I‘ve written before about the value of a coach having a coach him or herself (here), but I want to expand on that a bit today by thinking about the advantages (and potential disadvantages) about being able to race with your coach.
Last Tuesday, my coach (Gary Hoffman) and I drove down to the weekly Bryan Park training crit in Richmond, VA. Since I moved up to the “A” category (Pro, 1,2,3), this has always been a tough race for me. In fact, for a long time I considered just finishing with the bunch as a strong result. Because this is a training race, I often race it “stupid” and jump after early breaks, try to bridge up to breaks made, and generally burn my entire matchbook by midway through the race. This week the goal was simple – don’t get dropped and if at all possible mix it up in the sprint.
To that end, I sat in the entire time, even as the winning break developed right in front of me (that sort of rankled, but if I’d jumped after it, there was no guarantee I would have survived). I was in the 2nd group on the road on the last lap, sitting 3rd wheel. A teammate jumped past me on the downhill and someone behind us shouted “go with him”; without thinking, I did. He did a monster turn on the backside and pulled off and there I was on the front with a little less than half a lap to go. I took a short pull, pulled off, hoping to jump on a wheel for the sprint, and then as absolutely swamped by the onrushing pack.
From my perspective, I thought I was on the front too early and needed a wheel to follow, but because my coach was in the same race, we were able to dissect the finish and figure out what went wrong for each of us. In Gary’s case it was pretty straightforward — he miscounted the laps and sprinted with 1 to go. In my case it was a tactical mistake — what I didn’t realize was that the race was strung out behind us and if I had jumped all out when my team mate pulled off, I would have had a much better shot — I probably wouldn’t have won the bunch sprint, but would have had a respectable finish.
It’s that chance to conduct a post mortem on a race, especially the opportunity to see the race unfold from another perspective that makes racing with a coach valuable, especially one with Gary’s experience. But even if you don’t have a coach, conducting that kind of post mortem is valuable; just some team mates getting together and talking can provide valuable insight (of course, each rider’s individual goals may make conducting the discussion objectively more difficult).
The ability to be objective is another advantage to racing with your coach, but there are some potential disadvantages. From the athlete side, you might feel as if you’re under constant scrutiny. For some that might actually be a benefit — a sort of constant reminder of accountability. For others it may lead to additional pressure that can compromise performance. From the coach’s perspective, racing with an athlete requires some juggling of roles or wearing different hats as you’re concerned both with your own success as well as that of your athlete(s).
But as a coach and as a rider, I find the experience quite helpful and that I invariably learn something both when I’m the athlete and when I’m the coach.