Cyclocross Training and RacingCyclocross, or cross,
is a skill-building workout but also a lot of fun. The beauty
is how the riders gracefully flow from bike to road, and then
effortlessly back on the bike again, making the transitions
look much easier than they are. Along with the seasonal change
comes a few issues with the weather and as a result you gain
high-level bike handling skills in all conditions. You will
learn more about cornering your bike in one season of cross
than three on the road.
If you are a Road, Track, Triathlon or MTB racer looking to
improve your racing ability, cross is perhaps the easiest way
to improve your technical skills, keep intensity in your
training in the off-season and have a great time in all kinds
of weather on your bike.
What is Cyclocross?
Cyclocross races are 30 - 60 minutes on 1-2-mile lap
courses on a combination of dirt and pavement and include some
running and getting on and off the bike to get over barriers
or run up hills. Cyclocross is a great cross-training
supplement and easy to fit into your winter schedule because
the races are short and held, rain or shine, on nearly every
weekend from September to February.
Cyclocross develops a number of skills, including
descending, technical transitions, accelerations, running,
cornering, time trialling and explosive starts.
If you are a beginning rider, expect cyclocross to develop
your power and stamina while working on your cornering and
descending skills. You will also get a great cross training
workout with the running and lifting of the bike.
For intermediate riders, cross will maintain anaerobic
conditioning, train upper-body and running muscles and take
your time trialling to the next level. For elite racers,
cyclocross is the place to hone high-speed transitions with
agility, develop further handling skills and get that short,
hard power training that is difficult to maintain in the
off-season.
Training for Cyclocross
If you decide that cross is something you want to give a
whirl, you can either just jump in and use it as your
once-a-week anaerobic skills session in the off season, or if
you have tried cross as a beginner, you might want to get a
bit more focused.
Take a mini-break of 1 week to 10 days and then rebuild
some strength and endurance base prior to the first races. You
will need this recovery because of the large power demands and
high anaerobic system stress of cross. Slower pedaling
intervals and some time in the gym during this rebuilding
period will give you the power necessary to survive a cross
race at the front and help to prevent over-training.
At a basic level, cyclocross is like any other endurance
racing, the higher your aerobic capacity, the faster you will
go. The starts are 100% full-on sprints to the single track,
so lactate tolerance and anaerobic system development is
critical. In addition, like any good time trial, you must
develop the ability to recover while at or near your
threshold.
Sample Cyclo-Cross training
| Monday |
1hr Recovery ride or
rest with lots of stretching, especially hamstrings,
groin and lower back. |
| Tuesday |
AM Run 20-30 minutes.
PM 1.5 hr road ride easy |
| Wednesday |
Hard cross workout.
Barriers and running transition practice with short
technical race intervals. Short race endurance practice
15-40 minutes. |
| Thursday |
AM Run 20-30 minutes
steady medium. PM 1.5 hr road ride easy |
| Friday |
Rest Day 1 hr spin
very easy, stretch and hydrate |
| Saturday |
1.5 hr cross or road
ride with 2 x 5 minute medium intervals and 2-3 race
intervals of 2 minutes each with 5 minute
recoveries |
| Sunday |
Race (including
minimum 30 minute warm-up and
stretching) |
Some pointers if you start to get serious about
cross
-
Practice starts. Typically start in the big ring and
large rear cog. This eliminates trying to shift chain rings
as you are accelerating. Set up a 50-foot grassy straight
with a turn into some single-track and find a friend or two
to race for 6 - 8 starts.
-
Set up a short cross course with whatever barriers you
can put together. The regulation height maximum for barriers
is 16 inches, although you will find many promoters use
shorter ones.
-
Take 1 month off from racing before the first cross race.
This helps the brain and body rebuild for what can be a five
month (September to February) season for the elite.
-
Although it is often tempting to continue racing
immediately after cross because fitness is so high, I
recommend taking a rejuvenating break. This is key in
establishing a good yearly cycle.
Transitions on and off the bike
Whether cross is the focus of your year or simply a
training tool, to survive a cross race will require being able
to mount and dismount from the bike to get over barriers and
run up hills.
First practice lifting the bike and find your two grabbing
locations. Use 2 fingers under the top tube and find the
balance point where both wheels rise evenly from the ground.
This will be where you grab the bike for barriers and short
runs. Next grab the downtube, usually in about the middle, and
practice lifting the bike onto your shoulder for longer runs.
Do 2 x 20 reps of "bike ups", lifting the bike from the two
basic holds up into the position you will carry it.
Once you have established your grabs, start practicing
mounts and dismounts at walking speed. First ride around on
some grass and practice swinging your right leg over the bike
and coasting as that leg dangles straight down behind your
left leg. Keep your hands on the hoods and practice cornering
and coasting as long as you can like this.
Once you feel comfortable riding and coasting like this,
then step the right leg between the bike frame and your left
leg still on the pedal, and begin to walk. (Hint: click out of
your pedal with the left shoe before you start and just stand
on the pedal to avoid staying clipped in once you dismount.)
Practice stepping the right foot through for fast and flat
dismounts, typically into barriers, and simply step back off
the bike for slower (the cowboy dismount) typically uphill.
Practice both ways very slowly until you feel comfortable,
each time just throwing the right leg back over the saddle and
remounting at walking speed.
In practicing the remount, start at walking pace and keep
it very slow until you eliminate repeated hopping on the
launching foot onto the saddle. Work toward one smooth lunge
onto the right pedal and instantly begin to pedal. Keep your
eyes looking forward; use your peripheral vision to help your
feet find the pedals. Just keep pedaling, your feet will find
the pedals. If you need to take a quick glance down at the
pedals before you remount, do it. Just like the dismount, once
you feel comfortable (or at least not totally spastic) then
add a little speed, and eventually a flat barrier, then a full
15-inch high barrier to practice regularly.
Running for cross
If you are doing cross for a bit of top end training rather
than taking it too seriously then you won't need to work on
your running. Running is essential for racing cross at a high
level however. You can't avoid it in a race, and although you
might hear of guys who don't train their running, on courses
with longer runs or very muddy conditions, they will suffer.
Although most racers can sprint up a cross run-up, an
untrained runner will not recover as quickly or be able to
stay with good runners on the longer runs.
Running is best approached in a similar way to your cycle
training. Start easy and build up a base of moderate running
time, typically three times per week for 20 minutes for a
couple weeks, then add some longer threshold intervals and
then peak your running with short, sharp hill accelerations
during a moderate 30-minute run.
Running Program
Pre Season:
10-50-minute runs beginning with walking
the downhills and flat portions* and working toward steady
threshold intervals with recoveries 3x/week.
Season 20-30-minute runs starting with
3 x 3-minute intervals at race pace 2x/week. Peak
20-30 minute runs with short explosive uphill running
bursts of 5 - 30 seconds 1x/week.
*Running uphill is very similar to the pedal stroke
and is the ideal transition because it is easy on
cycling-trained muscles and decreases your risk of
injury.
Quick Cross Tips
-
Steer the bike underneath you, do not lean body into
corners.
-
Lift butt at least slightly off seat through corners.
-
Pedal while remounting, even if pedals aren't there yet.
-
Ride easy for 15 minutes and stretch prior to practicing
barriers to avoid pulls. Practice perfectly smooth
transitions, slowly first, add speed later.
-
If you feel rough and out-of-control over barriers, slow
down a notch or two.
Conclusion
If you want to be a better bike racer and take your riding
to a new level, then cyclocross is for you. To get better at
the technical side of cross, watch the best. Go National
Trophy races where you will see some of the best racers in the
country ride the same course you just finished as a beginner
and then study books, videos or DVD's to learn more and to
mentally rehearse smooth transitions.
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