Bike
Eleven
Reasons to Give Santa why you need a Power Meter for Christmas |
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As the season
winds down, most athletes start thinking about how to get a
notch faster next year. Christmas lies at a time of year when
training volume is low and is the best time to introduce new
equipment into your life ø how convenient! By now you must have
heard the buzz about power meters and owners raving about them.
It is the best training tool you can invest in after hiring a
coach of course! If you have checked them out then you know they
are a big investment, so here is a list of reasons to tell Santa
why you need one.
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Accurate Performance Assessment
If you put out more watts over a given time then you became
stronger. Wind will affect speed and many things will affect
heart rate readings making cross-test comparisons difficult.
Watts are a direct measure of performance and if you produced
more of them you improved. You need to be able to accurately
gauge your performance progress to know if the training plan
you are following is working for you.
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Quick Training Schedule Adjustments
A power meter is an unforgiving mistress because just as it is
clear when you are putting out more watts it is clear when
your legs are puny and the watts are nowhere to be found.
Armed with this information you can immediately ramp up the
recovery and rest side of your schedule and let the high end
watts return when you are ready. Heart rate is a cloudy window
to examine your training effectiveness through. When you are
superbly fit your heart rate gets ÒstickyÓ at threshold and
when you are tremendously fatigued it does similar things.
This leads to enough confusion you are not able to make
immediate micro adjustments to your training plan to optimize
benefits.
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Motivation The only thing more motivating than seeing a weekly
climb in mean maximal power output is seeing yourself climb up
the race results rankings. Motivation feeds performance.
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Race Analyses
Race with your power meter and you have a blue print of
what you need to do at that race to be better next time - or
if you had the race of your life you have the manual of how it
is done. Power files are gold mines of information. Using
CyclingPeaks software you can break down your race and examine
the key parts. Did you pace well, did you finish strong, did
you have the power needed to make the moves at the crucial
time. Did you fade? When and after what power level?
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Training Specificity Do you train like you race or are you just
riding around. Compare your race power files with your
training power files. This can be a big eye opener to some
cyclists and a key aspect that can bring a big performance
improvement when optimized. I look at the variability of race
vs. training power traces to see if training specificity is
being achieved. The hard data may often not look like what
perceived exertion tells you it will.
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Effective Intervals With a power meter you can dial in on exactly
the power level you want to train. During an interval if you
slack off for even a second your power numbers will drop. With
heart rate you have lots if opportunities to soft pedal during
an interval and still keep your heart rate up in the target
zone due to the time lag in the heart rate response. If you
ease off during a power interval there will be a dip in the
power graph and your coach will be asking you what happened
there.
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Communicate with your coach
As a coach I get a huge amount of information from a power
file ø and they are so easy to e mail. The combination of
seeing watts, speed, heart rate and cadence over time is
invaluable. It answers so many questions and I can work
closely with my athletes to hone in their riding, racing and
pacing skills. I can see days when their power was low and
heart rate high and tell them to back down. The best days are
when athletes tell me ÒI couldnÕt get my heart rate up today
during the rideÓ and I look at their power file to see
personal best mean maximal power out puts. Those are the files
I like to see very close to peak race time.
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Tracking Training Load
Every athlete has an optimal training load at which they
perform best. Less than optimal will not maximize performance
and more than optimal is an overtraining disaster. With a
power meter you can track training load and take much of the
guesswork out of peaking for a specific event on a specific
date. There are several metrics you can use to track training
load. The best metric to use is using the Training Stress
Score (TSS) calculated by CyclingPeaks software. Tally up the
total TSS produced during a given period, season, month or
week, identify your optimal load and track TSS produced in
training to be sure you stay under that cap.
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Use Performance Manager Analytical Tool
Using TSS as your training load metric you can compare your
season long chronic training load (CTL) with your recent or
acute training load (ATL). To peak perfectly a high CTL and
low ATL is desirable. With power data and TSS scores you can
manipulate ATL and CTL to time your peak perfectly. Again much
of the guesswork is removed.
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Improve Technical Riding Skills
Maybe you think you know how to draft but the power meter will
show you exactly where the best draft is found. Just a couple
of inches over can often make a 50 watt difference. This can
be the difference between making the lead pack and being
gapped off into a chase pack. For mountain bikers the power
meter can be used to dial in technical riding efficiently by
learning how to ride the same trail at the same speed with a
lower average power.
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Pace Races In triathlons, time trials and mountain bike races it
is crucial to pace yourself accurately from the start. There
is no pack to sit in and recover from early mistakes. The
power meter is a huge advantage at the start of these types of
events where you can have a cap set on the watts to ensure you
start at a pace you can maintain for the duration. In long
distance events such as ultra mountain bike races and Ironman
triathlons all of the pacing mistakes are in the first two
hours and those mistakes are paid for many times over in the
final two hours of the race. IÕll bet you have never, ever
heard anybody say ÒI just went too fast in those final two
hoursÓ. I am sure everybody has gone out too fast at sometime
in some race. Unless you are ignoring your data, a power meter
will prevent you from being this dumb ever again.
Tell Santa it
is time you started training with power. |