
How to Hold Your Own on Fast Club Rides
By Fred Matheny of www.RoadBikeRider.com
The major activity of any cycling club, racing or touring, is the group ride. As a result, its important to know how to hang tough on a given ride and make yourself welcome on the next one. Success is often due to more than fitness.
Heres a club cycling primer!
Some clubs like to start all rides, no matter how fast theyll eventually become, with 20 or 30 minutes of easy warm-up. If youre impatient early, you can cause hard feelings by chafing at the bit to go faster. When you know the pattern, its easier to be patient.
Will it be a fast training ride? A leisurely spin? Paceline practice? Its disruptive when most of the group is thinking one thing while one or two cyclists are on a different agenda. If an easy recovery ride is scheduled, but you're out for hard training, people are going to get angry. Be certain of the rides goal before the start.
If you're having trouble taking your pulls at the front, get off quickly and slide back to get maximum draft in the paceline. It's far better to sit on the back and let others do the work than to slow everyone with valiant but sluggish turns at the front.
As a climb begins, be nestled in the front third of the bunch. Get as much draft as possible. If you cant hold the pace, dont blow up trying. Let yourself slide back through the group but still be in contact at the top.
Stronger cyclists may give you a helpful push as they ride by. Dont be embarrassed by their help. They probably got towed up climbs when they were starting, too. A short push often allows you to regain your breathing and climbing rhythm so you can continue on your own.
If you're really having difficulty keeping the pace, get on the wheel of a good rider and mirror his (or her) technique. Use the same gear, stand when he does, take a drink as soon as he reaches for his bottle, and so on. This teaches you good cycling habits. Plus, emulating his movements takes your mind off your own effort and helps you past the hard spots.
Its a good bet that other cyclists feel the same way but are reticent to speak upor cant, because theyre breathing too hard to talk! Perhaps even the riders who are setting the pace are having difficulty, but they continue to go hard out of vanity or because they think everyone else expects them to. A little communication goes a long way in making a group ride a more pleasant and productive experience.
Find one closer to your ability level. Theres no shame in rationally assessing your strength and choosing cyclists who share it. Youll actually improve faster if you ride with a group that you are on equal terms with. Youll be able to practice paceline cycling, following a wheel, riding in close quarters, cornering in a group, and other important skills.
Frequently riding with a too-fast group will make you tired. You wont improve as rapidly as you might with more rest. A pace thats too fast will hurt you mentally, too. Youll begin to associate cycling with pain, misery and disappointment. Dont let your ego overpower your better judgment. An appropriate dose of humility now will pay dividends later.
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