Blogs that suck time

my pooTUBE
my pUtube
my poopics

SWOBO
avoid the bummerlife

need to reach me? pedalhome at hotmail

Thursday, May 25, 2006

speed vs acceleration

Out and out pure-bred speed is a thing both rare and prized. If you don't have it, you can get it ... but man, it do take a long hard while to attain.

But, acceleration is something that can be gained in a relatively short amount of time. And ... acceleration will pay off, big time.

The ability to accelerate quickly will enable you to make more breaks, cross gaps in races, and participate in many a sprint situation. Yeah, there may be someone with a bit more overall speed who comes around you once in awhile (meowbox hill anyone? ... and a crit the weekend before, now that i think on it ... dammit!) - but if you practice and achieve your acceleration ~ you'll be a player in the sprints more than you thought you'd have the potential for.

Acceleration

I've mentioned what I call "technique sprints" in the past. These are sprints that last 20 - 50 seconds, done on the 4 - 6 minute rest regime. Trust me, you do 6 of these and you'll be feeling woozy ... you do 10 and you're going to rip folks legs off.

once a week = progress

twice a week = you're bloody serious about this shit

Technique sprints are focused on combining and practicing the elements of acceleration. Elements such as breathing, gearing choice, shifting, leg speed, vision (foreward and behind), relaxation...

Breathing ~ one of the weirdest things I see some folks do as they start their sprint is ... scrunch up their entire body in one big clench ... like their going to heft up a huge box or pinch off an uncooperative loggie. Sprints last many, many seconds. In fact, some sprints have lasted a couple of eternities, as I recall. Ouch.

You need oxygen to sprint. You need it desperately. So, BREATHE! My favorite technique to get more O2 into my system is to exhale a relatively slow and deep breath as I begin the first few pedalstrokes of my sprint. By letting out a nice long push of breath as you start the sprint, you force the body into taking a big ole gulp AND you really can improve your overall relaxation of body and mind.

Gearing choice ~ don't shift to start a sprint! When you sprint, you should be in the right gear and should not need to shift. You don't won't to overload your muscles by slamming down two gears to start your acceleration. All your doing is flooding your muscles and slowing your body down. Your first 4 or 5 pedalstrokes can be quick, lively things that shoot your speed up. And, you get to not alert the universe to your intention by the "CLANK, CLANK" of your drive train.

Shifting ~ this is one of the keys to excellent acceleration and ONLY comes through much, much practice. You've got to be completely in tune with your bike, in this regard. You've got to reach a level of intuition with your machine that moves you to shift at just the right moment and only 1 cog at a time. You should be able to downshift and upshift during your sprint. Practice, practice, practice. Mostly, it's about shifting during the dead-zone of your pedalstroke. Shifting under extreme power loads does nothing for acceleration. Your shifting should be smooth, quiet, and timed just right.
Practice.

Leg Speed ~ sprint at a high rpm.
'nuff said.

If you need to work on leg speed - do your sprints on a slight decline. Trust me, it really helps.

Vision~ as you are out of the saddle, sprinting ... practice glancing down at your saddle. Then, after you become comfortable looking briefly at your saddle, move your line of sight just slightly over through that gap between your elbow and your hip. On both sides. Then, when you get familiar with that, practice glancing down to look through the gap created by your butt and your saddle. Once you get that, you'll be able to accelerate quickly and check to see who's on your wheel and which direction their coming. Very useful.

Relaxation ~ the most important element. The more relaxed you are, the more power you will generate. Breathing is how I remind myself to relax - what will your technique be? Twiddling your toes? Opening your fingers from the bar? Running your tongue around your lips? mmmm...

The more relaxed you are, the faster you will accelerate, the more precise your shifting will be, the longer your acceleration will last, and the faster you will recover.

shit ... gotta go.
latah,
~oV

11 comments:

Dan Cleary said...

Thanks OV. When I win my first sprint, I'm sending you the winnings. At M 4/5 that could be as little as a water bottle or something, but trust me, its yours.

Anonymous said...

OV, your words are better than those of the Dalai Lama....

diskzero said...

You know what the Lama says? Gunga ga lunga. Gunga la gungala gunga.

No disrespect meant to His Holiness.

norcalcyclingnews.com said...

well ... with only 1 bottle cage, whatyagonnado?

keep sprinting!

norcalcyclingnews.com said...

Cleay ~ everyone knows i only take one form of currency ~ and it comes in 6-packs.

Sticky ~ the Dalai Lama would whip our asses in a sprint

Disk0 ~ gunga ga lunga is now my new phrase for smoochies on the hoochies.

PAB(a.k.a.CID) said...

damn that was some good sprinty coachy talk.

li'l fucker. (said adoringly by someone who likes to mash huge gears as inefficiently as possible...)

nosajpalnud said...

nice write up - thx

Dr. Xeno said...

Thnx for the scoolin'!

X Bunny said...

sometimes you gotta spin and sometimes you gotta mash

(said by someone who has no idea what she is talking about but just didn't want to not leave a comment on a good post)

JT said...

Uh, thanks coach. You done a great jeorb.

http://homestarrunner.com/cantsayjob.html

Anonymous said...

Especially I like the first site. But other links are informative too, if you are interested check all those links.http://googleindex.info/1681.html and http://google-machine.info/1488.html