There are few pleasures in life as great as to achieve a goal, to accomplish something that doesn’t come easily. Great lessons are taught through this activity; we learn that it is our determination and not our doubt that defines our limits. We learn that through studied discipline we can cultivate the skills required to work incrementally towards becoming what we want to be.
This is true for our personal, social and professional lives – and any other aspect that I may have left off. But to achieve our goals is usually a rather complicated mess; it requires introspection, it often requires reliance upon others to do their part or at least not interfere with you doing yours, and it is usually rife with hard choices of long-lasting and difficult to understand consequences.
In its most basic form, Cycling provides us a path to discovery in a less complicated model than do our actual lives. We train our bodies, we become more healthy. We become more healthy, we train more. We become stronger, we go faster. We derive more pleasure from our efforts. We experience reward for sacrifice. We associate progress with the pain of an effort. We enjoy Cycling more. We ride more. We become healthier still. We become stronger still. We go even faster. We suffer more. We associate more pain with a greater sense of achievement. And though it all, we discover it that unlike every other walk of life, in Sport we are islands: what we find here is only what we have brought with us.
Eventually, exercising will become training. The activity becomes richer with the application of the discipline that comes with this rebadging. Exercise is something you do regularly but without structure. With training comes a study of your body and how it responds to stimulus. Long rides have a different effect on the body than do short ones. Successive hard efforts have another effect, as do longer and shorter periods off the bike.
Training Properly requires discipline and patience. It means you don’t just throw your leg over your machine and pedal off to ride along tree-lined boulevards. Training Properly means having a plan for each day. It means heading for the hills one day, and the plains another. It means controlling yourself and not trying to set your best time up the local climb because you feel good that day. Training Properly means restraining yourself on a group ride and not joining in on the town line sprints if your plan doesn’t call for it. Training Properly means leaving for a ride despite the rain falling from the heavens and the loved ones whom you leave at home.
Training Properly comes down you and you alone; much can be learned from books and coaches, but the path is yours to walk. The discovery is yours to experience and to shape into what you are seeking. There are, however, some basics to keep in mind. Also keep in mind I’m not a “Sports Doctor”, “Physiotherapist”, or “Smart”. And never take medical or sporting advice from Some Guy On the Internet.
Be patient. Have discipline. Train Properly. Vive la Vie Velominatus.
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@King Clydesdale
At the risk of over-espousing ( my word) Carmichael's book he has a good idea about resistance training. In short if you are riding a shed load of Klms then weights MAY help as an extra. However it ain't certain. However what is certain is that if you are a weekend warrior cyclist with limited training time then non-cycling focused weight training is a great thing to do so you don't completely fuck yourself the next time your do some gardening or try to move some furniture. Or something like that
@King Clydesdale
Thanks chap - I'll get a look at that when I get home - good tips to work on meantime
Great thread guys!
Tomorrow will be a rest day for me. I just realised the best thing about a rest day is that it means you're getting enough riding time to warrant one. I love spring!!
@Dr C
I read that the thing about Cav that makes him stand out is his ability to kick twice!
@King Clydesdale
Watching that clip I'd put the cadence in the 70 to 80 zone. I thought cadence was measured by a full rotation of the crank, not every pedal stroke. If I'm wrong, I await correction.
@Dr C
Nah, that's got to be impossible, a Keeper doing anything in miles.
@King Clydesdale
That's an awesome bit of video. I can't believe how low over the bars he is.
If he's doing 114 in 53 x 11 that's 73kph. On a slight uphill and from memory on cobbles (albeit small city cobbles but not smooth tarmac) for 20 odd seconds.
@snoov
He'd have to be turning a huge gear to be doing any meaningful speed at 70 - 80 rpm, that'd be 45 - 50kph at 53 x 11. Given a lead out train most of us could hit that for 20 seconds.
@Marcus
"Over-espousing" is also used in polygamist circles.
@King Clydesdale
I noticed you didn't mention anything about lower leg strengthening. Although you don't really generate power from your lower leg, these muscles are responsible for stabilizing your ankle and foot, and would stand to get the most benefit from targeted weight training. Feet and ankles are poorly designed for riding, since the fulcrum of that particular lever is located at the very least efficient point, right at the end. Anything you do to strengthen the muscles in that area will make your power transfer much more efficient.
This is also why I believe in non-traditional cleat placement, ie. as far back toward the heel as possible. Having large feet is a liability in cycling, and there really isn't much science to the method of placing the ball of your foot over the axle. The shorter you make that lever, the less your lower leg has to work to stabilize your foot. I wont go so far as to recommend mid-foot cleat placement, like Joe Friel does, but I won't knock it, either.
@Dr C
I guess apart from proper training, it's your genes that decide if you have the potential to be as fast as MC or not. So it's not your fault but rather your parents', if you cannot sprint faster than 50kph.