Sunday, December 13, 2015

Leadville Training 1



Training 

Training wise, I’m not a fan of long slow rides.  They have their place, mostly on recovery days, but for us non-professionals with actual non-cycling day jobs, they are waste of time.  Assuming you only have 5-12 hours a week to train, you need to make the most of it.   I’m going to advocate two intervals a week and 1-2 long sessions of riding on the weekend.  I’m also a fan of 1-2 recovery rides during the week. 

A standard week goes something like this.  Monday completely off or 1 hour of very low-intensity riding (zone 1).  Tuesday 3x10 or 4x10 threshold intervals.  Wed – 1 hour recovery or Interval session 2 depending on how I feel.  Thursday – 1 hour recovery or interval session (depending on what I did Wed) 2 – 4x12 sweet spot, 4x10 over-under, or similar.  Friday recovery ride or off day.  Saturday a 2-4 hour ride out doors for fun – ride however you want – spirited group ride, ride at the trails, or solid solo ride.)  Sunday 2+ hours of easy zone2 riding or take the day off. 

I advocate intervals during the week because these will bring up your physical conditioning and start building your legs and mind.  More on this later.  

I use the trainer, computrainer for my intervals.  I’m apparently a sick person as most can’t stand to ride indoors.  I personally see my trainer as the gym – when I’m on it, it’s workout time.  It’s not for fun, it’s not for dead miles.  Each ride on it has a purpose.  Also, I hate getting dressed to go outside.  With the trainer I can get in to a routine and I can get a very quality workout in a short period of time.  This is important to me because I work 9 hours a day Mon – Fri and I don’t have a lot of time to ride.  Getting on the trainer saves me 20-50min of prep time and ride out time (time I ride to get to a spot to do my workouts.) 

Whether you do your week rides on the trainer or outdoors, it’s your world.  I’m just explaining how and why I did what I do.   I have a helacious “laboratory” setup where I train including a computrainer, dedicated trainer bike, dedicated computer, 50” tv/monitor, and several thousand dollars of cycle training software. 

If you choose to go outside just hold yourself accountable to doing what you’re there to do. 
I like intervals during the week since time is usually limited.  Intervals give you more bang for your buck (timewise.)  Many people think that interval training is only for racing short distance races and since Leadville is a 9+ hour endurance race, they aren’t necessary.  Truth is, you’ll be climbing for 30minutes to 1:30 at a stretch and while climbing you will be using an intensity above normal endurance race intensities.  You need to be able to climb at these intensities (zone3 and 4) and be able to recover.  IMO you can’t do this by riding at an endurance pace for all of your training times.  Intervals will help you and your body cope with these climbing intensities. 

In addition, to helping you cope with the climbing, intervals will bring your fitness up quickly.  Not only will your ability to go hard increase but your endurance ride intensity will also go up.  More on this another time. 

Rest

You need rest.  Rest is very important.  If you notice in the workouts above, there are lots of recovery rides.  Training smartly with intervals and doing them properly will stress your body and legs.  Your body needs recovery.  Build it up, recovery, build it up, and recover.  This is how you get stronger.  Recovery is just as important as training. 

Most people do too much training and never recover.  This is a normal thing for most who train and thus they struggle with getting better/stronger.  Build in enough recovery in to your plan and you’ll get the results you are looking for. 

Recovery means doing nothing or riding very easy.  When I say easy, imagine a ride with intensity of about 10mph on a road bike.  These kinds of rides seem pointless but they do wonders for helping your body recover. 

Nutrition

You need to start dialing in your nutrition early on.  Do you want to eat normal food, gels, liquids or a combo of all the above?  You need to start experimenting now.  If it were me, I’d start experimenting with a lot of different items.  On race day, at altitude, and with the intensity needed to race Leadville, you may find that what you like is suddenly un-palatable during the race.  You will need to eat something, you’re going to burn upwards of 5,000 calories and ride at various intensities.  It will be impossible to ride without some kind of nutritional aid. 

I went with portables.  Midway through the race I couldn’t tolerate them anymore.  I forced myself to eat them but only because I knew I couldn’t go without.  I started eating GU’s because they were giving them away for free.  I hate GU but for whatever reason I was able to eat them that day. 

My point is make sure your body can run on different fuels.  Find what you like and what works for you but also have a backup plan.  Understand you will HAVE to eat something several times throughout the race. 

Another thing to be aware of is how you eat.  It’s one thing to eat something when you’re heartrate and breathing is relatively low (120-135bpm), it’s another when your HR is up in the 150+ zone.  When you’re HR is elevated (as when you climb, or race shorter distances) it becomes difficult to chew, breath, and swallow.  The higher your heartrate and breathing, the harder it is to eat solid food.  You need to practice eating at higher intensities.  This sounds like a joke but at the rattler (a shorter race) and while climbing at Leadville, it’s a HUGE deal and could prevent you from being able to eat. 

Weight

Getting your fitness to its highest is key but an equally important thing is to go to Leadville as light as possible.  This means being as lean as possible.  You’ll be spending a lot of time climbing and gravity is not a friend of weight.  I didn’t understand this, being from Texas, I never really understood gravity’s effect on climbing.  It’s real, and real bad for those of us who are heavier.  I went to Leadville at 225lbs.  My buddy Zack when at 200lbs.  We were equally fit, I may have been a little stronger.  He beat me by 40min during the race because of the weight difference. 

While you train, especially in July, you need to start trying to drop as much weight as you can.  You need to hit Leadville as lean and light as possible.

There’s a fine line between training and losing your weight.  Losing weight and training may seem to be one of the same but they are not.  If you’re training hard you will burn calories and lightly lose weight.  With that said, if you try to lose weight while training, you could cause your body to have a difficult time to recover from your workouts.  If you can’t recover you won’t recover and your training will stall.  I caution you to be very careful, you can’t train with intensity or long duration if you are also trying to lose weight. 

Rattler

The rattler is very important and this should be considered your A-race.  You want to do as well as possible here.  The better you do the further you move up in corrals at Leadville.  This is a huge deal.  You’ll be up front the better you do which means you won’t be stuck behind people on the first climb or on Columbine.  This will save you 30+ minutes of time and it’s huge.  As the riders get tired you’ll be stuck behind them.  The further up in corrals you start, the faster riders you’ll be with.  If you start in the back corrals, you’ll be surrounded by riders who are slower and thus you will be at their mercy on the single track climbs.  This will add minutes to your time. 


Do well at the rattler (under 4:30) and you’ll have a good place to start from.