Convection or not, I'd go the other way . . .
Pre-heat the oven to 250 F and prepare the roast for cooking as you normally would. I recommend letting it sit out of the fridge for an hour or 2, so it's not ice cold when you start cooking it. Season it with salt and pepper, give it a very light coating of neutral-flavored oil and place it on a rack in a roasting pan.
Put the meat in the oven and immediately drop the oven temperature to 200 F standard bake mode. Cook the roast at 200 F to the desired temperature (or within 5 degrees of it, as there is almost no carryover cooking when using this method). Of course, the roast will take longer to cook at this low temperature than you are probably used to, so allow some extra time. Remove the roast from the oven. At this point, the roast can safely sit covered, on the counter for an hour or so. When you are just about ready to serve, turn the oven on to 450 F Convection Roast, put the roast back in the oven and cook it for another 6-8 minutes to develop an exterior crust. You may need to turn the roast once during this final blast of heat to avoid over-charring it. A few moments of resting may be needed before slicing, although it's not likely.
If you prepare it this way, the roast will cook evenly -- to the desired temperature -- all the way through; ie medium rare from edge to edge with no "bullseye" effect. The meat should remain moist throughout and the exterior should be nicely crusty.
Enjoy,
=R=
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