Casually Deliberate is at the core of Looking Pro; it’s something that comes from a lifetime spent on a bike, becoming one with the machine. There are two components to this phenomenon, two organisms forming a symbiotic bond and working together in perfect harmony towards an end.
The Machine. Immaculate. Every piece of kit in its place, adjusted to the millimeter; il posizione must be set up precisely to maximize the V-Locus. The Principle of Silence reigns supreme; no creaks, no squeaks – no Rattle, just the Hum from the tires and spokes as they cut through the air. Every last detail is looked after; the frame is spotless and the bars perfectly wrapped.
The rider. A paradox. Victim at the hands of the Man with the Hammer, yet conqueror of their own physical limitations. Perched on the saddle, the rider is comfortable as the legs spin with deceptive ease. Every movement is perfect and carefully controlled, yet nothing is given undue consideration. The hands reach out and rest easy on the bars. The back is simultaneously arched and flat as the body finds the ideal balance between transferring maximum power to the pedals while keeping the shoulders low and narrow to punch the smallest possible hole through the air.
Nothing conveys this notion as much as riding in the Phantom Aerobars. The forearms resting on the tops, hands draped loosely in the air, clutching at nothing but wind: physics are seemingly defied as somehow the rider manages to not only steer, but also coax the leverage from the arms required to propel the machine forward. In a word: Grace.
It is paramount that any rider who endeavors to Look Pro learn to ride in this difficult position. But beware: one must take care to avoid crashing while practicing; not only is crashing while trying to Look Pro un-casual, it is monumentally un-Pro. That’s a tip.
One last consideration, the gut you’ve been nursing since discovering that beer is the ideal post-ride recovery drink may actually help keep your forearms unweighted. I recommend you keep testing that theory until it becomes true.
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
I was amazed to see Gilbear chugging along in the phantom aero position with 5km to go in stage 10. It takes complete skill to put full speed into the pedals in that position.
That's what I was talking abut when I said I was "being all pro and shit..." in my VSP report.
Millar eats his Wheatabix like thusly in the morning:
I said thusly!
Millar went all phantom aero today during his brief foray off the front.
And you know DZ can lay it down TT style almost anywhere.
@Jeff in PetroMetro
aye, he did! that's what made me think of it.
@ben
I read the interview with Millar in Rouleur. I am definitely gonna buy his book. I really like the panache he, JilBear, and V-oeckler displayed today. I loved how they all tried to burn up HTC-Highroad before the sprint. And it worked!
@Jeff in PetroMetro
This was the original shot for the article, until I found Faboo, King of CasDel. Before him, though, it was Dekker. Dekker may have invented it.
Awesome. I aspire to ride in this position. It makes you a bad ass.