Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Aug 21, 2009 6:39 am
Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby evrcycle » Fri Aug 21, 2009 6:48 am
Cheers
Peter
-
- Posts: 392
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 9:29 am
- Location: Sydney
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby othy » Fri Aug 21, 2009 10:28 am
- lemmiwinks
- Posts: 1249
- Joined: Wed Oct 29, 2008 9:34 am
- Location: Northern Tablelands NSW
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby lemmiwinks » Fri Aug 21, 2009 12:58 pm
- drubie
- Posts: 4714
- Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 11:12 am
- Location: New England
- Contact:
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby drubie » Fri Aug 21, 2009 2:12 pm
In the sag wagonlemmiwinks wrote: Dunno where that leaves you though.
(at least that's where I'd be. I'd reckon if you weren't doing 3-400km a week then don't bother showing up at all).
but really, that's rubbish. We get none of it because the choices are illusory.
- toolonglegs
- Posts: 15463
- Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2007 7:49 pm
- Location: Somewhere with padded walls and really big hills!
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby toolonglegs » Fri Aug 21, 2009 3:39 pm
But depending HOW time poor you are?...I would think 7-8 hours a week would be the minimum.
- MichaelB
- Posts: 15550
- Joined: Tue Feb 20, 2007 9:29 am
- Location: Adelaide, South Australia
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby MichaelB » Fri Aug 21, 2009 4:13 pm
You have already cycled almost double the distance I have this year , and all of that would have been a lot harder than I have done.
I would have thought to do the ride that he is enquiring about that at some stage it would be wise to have at least done several approaching that distance from a metal point of view, not only a physical one.
- toolonglegs
- Posts: 15463
- Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2007 7:49 pm
- Location: Somewhere with padded walls and really big hills!
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby toolonglegs » Fri Aug 21, 2009 4:44 pm
Yes like I said he needs to know he can sit in the saddle for 4-6 hours...ie: if you have never done a ride that long it is good to know if you have any physical reasons that might play up after a long time...also you need to eat eat eat (how long is Grafton to Inverell?)...but you do not need to train for a long race by doing long rides.
-
- Posts: 758
- Joined: Sun Oct 26, 2008 9:34 am
- Location: Perth
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby Ant. » Sat Aug 22, 2009 7:59 pm
Cervélo P3C
BT Blade
-
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:12 pm
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby Jono L. » Sun Aug 23, 2009 12:41 pm
Ok,toolonglegs wrote:I would have thought exactly the opposite,a coach may have more to say .I finished the etape du tour (7.5hours) on training with very few rides over 3 hours,I hardly ever go over 2.5hours.Building your FTP (function threshold power / best hour power) is the key...it is a race so the higher your ftp the longer you will survive....I am pretty sure it would be "easy" to complete this on 8 hours training a week.Of course you need to know you can sit in the saddle happily for 4-6 hours,but the higher your FTP...the more watts you can hold as a percentage of that over a few hours the better...and you don't raise your threshold by riding long....you raise threshold by raising intensity.
But depending HOW time poor you are?...I would think 7-8 hours a week would be the minimum.
Here's my take. Just something that worked very well for me.
Bottom line, you do need to do long rides. But not all the time, ie a weekly structure focused on shorter rides to build ftp with one long ride 5-6.5 hours. The biggest thing for me was to do these long rides hard. Really hard. You can't simulate the race by yourself but you may as well induce some serious pain, within reason. Obviously I'd aim to build up this long hard ride each week, not jump straight into 6 hours on the rivet, but if Grafton ain't the place to go under-prepared.
I suspect a lot of people do their long rides too slow.
-
- Posts: 758
- Joined: Sun Oct 26, 2008 9:34 am
- Location: Perth
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby Ant. » Sun Aug 23, 2009 1:28 pm
I agree with that last sentence.Jono L. wrote:Ok,toolonglegs wrote:I would have thought exactly the opposite,a coach may have more to say .I finished the etape du tour (7.5hours) on training with very few rides over 3 hours,I hardly ever go over 2.5hours.Building your FTP (function threshold power / best hour power) is the key...it is a race so the higher your ftp the longer you will survive....I am pretty sure it would be "easy" to complete this on 8 hours training a week.Of course you need to know you can sit in the saddle happily for 4-6 hours,but the higher your FTP...the more watts you can hold as a percentage of that over a few hours the better...and you don't raise your threshold by riding long....you raise threshold by raising intensity.
But depending HOW time poor you are?...I would think 7-8 hours a week would be the minimum.
Here's my take. Just something that worked very well for me.
Bottom line, you do need to do long rides. But not all the time, ie a weekly structure focused on shorter rides to build ftp with one long ride 5-6.5 hours. The biggest thing for me was to do these long rides hard. Really hard. You can't simulate the race by yourself but you may as well induce some serious pain, within reason. Obviously I'd aim to build up this long hard ride each week, not jump straight into 6 hours on the rivet, but if Grafton ain't the place to go under-prepared.
I suspect a lot of people do their long rides too slow.
However if I only had 10hrs to train per week, I would not spend 5 or 6 hours on one ride, regardless of what I was aiming for.
Cervélo P3C
BT Blade
- Alex Simmons/RST
- Expert
- Posts: 4997
- Joined: Fri May 02, 2008 3:51 pm
- Contact:
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby Alex Simmons/RST » Sun Aug 23, 2009 1:57 pm
He's pretty normal.MichaelB wrote:But TLL, you're not normal
Quality over quantity, then it's a matter of the quantity of quality.
A goal of Grafton is a little ill defined as many do it to race competitively, others do it like a Sportive ride. There is a big difference between those two goals and what may be necessary for any individual rider (based on their riding/training history, current performance levels, physiological profile, training time availability etc).
In terms of the final weeks before, and assuming this was a main goal event, well I would probably be looking at some solid volume of tempo and hard endurance riding to get some training load into the body before a taper (but probably not a longer taper - depends a lot on how much you have been doing up to that point - in some cases no taper at all). These might include other races in the weeks leading up or at least some high quality hard long training rides. The work to raise threshold should have already been done before that stage though.
For someone with the talent and wants to be competitive in that race, I'd say you'd want to be looking at 10-15 hrs/week. Quality hours.
For others, then you can do it on 5 hrs/week and 7-10 hrs/wk can get you into excellent shape.
For these riders, the most important thing is using the hours wisely and knowing how to pace themselves on the day. The latter point being where most come crashing down.
-
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:12 pm
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby Jono L. » Sun Aug 23, 2009 2:04 pm
Agreed.Ant. wrote: However if I only had 10hrs to train per week, I would not spend 5 or 6 hours on one ride, regardless of what I was aiming for.
- snedden9485
- Posts: 1446
- Joined: Wed Oct 08, 2008 9:25 am
- Location: Newcastle, NSW, AU
Re: Grafton to Inverell. Training tips for time poor please
Postby snedden9485 » Sun Aug 23, 2009 8:31 pm
2011 Giant TCR Advanced SL
2011 Malvern Star Oppy TT9 Time Trial
2011 Giant Omnium Track
2012 Giant XTC Composite 29
- General Australian Cycling Topics
- Info / announcements
- Buying a bike / parts
- General Cycling Discussion
- The Bike Shed
- Cycling Health
- Cycling Safety and Advocacy
- Women's Cycling
- Bike & Gear Reviews
- Cycling Trade
- Stolen Bikes
- Bicycle FAQs
- The Market Place
- Member to Member Bike and Gear Sales
- Want to Buy, Group Buy, Swap
- My Bikes or Gear Elsewhere
- Serious Biking
- Audax / Randonneuring
- Retro biking
- Commuting
- MTB
- Recumbents
- Fixed Gear/ Single Speed
- Track
- Electric Bicycles
- Cyclocross and Gravel Grinding
- Dragsters / Lowriders / Cruisers
- Children's Bikes
- Cargo Bikes and Utility Cycling
- Road Racing
- Road Biking
- Training
- Triathlon
- International and National Tours and Events
- Cycle Touring
- Touring Australia
- Touring Overseas
- Touring Bikes and Equipment
- Australia
- Western Australia
- New South Wales
- Queensland
- South Australia
- Victoria
- ACT
- Tasmania
- Northern Territory
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users
- All times are UTC+11:00
- Top
- Delete cookies
About the Australian Cycling Forums
The Australian Cycling Forums is a welcoming community where you can ask questions and talk about the type of bikes and cycling topics you like.
Bicycles Network Australia
Forum Information
Connect with BNA
This website uses affiliate links to retail platforms including ebay, amazon, proviz and ribble.