If I spent half a summer riding with one hand on the tops and one on the hoods, I spent the other half riding with each hand deliberately gripping the hoods differently. As any young Cyclist growing up in the United States in the late 80s, I had a major thing for Greg LeMond.
I imagined Greg to be the perfect Cyclist, as youth often does of their heroes. I modelled my position on his; when Scott Drop-Ins became available, I hastened to save up for a set and mounted them on my bike. In the interim, I mounted some mountain bike bar-ends on the drops of my regular Cinelli bars. (If I could ask Greg one question, it would be whether he ever actually used his Drop-Ins in any race situation. I’ve never seen a picture of him riding in them, and after having owned a set, I can tell you those babies were the flexiest bars I’ve ever had on a bike.)
But I digress. Back to me and my BFF, Greg LeMond. However much I idolized him, one personality trait I knew we didn’t share was an obsessive/compulsive need to have things be symmetrical. I am all about symmetry; my hoods have to be mounted at exactly the same height, the cables have to emerge from the bar tape at exactly opposite the other side, the gap between the tape and the stem has to be exactly the same on both sides of the bars. LeMond did not share this compulsion, a fact most readily demonstrated by how he gripped his hoods with each hand usually sharing a different number of fingers in front and behind the brake levers.
I could understand that people might differ on precisely how many fingers should be in front of the levers and how many behind, but the idea that one could grip their bars with an uneven distribution across hands completely blew my adolescent mind. If I was going to win the Tour some day, this was obviously a skill I needed to have.
So I set about practicing holding the hoods the way he did; one hand with no fingers in front of the brake lever, the other with all but the littlest hand-piggie in front of the brakes or two fingers in front, two in back on one hand, one finger in front on the other – the quantities were irrelevant so long as they were not the same on both sides.
But I couldn’t do it. It drove me crazy – it twisted my guts up inside. And that was when I realized I would never become a Pro Cyclist, if I lacked such a basic skill.
But every cloud has a silver lining, and with my failure came an interest in the various ways one could grip the bars. The first obvious point to make is that the classic “three-position bar” actually offers about a trillion positions, although I admit I lack both the skill and the fortitude to count them all, and am therefore unable to confirm that figure.
I find the hoods offer the most interesting position variations; depending on how you grip them, you can stretch your back or shoulders, settle in for a relaxing spin, or go low and aero for some Passista hammering. Most importantly, if you add a scowl or a grimace and a little bend to the elbow, you can instantly look the Flandrian Hardman.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Hood Position/”/]
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Ahhhh, there is so much right with this thread and pics that it is like I have ended my time on the wagon and off the booze early! Chapeau Frahnk. Such a great piece!
I suffer through a multitude of hood - hand relationships, always in seeking the V. Then, out of nowhere, La Volupte. Nirvana is achieved for a fleeting moment...
When I was 14 I worked in the potato fields of the North East for two looooooong weeks and many weekends to put the dosh down on a Raleigh Shadow five speed racing bike.
Raleigh helpfully provided an instruction book on how to ride it.
One illustration showed three basic hand positions and my teenage mind took the message that on bends one should have one's knitted mitt covered hands on the bends of the bars and for at least a year every time I went round a corner my paws went on the bends (sans mitts - I doubt if anyone within 50kms possessed track mitts).
As we were:
a) Poor
b) Scottish
actual pictures of men racing bikes were not available and I just had to make it up as I went along.
To my credit I did suss out that my father's choice of faux tweed jacket collar and tie was unlikely to be the kit of choice in Continental racing - however I was fine with tucking my flared jeans into my Pathfinder sock/Clarks Commando shoe combo.
I'd love to see the pros racing in wet jeans...
Will go Rotundo or Tornova -- with the drops perfectly level. And then tune my grip. Yates gangnam style!
I am keen on the phantom tt bars.
Also, the tops while climbing may not be the most stylish, but with a loose grip and a big smile it is really un-nerving to those hunkered down on the hoods grimasing and nodding away.
Sastre a doofus!?! I object!
@Graham
We must not be talking about the same Sastre.
@pink
Climbing from the tops is a perfect style. Your big smile may not be so good. Unless your cycling nickname is the Joker.
Perfect
another perfect
Great post! I had to think about what my hand positions are - they come so naturally. Mostly, I'm a one finger front, three behind. I spend a lot of time with both hands near the stem on the tops. If I'm super relaxed, it's four fingers behind the hoods.
The RdV image is noteworthy as such a position was possible due to the relatively small differential between saddle and bars. Many modern riders would have a hard time getting there because f the greater differential.
Is #3 Koblet? The "pedaller of charm"?
Still have my Scott drop-ins too. Always a wee bit sketchy unless riding straight and flat.