Archive for September, 2008

Including Cross in your season

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

At this time of year, most riders are wrapping up their seasons and looking back, hopefully with fond memories of success.  All athletes need to do some sort of post-season review — more on that later, but what riding they do now depends on their goals for October, November, and December, that is, whether or not they are racing cross, and if so, how seriously.

If a rider is not racing cross all that seriously, I generally recommend one cross workout midweek, with a warm-up of 20′ or so, focusing  on skills, then 20′-40′ (depending on the length of the races he or she does) of race simulation on a shortened course.  One of my favorite workouts is to set up a course that takes approximately 4 minutes to ride, with at least 1 dismount, 1 run-up,and if at all possible, a short section of single track to work on handling, and then alternate hard and easy laps for the recommended time.  Following this scheme gives the rider specificity both on the “on” and the “off” section of an interval.  This midweek workout, combined with a weekend race, is generally enough for riders to maintain enough race fitness to last through the cross season.  The other days of the week, I recommend all other rides be endurance rides, with the occasional sweet-spot ride through in every 10 days or so.

For most of the riders I work with, and in most years, for myself, this stripped down approach is the one I recommend.  This season, however, my move at the end of July put paid to the last 3 months of my road season, so I determined to focus more fully on cross.  I will only be doing a few cross races, but in the past, I’ve always been happy to finish in the top half of the field because I was just out there for the heck of it.  This year, I hope to move up a bit by focusing my training more specifically on cross.

What this means in practice…

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Burned out … return to base

Monday, September 15th, 2008

At this time of the season, many riders feel a bit burned out.  The usual advice is to take a decent break from the bike, and I certainly think that it is sound.  Indeed, I wound up taking nearly a week off myself when we moved from Chicago to Virginia.  But if it hadn’t been for the move, I’m not sure I would have taken the time.  Rather, I would have returned to early season workouts, endurance rides, tempo and lots of sweet spot (sst).  After the sheer agony of anaerobic intervals and two crits a week, the dull pain, perhaps better described as a pressure on the legs, of sst is a welcome change.

When I was able to get back on the bike, I focussed solely on this type of threshold work — climbing the local mountains at threshold intensity, doing the middle hour or so of rides at sweet spot intensity, and of course, a few sessions of the ubiquitous 2×20.  For the latter two I discovered that to stay in the proper training zone  in this (hilly) area requires me to ascend the hills at nearly a walking pace and hammer on the downhills.  Despite the natural variation of cadence required by the rolling terrain, I have definitely lost some "snap" in the legs and will have to put in some time working on my sprint so that I don’t get gapped in ‘cross starts.

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