Why do I suck so badly at cross?
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bc sparks wrote:A friend of mine has a really big engine on the road and can beat me by minutes in time trials and he can keep a pretty quick pace for hours, but I have lapped him in several cross races. He's good at time trialing so that's all he wants to train for, I try to get him to practice cx skills and do acceleration workouts but he tried a couple, and they hurt, so he goes back to the training that he's good at.
I think that's the key difference fitness wise. Testers tend to stick right at or below threshold. Road riders will go over threshold maybe for a couple of minutes max but will have extended periods way below this. For cross, you are at your limit for an hour, with constant efforts above this.
I'll echo what everyone has said about technique. When you are at your max, trying to close even the slightest gap (because you've taken the wrong line, haven't dismounted/remounted as smoothly, slipped on an off-camber) is very hard.
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- Posts: 383
- Joined: Sun Nov 10, 2002 6:03 pm
- Location: Belfast
Tinea Pedis,
The collarbone incident was the result of the front wheel washing out on a thin film of mud on hard/well drained ground. I lost concentration and the wheel went from under me. Anyway I picked the bike up and carried on (I did not come last!!) but at the end I got very nauseus and passed out with pain, the first aiders revived me gave me a kick on the ass and sent me home. I drove home took a very painful shower, and actually went into work on the following day only to be sent to the local casuality where the broken collarbone was discovered. Luckily it was a clean break and has healed "perfectly" but it meant that I could not train at all for 12 weeks. Needless to say I was very depressed so I did what I had to do - ate too much and drank too much and piled on 10kg.
I managed to get things back under control but my performance has not really returned to what it was - mainly due to excess weight - I hope to get this sorted in 2013 and start winning (TT's) again - which echoes the point made about TTer's not being good at CX
I am on quite a good Winter programme, which includes CX as a weekly source of high intensity training, and as long as I enjoy it, improve at it and benefit from it I can accept coming in at the rear of races
Plus there is great scope to experiment with kit
The collarbone incident was the result of the front wheel washing out on a thin film of mud on hard/well drained ground. I lost concentration and the wheel went from under me. Anyway I picked the bike up and carried on (I did not come last!!) but at the end I got very nauseus and passed out with pain, the first aiders revived me gave me a kick on the ass and sent me home. I drove home took a very painful shower, and actually went into work on the following day only to be sent to the local casuality where the broken collarbone was discovered. Luckily it was a clean break and has healed "perfectly" but it meant that I could not train at all for 12 weeks. Needless to say I was very depressed so I did what I had to do - ate too much and drank too much and piled on 10kg.
I managed to get things back under control but my performance has not really returned to what it was - mainly due to excess weight - I hope to get this sorted in 2013 and start winning (TT's) again - which echoes the point made about TTer's not being good at CX
I am on quite a good Winter programme, which includes CX as a weekly source of high intensity training, and as long as I enjoy it, improve at it and benefit from it I can accept coming in at the rear of races
Plus there is great scope to experiment with kit
- Tinea Pedis
- Posts: 8615
- Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2009 6:08 am
- Contact:
You honestly sound like the Irish version of me
I didn't pile on quite as much weight, but certainly gained a bit. And it was/still is dim times.
Thanks for being so candid with your reply
I didn't pile on quite as much weight, but certainly gained a bit. And it was/still is dim times.
Thanks for being so candid with your reply
Tinea Pedis wrote:I'm just coming off of having one (from road), am keen to get into CX next winter (Aussie) however also super keen to avoid another busted collar bone
Why wait till next year? I'll be lining up on the 3rd November this year...
Reading all the comments intently - even though I haven't raced CX yet, as a TTer I have a feeling they are all relevant to me too!
- Tinea Pedis
- Posts: 8615
- Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2009 6:08 am
- Contact:
Need a bike
And a job...
Semi-pro doesn't pay well, who knew
And a job...
Semi-pro doesn't pay well, who knew
Top 10 reasons you suck at CX
1 -- You're fat
2 -- You don't strength train
3 -- You don't do agility drills
4 -- You are not flexible
5 -- You're old
6 -- You're a wuss (fear to run them bitches down no matter what)
7 -- You don't ride cotton tubs
8 -- You don't like the cold
9 -- You don't ride enough races to get the intensity in
10 - You don't have a mullet or some sort of cool facial hair
1 -- You're fat
2 -- You don't strength train
3 -- You don't do agility drills
4 -- You are not flexible
5 -- You're old
6 -- You're a wuss (fear to run them bitches down no matter what)
7 -- You don't ride cotton tubs
8 -- You don't like the cold
9 -- You don't ride enough races to get the intensity in
10 - You don't have a mullet or some sort of cool facial hair
Instagram @rich_dub_u
'19 Trek Emonda SLR H1 Rim Brake (6,250g) | '21 Sworks Tarmac SL7 (7,300g) | '21 BMC Teammachine SLR_01 | '15 Sworks Epic World Cup (10,242g)
'19 Trek Emonda SLR H1 Rim Brake (6,250g) | '21 Sworks Tarmac SL7 (7,300g) | '21 BMC Teammachine SLR_01 | '15 Sworks Epic World Cup (10,242g)
Fair enough TP... Was lucky to pick mine up very lightly used and going cheap.