For you that are doing Reston this weekend.
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Coach's Tips For... Reston Town Center
Grand Prix Posted: 25 Jun 2008 10:10
AM CDT [ed: Here's another article
by BJ Basham, part of the series called "Coach's Tips for... ", in
which BJ will give you all the inside track on how to race a specific event.
BJ knows all these races, and he probably also knows most of the racers
hellbent on beating you at them. If you like BJ's contributions, let him know
in the Comments section below. You can even ask him questions in the
comments, which he'll answer there as well. Note: This
article was first published in 2007 and is re-published here for new readers,
new racers, and those of us who forgot a little something since last year.]
Coach's Tips for... Reston
Town Center Grand Prix This is one of my favorite events
of the calendar, even though I have never done well at this race. The course has always been the
story with this race with the six corners and that killer fifth corner that
has been the site of more than one crash every year. This year the course
gets even more interesting with eight turns instead of six due to the ever
expanding construction around the Reston Town Center. This course will be selective due
to the technical turns and the fact that some of the corners are pretty fast.
Staying up where you can pick your line and carry your speed without breaking
will be the rule of the day for anyone with aspirations for a good result. In
the past the long finishing stretch gave the field a chance to come back
together after things would get strung out by the three fast downhill corners
on the back half of the course. This year, the long straightaway will be
broken up by a detour between the buildings that will be the source of the
two new turns. That means the finishing straight is much shorter and the
distance from the last turn to the finish will be half as long. As I wrote last week, if you are
not a sprinter, you really need to be looking for the chance to take the race
away from the sprinters. You can do this in a couple ways: the first, drop
the sprinters, is nearly impossible without a significant climb. A sprinter's
strength is his or her ability to accelerate quickly which means the corners
will not be a big deal for them. So that leaves a breakaway. Get away from
the field and leave the sprinters to fight it out for the minor places. There are plenty of riders in the
field who have the endurance and power to stay away from the field. The real
challenge is getting away from the field. On a course with so many turns and
relatively short straightaways, it can be easier to get out of sight and that
is one of the tactics to making a successful break. The mechanics of a break
away are varied, but in its simplest form, a break forms when someone attacks
the field and gets a big enough gap that it takes a concerted effort to bring
it back. What that means is that you need to be able to put in a hard effort
to get away and then not poop out. You need to stay on the gas, at a lower
intensity, but still hard enough to stay away. Most riders can do the attack
part, but the not-poop-out is the hard part. Learning how hard you can go in
an attack so that you will be able to continue the move either alone or with
a smaller group takes practice. Knowing that you can do 1000 watts for 10
seconds and knowing that you can TT at 300 watts is great, but can you do the
300 watt TT after a 10 or 20 second 1000 watt effort to establish your break?
Practice it before you try it in the race and learn what the right amount of
effort feels like. One rule that they teach at USA
Cycling Coaches school is that when you make an attack, the commitment has to
be 100%. If you are making a move that you know will not work, and there is
not a logical team tactic behind the effort, it is a waste of energy. Once you get your break
established, hang with it, but keep an eye on the field. If the field is
right on your tail, don't hammer along with the group sitting on your wheel
waiting for you to cook yourself. But if you have a reasonable gap that still
is not completely under the control of the bunch, stay with it. If the break has
failed, don't beat a dead horse - get ready for the next move. If the
break gets caught, be ready to try and follow the counter attack that will
likely come. Just because you just put in a big effort in the first move,
that does not mean you cannot be part of the next move. Not to neglect the sprinters, your
place in the field will be crucial as the bell lap comes up. It is a great
idea to try for at least one prime and pay attention to how any primes are
won. Did the winner lead out of the last corner? Where they able to win from
10 places back? Primes are a dress rehearsal for the final sprint. Good luck and be safe. -- BJ Basham is a USA Cycling
Level II Certified Coach with Peaks Coaching Group. He lives in Fairfax, VA
and competes in most of the same races you do. To learn more about his
coaching practice and philosophy, visit his website at PowerCyclingCoach.com. |
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