leg 1. Massive changes to the bonus structure in later legs tilts the scales more towards a gambling exercise than logical exercise. Doesn't seem as elegant to me. I hope no such mega-change comes up.
I would be annoyed if they DIDN'T go up. Traditionally, they always have gone up in an exponential manner. So without some very strong hints prior to the rally, I would expect point values on leg 3 to be significantly higher. And that won't hurt the Hyder Riders. They still a fairly significant points lead, and will have the same opportunity as any other rider on leg 3 to get whatever points are available.
If I am annoyed about anythning, it's that in this rally we have what
*may* be a 'knock-out' punch on leg 1 with Hyder. I'm not certain, but fairly confident that that has NEVER occurred before in an IBR. Nor do I like it. Past IBRs have always been about a strong finish when the going really gets tough. Who can excel on days 7-11 when a rider is at their limits? What fun is it to have the final top positions of the rally determined on leg 1?
The IBR is a marathon, not a sprint. A rider should NOT be able to go hard in the beginning and 'cruise' the rest of the rally and be able to do well. IMO, the rally should be run so that it rewards a rider who paces themself and finishes strong. In the past, that has always been the case that I am aware of.
Not disagreeing here, but for the purposes of discussion:
There is another way to view this, granted that the previous Rallies have followed the pattern you described.
First off, the Riders were told that this was to be a different kind of Rally, more traditional, less "head work", more endurance.
Going to Hyder wasn't a "knock-out" punch in Leg 1. Certainly not an obvious one, because only three riders chose to take it .... Is that "fortune favoring the brave", or a simple throwing down of the gauntlet?
Those who didn't go to Hyder could regain parity by scoring well on Leg 1 and grabbing Key West on Leg 2. So it could be recouped, but required the kind of effort put in by the "Hyder Three" on Leg 1.
There was also a clear hint that high points would be available on Leg 3, so start it well rested. That could be because so many State Capitols will be at least in the 1000 point range, but it requires big miles to get them all.
So if you went to Alaska you got a head start, and earned it. If you didn't, but realized you needed Key West on Leg 2 then you were back close to parity, and it would all be to play for in Leg 3.
As it turns out, only one guy looks to have picked up the challenge on Leg 2, and we don't know yet if it will work for him.
Leg 2 has been a bit "processional", but the outcome is still not certain, what is certain is that the big mile riders will go into the third leg with an advantage .... It's an 11 day Rally, not a Leg 3 Rally.
All of the above is simply discussion. Not a plan, or an opinion, just point and counterpoint. As I said before ... They all deserve to win, dammit!