Categories: GeneralRoutes

Training with the Pros

Ryan Kelly on the 200 on 100 photo: Chandler Delinks

Training with the Pros, it sounds like fun but it can’t be. Pros are genetic freaks; they put more kilometers on their bikes than any of us civilians do on our cars each year, they ride around whole countries at an average speed greater than 40km/hour and they can dish out such Rule V style day-after-day-after-day. We all dream about it but we don’t have it.

In an earlier life I came close to landing my dream job in Monaco with the IAEA. Serious people counseled me not to take the job, they said it was a bad career move. How could I explain to them I didn’t give a shiet if it was a bad career move, the chance to live, and more importantly to be a cyclist near San Remo and La Madone was all I cared about?  Yet I knew if I even saw Tom Boonen or one of the many Aussies who call Monaco their home out on a training ride, I would only be seeing their lycra-clad asses disappearing up the road. Could I at least catch up to Stuart O’Grady to chat him up for a minute before my inability to talk and breathe would force me to lie and say I was turning right HERE?  Maybe I could drink beers with the Aussies, I could keep that professional pace, actually no, I would get dropped there too.

Oh that job fell through and my dreams of  commuting into work on Merlin on the Cote d’Azure disappeared like those watery mirages on a hot highway, but I digress. I have some good and funny direct video evidence why training with the Pros would be a cruel lesson in our mortal failings. One such Pro is Ted King, an American racer living the dream; he is based in Lucca, riding for Liquigas, riding in support of Ivan Basso and Peter Sagan. He is tough, he has finished every Giro d’Italia he has started. He broke his collarbone this summer racing in Philadelphia when his front wheel dropped into an inexcusably lame drain grate (thank you very much, oh third-world infrastructure that defines the USA).

To bring his training back up to speed he did the 200 on 100 with fellow Pro Tim Johnson and amateur racer Ryan Kelly. The 200 on 100 means 200 miles on Route 100, riding North to South from the top to the bottom of the state of Vermont, the Green Mountain State. Unless you are Marcus, 333 km seems like an impossibly long ride to do at once, I would be in broom wagon long before the end of such madness.

And by madness I refer to the 338 km at 34.1 km/hr average speed with 3,197 meters of climbing thrown in for good measure.

Video credit to Chandler Delinks

 

Gianni

Gianni has left the building.

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  • @mblume
    For my money, me being a shit climber, I'd say the ride that includes climbs with the steep grades are the tougher ones. They are what that put you in the pain cave. For example, Mt. Haleakala: 60km and 3300m of climbing versus Mt Washington: 11km and maybe 1000m of climbing (maybe less). Mt Washington is a cruel and brutal whore of a climb. The whole grade must be 12%-15% the whole way, one is red lined from 100m after the start to the top. The horror.

  • @frank

    Good question, and I think we'd have to do some tricky math using calculus and imaginary numbers (eleventeen, thirty-twelve, etc) to come to a reliable formula that works for everyone.

    That's Numberwang!

  • @Gianni

    Mt Washington is a cruel and brutal whore of a climb. The whole grade must be 12%-15% the whole way, one is red lined from 100m after the start to the top. The horror.

    Damn, have you done that - sounds nay on impossible! Feeling sick at the thought of it

  • @Dr C
    I did it a few times in my youth, it always sucked, I was always under-geared, it never got easier. If you are ever in the States in August, you too can do it.

  • @Rob

    @Buck Rogers
    Rob is correct, I maybe used a 42-28 and I was barely turning it over. I would have been happier with my present 34-26 and I still would barely be turning it over. Did I mention I am a shit climber?

    Rob flew up that race, always on the podium. If you are a good climber you like it. Tommy D has the record ascent, before him it was Tyler H.

  • Rob & Gianni:

    Are you guys in for the 200 on 100 next June? Sounds like you live nearby and would be right at home.

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