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Old 07-24-20, 08:12 PM
  #142  
RadDog
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Originally Posted by TMonk
The bike skills discussion is interesting in the context of roadie racing. I'm just a cat 2 in SCNCA and even as a lighter rider (66 kg), my threshold w/kg numbers are nothing to write home about. I am good at over/under type efforts and at getting up the road with a few minutes of high power.

But I do have better bike handling and riding skills than most IMO. The physical handling doesn't come in to play so much in road racing, esp. compared to other disciplines like MTB and messenger racing. But it helps.

There is a lot of skill associated with going as fast as possible while using a minimum of energy. Physical nuances like chosing the best line, holding your body/shoulders a certain way depending on the wind and optimizing your cadence with course features can make it easier to hold speed. Mental nuances like knowing exactly how long and hard to pull, if/when you need to close a gap and when to pull the plug on an effort also make it easier to go fast. Some of these things come with experience, and to some degree their also innate in a rider's talent.

I credit a lot of my ability to roll breakaways with guys over my pedigree to these nuances. Same with my ability to set course records (locally) and win state champ TTT's with these guys - skill, less brute strength:


I'm in the hat

That was an absolutely fantastic post, I wish I could like it twice.

I have tremendous respect for road racers. They are some of the best athletes in the world and in terms of pure fitness are extraordinary. My description of someone at your level is "animal" and it is no surprise that Tour winners get called things like "cannibal." I love MMA but you know what? Professional cyclists are arguably the toughest athletes on the planet.

In addition, one of, if not the best thing I ever did for my bike skills was to train with high level road racers. They taught me pedal and cadence sophistication I had never seen broken down so well, and this was after 20 years of riding.

For more than 10 years I followed every stage of the Tour and The Giro and Paris Roubaix.

That is what I think of road racers.
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