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Swapping the CyclesMaximize your training timeAuthor: Adam Hodges MyersonThese days, there's an abundance of training information available that didn't exist even 10 years ago. Books written by Eddie B. and Greg LeMond were bibles in the '80's, and while they're still relevant today in many ways, they've been supplemented by more modern training literature. But with all the self-help information that's out there, many racers still have the same question: what should I do for training today? I still adhere, to the basic weekly schedule laid out by LeMond in his Complete Book of Cycling: easy on Monday, sprints on Tuesday, intervals on Wednesday, long, steady ride on Thursday, easy again on Friday, sprints again on Saturday, and a race simulation ride on Sunday. That schedule has stood the test of time and still makes the most sense to me. It has you doing your most intense workouts first, and decreasing the intensity of each following workout until you have a rest day and start it all over again. It's seems like the "Thursday long ride" is a fixture in every town where there's a collection of serious cyclists. The racing season is upon us once again, and while "racing is the best training," as the adage goes, it's also the most disruptive to a systematic training program. Many of us will be racing on both Saturday and Sunday, rather than just the Sunday that the above program accommodates. If you're following a LeMond-style format, how do you substitute a race for Saturday's sprint workout? The two don't match up, so something has to give if you're going to stay on track. The best way to address this is to "swap the cycles," as I refer to it with my clients. Essentially, you can break the 7-day training week into 2 smaller, "mini-cycles:" Monday-Thursday is the first, 4-day cycle, and Friday-Sunday is the second, 3-day cycle. If you view those cycles as entities unto themselves, you can simply reverse them within the context of a training week and still be completing the same amount of training, with the proper progression of decreasing intensity and increasing duration. To see how this fits in, break it down and look what you'd actually be doing
each day: Swapping the cycles like this allows you to be prepared for a Saturday race day, while still getting the training done that you've planned for the week. All this without having to take an extra rest day, or feeling shut down in the race from having rested on Friday. While I originally formulated this structure to accommodate a Saturday race, it’s turned out that an even bigger boon is for people trying to balance working with training. If, like most of us, you're working full-time during the week and have limited training time on Monday-Friday, the benefit here is in moving more of your shorter workouts to the workweek and maximizing your weekends. |
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