Subject: RE: Why am I so slow on the bike? I certainly do not disagree that speed work of some sort is important at the right times.
But unlike triathletes ..... most cyclists do NOT specifically go out and do calculated intervals. At least not the people I raced against, the people on my old team or myself. You find hilly routes and have good long 80 mile rides that include hills at the end. You ride with three or four other guys and play catch-me-if-you-can. You run a good paceline and then pick points along the route to sprint for. Etc. etc.
If you are by yourself, then just getting out there and putting in the miles using one of the above strategies (fartleking, hills, having a few points you know you will sprint for ) are all the speedwork you would need.
Triathlons are NOT about pack riding, keeping pace after going through twenty corners per lap in a crit. or hitting 42 mph in a final sprint for the win. That is road racing (something I have always been deeply passionate about ). Triathlons are TT's. And that means being able to maintain a consistent and solid pace over a given distance by yourself. So the base miles make all the difference, ESPECIALLY for newer riders. I would not have been able to maintain near 25 mph in my TT's if it wasn't for the 1000+ easy miles I put in between January and March. Explosive speed is all fine and dandy, but there comes a point where it is not going to help your endurance pacing as much as putting the miles in would.
Just my opinion, but I had been doing this cycling thing at an amateur competitive level for quite a few years, so I hope it is worth something. |