Guest Article: Get it together

photo: Tim De Waele

It is my great pleasure to introduce this guest article, penned by my long time friend @Rob. I’ve know the lad since we were both in short pants. We both discovered cycling as something more serious than transportation at the same impressionable age. For Rob, his discipline gained from martial arts, his fearlessness on the bike and his innate enjoyment of the pain cave made for a potent Pot Belge* of a bike racer. His cycling career progressed up through the categories, high enough to see the rear wheel of Steve Bauer and throw his bike alongside Davis Phinney.

He has taught me many bike handling skills, including the pleasure of riding shoulder against shoulder in a casually deliberate manner, a skill of mine sadly lost through lack of group riding. Some may even have the pleasure of riding with him at the 200 on 100 Cogal this summer.

Yours in Cycling,
Gianni

The Worlds are long over, summer up here is a distant memory and now it is that bitter time of year where the life of a seasonal cyclist descends to the third or fourth level of trainer/spinning hell.

While the late fall kilometers are still fresh in the little gray cells, I would like to remonstrate my fellow riding companions. No names will be used. Many I do not know, many deserve no criticism. I am the first to acknowledge that cycling is not intuitive. One can ride for years, be an animal, comfortable at 29kph for many, many kilometers and still do things wrong – like be in such a bad position on your bike you can never go faster than 29kph.

So what am I exorcised about? I speak of good riding habits or put another way, the Art of the Bicycle. I was taught it by others who showed me and sometimes explained to me but more often I saw that this was the way to do it and only later did the reason and logic become apparent.

One is told, “don’t overlap wheels.” It’s simple- you the overlapper, will find yourself face down as the overlapped happily disappears in the distance never having felt a thing, wondering why it got so quiet behind. You can overlap and sometimes I do -but usually on the gutter side of the road and I’m always ready to bail right into the gutter or deal with my wheel connecting and I’m ready to throw my weight left on the disconnect.

If you have any doubt about what I am talking about or if you are not comfortable riding 2 inches from the gutter or edge of the road and are not comfortable looking 2 -3 bike lengths ahead as you keep your line while doing this, then do not try this at home. Do Not Overlap.

I was not a pro. I am not an expert. I have a long history on the bike and these things are just the foundations of good riding. How do you explain, “keep your line,” “stay close,”  “be smooth?”  These are the things that all my companions in the summer pace lines should know. Most of them are riding strong and well but there are subtleties that a few are missing.

Eddy, Fast Freddie, hell, even Sean in Ireland with no tracks (I don’t think?) would have learned these things before puberty. I do not blame my paceline friends, they have very little reference. There are so few role models, clubs, tracks, and training races, that they are not at fault. In fact most of them deserve huge praise for being out there at all. I had it easy- I was introduced to a 3 time Olympian and he rode morning training rides with me for the better part of two summers. Tuesday and Thursday training races and later group rides with teammates were constant practice.

If I have any point to make here it is that although I was brought along by others, I still trained myself to be smooth, ride close and keep a straight line. So next time you are in an informal paceline and you’re having trouble with those skills, go home and practice them. If you see the kid/adult next to you in a 2 up paceline who isn’t comfortable and is hanging out in the middle of the road, let the rider know they want to get comfortable next to you, shoulder to shoulder. Perhaps you explain as you ride, that if your shoulders and forearms are touching, it’s OK because that way your pedals or handle bars won’t get tangled, which really would suck.

Learn to ride between the white line and the edge of the road (4-6 inches – easy) better yet- learn to ride on the white line – for miles, casually without effort, because if you have to try, you are still not there. Do you really have a round pedal stroke? No, really? Can you stay smooth as you accelerate? Do you know how to look through the legs, under or around those in front, to be aware of the road even before the guy in front of you is? Can you sprint and look down and back between your legs to see who is coming up on you (or if you’re Cav,  who you’re dropping) without changing your line so you do not get DQ’ed?

None of this is rocket science but it is, as I said above, the foundation of our sport. Many here are already one with the V. Pass it on to those guys in your Tuesday night rides who don’t yet see it. One last thing- my skills are still being polished and I do not think it ever stops, because riding has a habit of catching you out when you least expect it. To me that means I will always keep learning. Part of having experience is passing it along to those who do not have it so that. as they say, we can keep the rubber down and be safe.

*Again, a disclaimer from the Velominati Legal Department, the term “Pot Belge” is being used here as a descriptive noun only and in no way is a reflection of @Rob’s cycling career.

Rob

Old dog rider with some amateur race experience back in the day. Still going fast but seeing the writing on the wall... Day job is self employed metal smith. Occasional mushroom hunter, collector of antique spoons

View Comments

  • Rob, as for the fixed track bike on rollers, did you cyclocomputers to gauge your distance and go on honor system? Sounds like an awesome idea!

  • @doubleR
    Thanks and safe riding in the coming year.

    @Buck Rogers
    This was way before cyclocomputers, hey it was before computers! I think we used a new fangled digital read out set of clocks from MIT.

    @mcsqueak
    Is that in a pub with the rollers up on the bar?? Thats the way I heard it was done in your part of the world?

  • We have goldsprints set up in a bar for the bicycle film festival every year. Usually the bar owners make you do terrible things like shot free tequila 5 seconds before a 300m race. Once that ~12 seconds is over you best have a champagne bucket handy.
    Ahhh, fun times. Can't do this with football now can you.

  • @Rob

    Yeah I've seen it at bars and bike shows, either bikes on rollers with the front fork on those stabilizer bars, or specialized "spin" type bikes connected to a screen showing distanced cycled by each person.

  • @rhys
    You know you guys just have way more fun than us puritan types in the North East US.

    @mcsqueak
    Sounds like fun but I loved that we were riding Kreitler rollers with no stabilizers and it was the quick learning curve to pro like smoothness.

  • Rob: Where are you from and when were (maybe you stil are) racing? I am a 7th generation Vermonter and went to UVM for 8 years and was racing from the late 80's through the early '90's. My best friend was a pretty strong rider who went on to become a US Pro. His name is Bill McDonnell. Just curious as I have probably been to some of the same races, although I never was better than Cat 3 pack fodder myself!

  • @Rob

    Buck R - I love the rollers and the thing I miss the most from the day was winter roller racing - not on stationary bikes but your own fixed track bike on rollers side by side flat out 1 kilo!

    Were you here, in an article featured in today's NYTimes?

  • @Buck Rogers
    I raced in New England in the early 80's. Putney (it snowed once) VT was a great spring race back then, Stowe was another through Smugglers Notch - I think I saw god on that climb!

    @xyxax
    Hey very cool, thanks, thats the kind of roller racing I'm talkin about! I now live in down state NY so I will have to check those out if they have a masters category. Any other Velominati in the area in??

  • Fantastic post Rob.

    I was lucky enough to have a local training ride/race every Tuesday night in my neighborhood as a junior in the mid 80's. At first there were no separate starts for different classes, everyone raced at the same time and they sorted things out after the finish. I remember being extremely nervous taking the rolling start as a 14 year old kid next to guys who looked as old as my Dad, were hard as nails and weren't afraid to scream at you when you put the group in danger. It never felt like they were being jerks about it though, just telling you how it was in a way that you never forgot. The ride grew in popularity quickly and within months there were separate races for each class with separate starts, judges etc..

    The lessons learned in those first months races shaped much of my understanding of the peloton and have stuck with me all these years. You touched on many of them in this post.

    Thanks and great job.

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