The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Sunday, 10.30.16. “Strategery”

•October 29, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep it going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this.

Heck, allow me to rephrase that; I can’t keep doing this if I lose money on it.

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, and you’d like to see it continue, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

Now on with the workout…

 

 

 

Howdy folks,

Well, this is a Sunday workout, and Sunday is a race day for most people, so hey… go race.

If you’re not racing today? Check out Yesterday’s post.

If you are, well… have you thought about your warm up?

This is particularly on my mind today, as I chose to race Saturday this week, and due to some unfortunate life stuff, I basically had no warmup at all. I got to ride about 1/2 the course about 5 minutes before the previous race, and then dealt with s**t on the phone for a while until I ran to the line about 5 minutes before the gun went off.

Not ideal, not even a little.

But you do the best you can with what you’ve got.

I chose to ride as much of the course as I can rather than get a better warmup in on the trainer, because –

  • I didn’t bring a trainer to the race (dumb, and even dumber because I don’t actually have one that would work on my CX bike right now.)
  • I’m of the opinion that it’s better to get at least some course preview in and be under warmed-up than to have a great warm-up and not know anything about the course.

So, how did that work out?

Mixed bag.

When in doubt, lead it out, so I holeshot the race and made sure that people who actually knew what the hell the good lines were had to go around me in order to use them. No one went around for a full lap, mission accomplished on that front.

1 full lap in on the front, and then the wheels came off. I know I actually tend to ride pretty well with minimal warmup, because I’ve kept track of things like that over the years, and noted warmup correlation to race results, but < ten minutes of just rolling around part of a course checking out lines ain’t enough, even for someone who does fine with the barest minimum.

Especially when this also means that there wasn’t any time to stretch and do all the other nonsense that I’ve been doing to fake my bad back having self through an hour of CX.

So, holeshot, full lap at the front, wheels come off, back seizes up, three guys go past, then damage control for the rest of the race.

What does damage control mean?

Well, in this case it meant “do as little as possible on the long uphill road sections of the course, then go full-gas on the technical mud and the descents.”

 

 

This got to be pretty nip-and-tuck, with two riders behind me getting really damn close on the fireroad, then losing just enough time on the technical sections for me to stay clear all the way to the finish.

Yay! Ish.

Not a great ride, on a not-so-great day, but the best I could pull out of the situation, and a testament to the power of experience and trickery.

Moral of the story?

Riding strong is good. Sometimes you can’t, and when you can’t, try to ride smart.

Smart and strong?

That’s ideal, of course.

But make what you’ve got work as best you can.

And get that damn warmup in!

Perhaps a warmup like…

The RSWO – 

 

the_rock_turtleneck-jpg-crop-promovar-mediumlarge

 

– Get on trainer. Spin for about 5 minutes.

– 2-3 minutes at your 20 minute output level

– Shift into big ring/largest cog combination.

– Ride 30 seconds in this gear, then shift up one cog.

– Ride 30 seconds in this gear, then shift up one cog.

– Repeat until you hit the hardest gear you’ve got, or can handle.

– Ride 30 seconds in that gear, and then shift all the way back down to the Big/big combo.

– Ride 30 seconds in that gear, then immediately shift to hardest gear you can handle.

– Full gas sprint, out of the saddle, for 30 seconds.

Back to big/big combo.

– Spin for two minutes.

Repeat The entire sequence, minus the 2nd “20 minute level” effort.

Go forth and conquer your race.

 

Enjoy!

M

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Saturday, 10.28.16. “Kitchen Opener”

•October 28, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep it going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this.

Heck, allow me to rephrase that; I can’t keep doing this if I lose money on it.

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, and you’d like to see it continue, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

Now on with the workout…

If you’re racing on Sunday this week – but not Saturday – today you need to get your openers in.

You guessed it. That means today calls for…

Can Openers – 

03-can-openers-zwilling-with-can-630

Here’s the drill:

– Warm up for 1/2 hour or so, spinning easy with a couple of short bursts thrown in.

– Follow with several short attacking efforts, IE 30 seconds at 80% of your max, or pretty damn hard. 2 – 3 of ’em.

– Back off and spin for 5 minutes.

– Follow with 10-15 minute effort at right about your 2×20 output level, or “I could talk to you if I had to, but I don’t want to” level.

– Spin for several minutes.

– Follow with 5-6 hard 10 second efforts, ideally on CX type variable terrain, level or slightly uphill.

 – Finish  with 5-6 start efforts on a straight section of paved road, level or slightly uphill.  You want to begin these from a dead stop, with one foot unclipped. Do not stop until you get at least        3 perfect starts in a row, and I mean perfect. This is the cross equivalent of practicing free throws. Make ‘em count!

 – spin out the legs, go home, and get ready for the race.

Not racing this weekend? Not taking the weekend off to recover from the season’s efforts to date?

Excellent.

Think about getting some long, hard miles in this weekend.

Think about going for a…

Kitchen Sink Ride – 

Check out the long form explanation here.  In short, though?

Go as long as you can, as hard as you can. The shorter you go, the harder you go.

Goal here is to be pretty much spent when you’re done.

If you can string two days of this sort of work together on a weekend, that’s great stuff… but end of second day, you should feel like you kinda maybe don’t want to wake up and do it again tomorrow.

“Epic” is an overused word, but if you can make these “epic” days? Nailed it.

If you’re racing today, think about getting one of these in tomorrow… you’ll be glad for it later on down the road.

 

Enjoy!

M

 

Hey folks! Go Check out…

se

Coaching, FTW.

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Friday, 10.28.16. “Get lit for the weekend”

•October 27, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep it going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this.

Heck, allow me to rephrase that; I can’t keep doing this if I lose money on it.

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, and you’d like to see it continue, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

Now on with the workout…

If you’re racing on Saturday this week, you need to do some openers today.

So, how about…

Ignition – 

 

ignition

You’re going to do a series of short, hard sprints midway through a 1 – 1 1/2 hour ride. Before you head out the door, give some thought to where you can do that effectively.

A flat, straight, low-traffic section of road is what you’re looking for.

It would be great if it’s about a :45 minute ride away; that would make things nice and simple.

Hop on your bike and roll out the door.

Ride steady, at a moderate pace for 1/2 hour – 45 minutes, eventually winding up at the aforementioned stretch of road.

You’re now going to do a series of Hard out of the saddle sprints.

How hard?

Well, hard to say. You’ll start to get the hang of it pretty quickly, but figure that you’re shooting for an output level that will allow you to crank out all the sprints in the set at about the same level, but not easily.

You aren’t sprinting to failure here, and you aren’t doing a max power test.

Don’t overdo it, you’re trying to open your legs, not destroy them.

Make sense?

10 sprints, 10 seconds each.

1 minute between each sprint.

After the last sprint, roll back home spinning easily to recover.

Budget at least 15 – 20 minutes for the spin/ride back home.

when you get home, put your feet up and relax.

For some folks, this isn’t quite enough to get their legs open and ready the day before the race – or at least it doesn’t feel like it’s enough – and the importance of “feeling” ready can’t really be overestimated.

If you’re part of this club (I am) add a 10-minute effort at right about your 2×20 output level before you start the sprint sets.

Warm up, 10 minute effort, 5 minutes spinning, sprint efforts, spin down, go home.

Not racing on Saturday this week? Racing on Sunday?

Cool.

Same workout.

Not racing at all this weekend?

Even better!

Same workout, and then you’re going to get some endurance work in this weekend.

In fact, if you have a race on the agenda this weekend that you’re not super psyched about, think about skipping it and getting some road miles in.

We’ll talk about that option tomorrow.

Stay tuned…

M

 

What’s that you say? You’d kinda’ like to have a cycling coach help figure this stuff out for you? Check out…

se

(and, in case you’re wondering…. nope, S.E. doesn’t pay for the plug. I am one of their coaches, though, so if you’d like to work with me as a coach, click on the logo.)

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Thursday, 10.27.16. “In which I kick the begging up a notch”

•October 27, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep it going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this.

Heck, allow me to rephrase that; I can’t keep doing this if I lose money on it.

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, and you’d like to see it continue, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

Now on with the workout…

 

As you’ve probably guessed by now, it’s Thursday, and as per usual, Thursday is a bit of a challenge, due to the widely varying weekend schedules of all ya’all.

So, a couple of options today.

If you’re racing on Saturday, today you might think about taking it easy today, or even taking the day off. If you’re doing a double this weekend, rest is almost certainly recommended today.

Unless you’re not really concerned about results this weekend, and are “training through” the weekend in hopes of stimulating a peak period later on down the road.

Huh? What?

Yeah. This stuff gets complicated.

For most people, though, the races right in front of us are the ones that are important, so the focus is – and should be – on them.

So take today slow if you’re racing on Saturday. At most, go for a…

 

One to Two Hour Moderate Ride –

 

 

Get on your bike.

Go ride for an hour or two.

No hard efforts, but do throw in a couple of moderate ones. By moderate, I mean just that. You can sprint for the town line, but you should be laughing while you do it.

You’re not doing a recovery spin, so you need to put a little bit of gas into the pedals… just don’t go out and kill yourself.

Check out the view, smell the flowers, just do it while you’re putting a little bit of effort into the pedals.

1 notch above a recovery ride.

Make sense?

 

Racing on Sunday this weekend?

Cool. You get to punish yourself a wee bit today. You get to do…

The Slow Roast – 

 

0237438_854x480

 

No real warm up effort required. You pretty much hop on the bike and go. This can also be done on the trainer. Ouch.

So, hop on the bike.

Ramp up to a level of output that’s approximately 2/3 of your FTP.

Hold this level for the duration of the ride.

Yup. You’re looking to average that power level for the whole damn thing, and as much as possible, you want to keep the output pretty darn consistent.

Just keep rolling along piling on the miles at a steady output level.

If you can, you do the whole damn ride one damn gear bigger than you feel comfortable.

Ouch.

When you start out, it’s probably going to feel like you’re pushing too easy on the hills, and too hard on the flats. Don’t let this get you twisted. You’re doing it right, and it’ll all even out eventually.

How long are you going to ride?

Well, as long as you have.

Got an hour?

Great.

Two?

Great.

By the end, it’s just going to feel like your legs are made of lead. Or tapioca. One or the other, depending.

When you’re finished, go home, eat, relax, recover.

Have fun!

M

 

 

What’s that you say? You’d kinda’ like to have a cycling coach help figure this stuff out for you? Check out…

se

(and, in case you’re wondering…. nope, S.E. doesn’t pay for the plug. I am one of their coaches, though, so if you’d like to work with me as a coach, click on the logo.)

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Wednesday, 10.26.16. “Hit, quit, don’t get sick.”

•October 26, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Well, it’s raining up here in Seattle.

BOY is it raining.

This is shaping up to be an old-fashioned Seattle winter, the kind we haven’t really been having lately, the kind where you can pretty much assume it’s going to be at least a little bit wet every time you head out the door for a ride.

Oddly enough, we really haven’t seen too much of the wet out at the races. Yet. A couple of muddy days, but mostly weekends have been more or less dry.

I have a feeling that’s coming to an end.

So, it’s getting wet out. Right as we reach the point in the season where people are starting to hit the wall. Lots wet, lots of racing, reservoirs of road fitness are starting to dry up, It’s getting colder and colder, flu bugs are starting to float around in a fetid fog… yup, it’s just about November.

Which brings us to today, Wednesday.

Skills Day 

We’re going to do skills work as usual today, but think about keeping it short, fast, and to the point tonight.

Don’t spend all night standing around in the wet. Hit it and quit it.

Wednesday Skills Session 

Warm up for 10 minutes or so.

Some easy dismount/remount practice for about 10 minutes. Work on smooth. 

Next, some race-pace riding skills…

Find some moderately flat, moderately technical terrain.

Lay out a short (2 minute or so so…) loop. This should have some technical challenges to it, but should be a loop that you can ride fast.

Think course features that won’t be super hard if you’re riding slow, but become more challenging as the speed increases. Off cambers, tight decreasing radius turns, small log hops… things of that sort.

Easy if you’re dawdling, tough if you’re going hard.

Ride it fast.

Do laps on this for the next 15 – 20 minutes with a focus on Speed. 

Work on your corner exits. Come out of ‘em fast. Out of the saddle, drill it, back in saddle, repeat at next corner.

Don’t get bogged down, don’t wear your legs out too much. Keep the cadence high and the gearing relatively low, just work on your fast.

Rest for about 5 minutes, then work on your starts.

5 sets of 5, full gas, and when I mean full gas, I’m talking full-on race speed, and make ‘em long enough that you hit that second effort point, where you have spun up, sat down, and now you need to get your ass back up out of the saddle and reaccelerate.

Remember, it’s that second effort that pays off in the race.

Work on that.

That’s it.

Go home, relax, get to bed early tonight.

Have fun!

M

 

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep this thing going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Tuesday, 10.25.16. ” ‘Happy, happy, happy, happy’ “

•October 25, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Happy Tuesday!

No, really. I mean it. Happy Tuesday, because today we’re doing the…

 

2×20 With a Happy Ending

 

– Warm up.

– Go as hard as you can for 20 minutes.

– Recover for 2 minutes.

– Go again for another 20 minutes.

That’s the basic version. Success on this is, however, all in the details.

The idea here is to go as hard as you can for the duration of both intervals without being forced to go easier at the end of the second interval. If you run out of gas before you finish the second interval, you went to hard. If your vision isn’t blurry at the end of the second interval, you went too easy.

If you’re doing this with a powermeter, you want your wattage output to be as close to constant as possible. We’re talking 10 watt variance at the most. Keep it steady.

These take practice to do well, and the better you get, the harder they get. This is another workout that works great on the trainer, and that’s how I do ‘em, which is a good thing… because I always wind up flat on my back on the floor trying not to puke after the 2nd interval.

I’m really not kidding about the seeing spots thing.

But hey… that’s not all.

This is the Happy Ending version.

smiley-face-wallpaper-017

What does that mean?

Immediately after your 2nd twenty minute interval, you’re going to begin a series of five – ten, ten-second “sprint” efforts, with 50 seconds of recovery between them.

It looks like this…

After 2nd 20 minute interval…

-spin for 1 minute.

sprint for ten seconds, starting at the one minute mark on your watch.

-spin until you hit the 2 minute mark on your watch

sprint for ten seconds

-spin until you hit the 3 minute mark on your watch

sprint for ten seconds

Etc., etc., continuing until you hit the five (or ten…)  minute mark, and give the last little bit of your energy in one final all-out 10 second sprint.

You’re done.

Ouch.

Have fun,

M

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep this thing going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Monday, 10.24.16. “P.H.N.B.I.CX.”

•October 24, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Well, it’s Monday. I hope ya’all had a great weekend of racing!

Have I mentioned before that….

https://www.facebook.com/PinwheelsHaveNoBusinessOnCxCourses/

🙂

Sorry, couldn’t resist.

Onwards with today’s…

 

Recovery Spin! – 

– Get on your bike. Roll out into the street – or into your living room if you’re on the turbo watching the vid – and just spin around for an hour. Or more. Or less. Whatever it takes.

– Really small gear, no hard efforts – heck, no medium effort.

– Spin. You’re looking to move your legs around in circles, almost like there is no chain on the bike.

– The idea is to get your body moving, flush the systems out, and speed your recovery.

– Just get out on the road and spin easily and aimlessly. At a certain point, your legs will start to loosen up.

– When that happens, turn around and go home.

–  If you’re doing these on the trainer, same deal. Just spin. No hard efforts, just make the legs go around in circles in a small gear.

– Follow up with as much relaxation as you can. Eat, stretch, and put your legs up. Get a massage if possible.

…and, of course, today’s cyclocross video! Enjoy it as you spin your legs out on the trainer, perhaps.

 

Cheers!

M

 

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep this thing going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Sunday, 10.23.16. “You need The Rock”

•October 22, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Race day!

You need to warm up before your race.

You need…

 

The R.S.W.O. – 

rock-eyebrow

 

– Get on trainer. Spin for about 5 minutes.

– 2-3 minutes at your 20 minute output level

– Shift into big ring/largest cog combination.

– Ride 30 seconds in this gear, then shift up one cog.

– Ride 30 seconds in this gear, then shift up one cog.

– Repeat until you hit the hardest gear you’ve got, or can handle.

– Ride 30 seconds in that gear, and then shift all the way back down to the Big/big combo.

– Ride 30 seconds in that gear, then immediately shift to hardest gear you can handle.

– Full gas sprint, out of the saddle, for 30 seconds.

Back to big/big combo.

– Spin for two minutes.

Repeat The entire sequence, minus the 2nd “20 minute level” effort.

Go forth and conquer your race.

 

Enjoy!

M

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep this thing going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Saturday, 10.22.16. “Insert Canned Joke Here”

•October 22, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Saturday! Race day for a lot of you. If you’re out there racing, enjoy. If you aren’t racing today, odds are you will be tomorrow, so today you’re doing…

 

Can Openers – 

 

zyliss-20362-lock-n-lift-manual-can-opener

Here’s the drill:

– Warm up for 1/2 hour or so, spinning easy with a couple of short bursts thrown in.

– Follow with several short attacking efforts, IE 30 seconds at 80% of your max, or pretty damn hard. 2 – 3 of ’em.

– Back off and spin for 5 minutes.

– Follow with 10-15 minute effort at right about your 2×20 output level, or “I could talk to you if I had to, but I don’t want to” level.

– Spin for several minutes.

– Follow with 5-6 hard 10 second efforts, ideally on CX type variable terrain, level or slightly uphill.

 – Finish  with 5-6 start efforts on a straight section of paved road, level or slightly uphill.  You want to begin these from a dead stop, with one foot unclipped. Do not stop until you get at least        3 perfect starts in a row, and I mean perfect. This is the cross equivalent of practicing free throws. Make ‘em count!

 – spin out the legs, go home, and get ready for the race.

Not racing at all this weekend?

Cool. Might just be that you’re taking some much needed rest, which is a good thing.

If you’re not resting, though, maybe think about getting out there for a long road ride this weekend. Getting some endurance miles in this time of year ain’t a bad thing, especially if you’ll be racing clear into January.

Think about it anyways!

 

Enjoy!

M

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep this thing going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Friday, 10.21.16. “Ignition Spin”

•October 21, 2016 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

It’s Friday, and speed week continues!

If you aren’t racing tomorrow, today you’re doing…

 

Spin Ups –

– Get on your bike and warm up with a leisurely spin, 10-20 minutes minimum.

– After you’re warm, find a nice, long, flat or slightly downhill section of road with little to no traffic.

– Begin interval by rolling into it at a moderate speed, in a gear that’s smaller than you would typically use to sprint.

– Get out of the saddle and sprint.

– Spin the gear up out of the saddle. When your leg speed gets to the point where it’s hard to maintain, sit down and keep going until you are totally spun-out. We’re talking  fast, can’t turn ‘em over any faster…

Think Road-Runner fast…

 The goal here isn’t to make the bike go fast, it’s to make your legs go fast.

There’s a difference, eh?

You should do these in a small enough gear that you want to shift up.

Don’t.

– Repeat 3-5 times, a minute or so recovery between reps.

That’s a set.

Recover for 5 minutes, rolling around at a leisurely pace between sets.

– Go again, same thing.

Recover, then repeat as time and fitness allow.

Shoot for 3-5 sets of  3-5, or keep going until your leg speed drops off.

When you’ve completed all your reps, roll on home at a leisurely, relaxed pace. Ideally, take 1/2 hour or so to do this.

 

Racing tomorrow?

Today you’re doing…

Ignition – 

ignition_

 

You’re going to do a series of short, hard sprints midway through a 1 – 1 1/2 hour ride. Before you head out the door, give some thought to where you can do that effectively.

A flat, straight, low-traffic section of road is what you’re looking for.

It would be great if it’s about a :45 minute ride away; that would make things nice and simple.

Hop on your bike and roll out the door.

Ride steady, at a moderate pace for 1/2 hour – 45 minutes, eventually winding up at the aforementioned stretch of road.

You’re now going to do a series of Hard out of the saddle sprints.

How hard?

Well, hard to say. You’ll start to get the hang of it pretty quickly, but figure that you’re shooting for an output level that will allow you to crank out all the sprints in the set at about the same level, but not easily.

You aren’t sprinting to failure here, and you aren’t doing a max power test.

Don’t overdo it, you’re trying to open your legs, not destroy them.

Make sense?

10 sprints, 10 seconds each.

1 minute between each sprint.

After the last sprint, roll back home spinning easily to recover.

Budget at least 15 – 20 minutes for the spin/ride back home.

when you get home, put your feet up and relax.

For some folks, this isn’t quite enough to get their legs open and ready the day before the race – or at least it doesn’t feel like it’s enough – and the importance of “feeling” ready can’t really be overestimated.

If you’re part of this club (I am) add a 10-minute effort at right about your 2×20 output level before you start the sprint sets.

Warm up, 10 minute effort, 5 minutes spinning, sprint efforts, spin down, go home.

 

 

Have fun!

M

 

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s the time of the season where I’ve got to pay the bills to keep this thing going.

I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thanks for the consideration!