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Bike Pacing
Long Course Bike
Pacing- When
going into the
longer bikes of
halves and full
Ironmans it is
imperative to do 3
things: have good
race nutrition
,which I discuss in
” Long Course
Nutrition”, a pacing
strategy that you
have practiced and
an effective way to
implement your
pacing. Today I will
discuss both how to
pace and how to
implement your
pacing plan.
Likely you have had
a major taper
leading into this
race and workouts
leading up to it
were probably pretty
hard due to a build
up of fatigue. As a
result of the taper
you will probably
feel extremely
strong on the bike
in the early portion
of the event. If you
are using a power
meter, you would see
that wattages that
used to be very
labored are now
fairly easy. This
early portion of the
bike is not the time
to drill the pace,
rather it is
important to stay at
the PE or HR that
you originally
planned for
yourself. Many
athletes destroy
what would be a
great race with a
decision early on
that they feel
better than they
thought and so now
its time to up the
pace. WRONG!, stay
at your pace and
enjoy the steady,
easy speed you are
getting. In this
early part of the
race you are only
drinking water to
let your stomach
settle from floating
around. For the same
reason, you want to
stay calm and allow
the blood to get
redistributed in
your arms and legs.
If you immediately
ride hard you are
prematurely moving
blood and spiking
your heart rate. So
for about 20 min in
a half or 30 minutes
in a full just stay
steady, calm and
hydrate. After that
time you must asses
your legs,
hydration, weather
and goals. At this
point dial in your
HR, watts, or PE.
But you must have
some way of
effectively
measuring your
workload, other wise
it is just to easy
for the day to get
away from you. I
find that ego
overrides PE on race
day and makes it
highly ineffective.
I prefer watts if
you can get a light
wheel but most
likely heart rate
will be your method.
Again, what feels
easy now will likely
not feel easy in 2
or 4 hrs so stay
patient and focus on
your nutrition plan.
As the race
progresses you will
start to see that
for the same speed
you heart is
slightly elevated,
this is cardiac
drift and is still
your body giving you
a chance to adjust
the pace. At this
point your faced
with either slowing
down a bit to stay
in range or cut
loose and make new
goals- don’t do the
latter- stick with
the plan! later your
body might not be so
nice in its request
to slow down! If
during the ride you
feel great then eat,
it is hard to eat
during endurance
events and rather
than speed up while
you feel good, I
always say eat! As
you approach the
last 20 - 30 min of
the ride it is
important to do 2
things, one is to
spin the legs out a
bit and relax the
muscles to prep you
for the high cadence
of running, secondly
is to go back to
only water and a few
electrolytes to prep
your stomach for the
run. You should have
been eating all day
and at this point
you don’t want to be
digesting food. You
wouldn’t eat at home
and then go out the
door and run, so be
mindful on race day.
All of these things
should be practiced
leading up the race
so that they are
second nature. Just
remember to set a
goal, make a plan to
get that goal, set a
pacing strategy to
meet the goal and
then practice it
regularly. This will
lead to success,
making adjustments
on race day is very
dangerous! |