During
the Base 1 training phase, most athletes work very hard
in the gym, strength training through the Maximum Strength
(MS) period. Once this period ends, leg strength is not
automatically transferred to the bike. It can be frustrating
to see gym built strength fail to transfer to the bike.
There are two links that need to be taken care of to ensure
gym strength is transferred into on-the-bike strength.
The first is core
training. The second area is, specific on-bike strength
training. MS weight lifting ends with the Base 1 period
of training. On-bike strength training should start with
the Base 2 period. Here are several workouts to build on-bike
strength.
Caution: The workouts described
below are difficult sessions and can be stressful
to your knees. Monitor your knees carefully and
stop if you feel any pain or discomfort. Build
up the number of repeats and duration of each repeat
gradually over weeks. Injuries are often caused
by too much, too soon. Have patience with yourself
to see the best improvements.
BIG GEAR REPEATS On a flat course
or indoor trainer pedal in a big gear, with a cadence
of 50 – 60 rpm for 5 minutes. Your heart rate
should stay in heart rate zones 1-3. That is well below
lactate threshold. This workout is to stress your muscular
system, not aerobic system. Start with repeats of 5
minutes and work gradually up to 20 minutes. Stay seated
in the saddle with a quiet upper-body throughout the
repeat.
BIG GEAR HILL REPEATS When you have
built up to 20 minutes of big gear repeats on flat
terrain you can do the same session on a hill to build
additional strength. Remember to stay seated in the
saddle with a quiet upper-body. Focus on leg strength.
FORCE REPEATS This workout is similar
to lifting weights in the gym, but done on the bike.
On a flat course or indoor trainer pedal in a gear
that only allows you to reach 50 – 60 rpm. While
remaining seated drive the pedals down as hard as possible
for 15 – 20 revolutions of the cranks. Do 6 – 10
of these, starting a new one every 3 – 5 minutes.
Between force repeats spin 85+ rpm easily with light
pressure on the pedals.
90 SECOND HILLS On an indoor trainer
with a high resistance setting pedal for 30 seconds
at 70 – 80 rpm with your heart rate in zone 1-2,
shift up one gear and maintain cadence for 30 seconds,
shift up another gear and maintain cadence for another
30 seconds. Your heart rate will rise but should stay
below lactate threshold in zones 3 – 4. Spin
at 85+ rpm with light pressure on the pedals for 90
seconds recovery between each repeat. Do this 8 – 12
times.
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