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[Closed] How long to be a credible Cat 4 or am I just crap (road content)

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I had a terrible inter-club experience last weekend,coming last and have a series of 1hr races from next saturday onwards. This happened after 2 years road riding, the last year with the club group riding and 2 x time crunched training cycles.

Does it take a long time to get up to speed, or even after all this experience, gain and weight loss am I just rubbish?

FWIW technically I may not be the best but understand getting in the wheels, echelons etc, I'm really looking for comments based on the the duration it may take to at least stay with the pack.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 12:44 pm
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You might be fit enough just not experienced. Take time to learn how to race. That along with plenty of training with get you there.

There is no real time frame. Just make sure your enjoying yourself and not beating yourself up about it.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 12:48 pm
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How far off the back of the pack were you?
How far through the race did you get dropped?


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 12:51 pm
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Was it a crit? They can sometimes be a bit brutal if there are tight turns as everybody slows down and then accelerates away. Or were you just struggling to keep up with the pace generally?

Edit: How many riders were there?


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 12:53 pm
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I would add, I had been through a morning sprint interval training on hills so that didn't help.

It was a 1hr/12 lap race on a circuit. I couldn't hold the Cat4 bunch after 20 mins, then basically just struggled through as fast as possible thereafter solo. Wind was 50/50 behind and in front about 20kph, so quite tough once solo.

20 riders in total, 6 in Cat 4 (it was a handicap).

Ny average was 29.9kmph / 200watts est by strava


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 12:56 pm
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I think you have the answer there then! Don't do interval training on hills before a race!!

Plus, do all you can not to get dropped on a windy day. Bad enough if you are feeling good let alone if you have trained in the morning.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 12:57 pm
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I think you have the answer there then! Don't do interval training on hills before a race!!

this!!


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:03 pm
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Kryton57 - Member

I would add, I had been through a morning sprint interval training on hills so that didn't help

Why would you do that ?


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:03 pm
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Tough on your own in the wind. But unless the lap was hilly 29.9km is a bit short on overall pace even isolated. Definitely leave out the pre race training session next time 😯


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:04 pm
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FWIW technically I may not be the best but understand getting in the wheels, echelons etc, I'm really looking for comments based on the the duration it may take to at least stay with the pack.

A school friend of mine took up cycling about 18 months ago, having never done it before really, has nothing else to do but rides his bike loads. He's gone from struggling up climbs to doing 200 miles+ every week, and finished very happily in the top quarter of the bunch at his first (cat 4) RR at the weekend. So... less time than it's taken you! HTH. 😉

(perhaps) more helpfully given the amount of riding/training you seem to do, I'm surprised you can't already. Are you comfortable sitting in the group, or do you tend to keep yourself on the outside of the bunch?

Edit: aah, doing hill reps in the morning then wondering why you can't race is pretty daft. I'm out.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:04 pm
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you were probably tired.
try another race, with more people in it of your standard so the group to hang onto is a bit bigger.

[njee - are you ever nice to people?]


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:06 pm
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Out of interest, what sort of average speeds would you expect in cat 4, 3, 2 or 1? Hypothetical scenario: 1 hr duration, not much wind, no steep hills.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:09 pm
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When starting you need to be a "clever" as possible in races. Never be at the back of the bunch, never be at the front. Always take a wheel and if you are at the back after a corner move up the bunch before the next corner/hill. Only when you can sit in the bunch then get up to the front and do some turns.

Oh and road racing hurts..... lots!


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:09 pm
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25mph IME but it really depends - 4th cat can vary massively from packs of bunch engines to people who aren't as fast as the higher cats but still understand tactics (and not chasing down every break).

But to the OP, don't do intervals just before a race unless you're used to doing that and already plenty fit enough 🙂


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:11 pm
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Racing, racing in a crit stylee, is way different than a group rideout. Unfortunatly you will have to get a race head on, think about positioning, drafting, resting, acelerating and so on. 1hr races are hard, everyones fresh, everyones got race heads on and a short time within which to do this... They will kill you and not think too much about it either.

I did last years Rapha Crit in Smithfields on my foldie, I'm fit, I ride hard, upshot was I got boxed in on the first corner and dropped out of the head group then couldn't race hard enough to get back on.. I ended up in the Pack and was soooo dissapointed I threw the foldie into the back of the van with a whole host of expletives accompanying what should have been a fun event.

I'd say rest before the next event, then get into the zone about 1/2hr pre the start then ride as hard as you can for the first 2 laps then see where you are in the pack. If you still bomb out, chill out and extend your expectations out for a few more months.

DOn't get pissed off if you loose out, it's a learning process and no one cares except you anyway. 😉


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:15 pm
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[njee - are you ever nice to people?]

All the time, fatty 😉

But I think Kryton is ripe for it, and I do (vaguely) know him IRL, so I'd like to hope he knows it's not personal.

My last comment was sincere too, that he puts in the hours so I'd suggest the fitness is there, it's perhaps the race craft -including not doing interval sessions just before racing - that's letting him down.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:16 pm
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"25mph IME but it really depends - 4th cat can vary massively from packs of bunch engines to people who aren't as fast as the higher cats but still understand tactics (and not chasing down every break)."

Wow - that seems fast. Where do all these people find time to get so fit? I thought I was fitter than your average guy, but I couldn't manage that.

Then again, I might just be comparing my average speed to that of a pack. How much faster can you go in a pack? I think in my hypothetical scenario I'd be ok at 30 kmh on my own, but what would that get me if I was with a pack?

Just wondering whether I'd embarras myself if I entered a race.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:18 pm
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Yeah, but that's not like 25mph riding on your own. If you're riding in a pack without leaving big gaps, you can do 25mph very comfortably even if 20mph would be your normal cruising speed.

But that's an important point - in 4th cat races you'll see a lot of riders spending a lot of time in the wind either at the sides of the pack or at the back with a slight gap - that makes it much harder work.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:22 pm
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Firstly, what circuit was it? A flattish open circuit like Hillingdon or Darley Moor is far easier to survive than something tight and technical like Tameside or Preston.

Secondly, at 4th Cat level tactics don't make the blindest bit of difference. Mostly cos there aren't any and it's (almost exclusively) individual riders rather than organised, coherent teams with the ability to have a plan and stick to it.

Fitness is less of an issue than skill. It requires a lot of skill and raw nerve to be able to sit in the middle of a bunch of 50+ riders all within spitting distance, all doing 25+ mph. Get it right and it'll feel pretty effortless to sit there and spin along. Get it wrong and you'll be wasting energy on every corner.

To be honest, I'd say that being shelled out the back in your first race isn't a problem. If you're being shelled out after your 10th race you'll know if you're crap! First race, it's practically expected!

Set yourself some goals - next race, try and hang on to the back of the group. The race after, try and be in the middle of the pack. And so on. It's all about learning the circuit and the style of racing rather than worrying about overall fitness.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:24 pm
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Riding at 30k's is about right for a good roadie group rideout for the first hour, then it'll drop to about 25k's then ramp up when everyone wants to get home.
It's fairly easy to crack 30k's in a group, pop out and do your turn and see how hard it is sucking a pack along. Do do this for too long a time maybe 5-7mins then drop back in, max out whilst you do it though or you'll get told to put some effort in. Thats riding, draft, do your bit on the front at Max, drop back in let someone else do thier bit..

And

Rotate.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:24 pm
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Oh and from my own experience doing another sport where I was much fitter than most roadies I raced, the changes in pace are actually the hard bit to deal with if you're not used to that. If you do lots of miles at steady pace (even if that pace is quite hard/fast) then you'll struggle with the on/off nature of road racing.

We always found that at the start of the summer (when our main sport season ended and we started road racing) we struggled with road racing if the pace changed a lot. By the end of the summer after lots of time on the bikes and racing, we did much much better as we got used to that.

So, don't just do junk miles even if they're hard - do some interval work while out training - sprint for signs, 1 min off, 1 min on and so on (you can obviously get a lot more scientific but if starting out, this will still work pretty well).


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:26 pm
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Agreed some crit circuits are brutal. It took me a whole season of racing at Crystal Palace to be able to corner hard enough, accelerate hard enough and sit in the bunch. It was never comfortable though.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:28 pm
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Then again, I might just be comparing my average speed to that of a pack. How much faster can you go in a pack? I think in my hypothetical scenario I'd be ok at 30 kmh on my own, but what would that get me if I was with a pack?

If you can do 20mph on your tod you'd be absolutely fine in a race. The problem with 4th cat - as Crazy_legs said, is that it's every man for himself, and it's carnage! E/1/2 races are actually much steadier, if quicker. If you can put yourself in the right place and hang on for the odd sprint then IME they can be easier to ride in! Fewer crashes too.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:32 pm
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I'd do some races that are Cat 4 only. You could have been racing 14 experienced cat 2/3 racers, so frankly you'd have no chance. I did a cat 4 only race last year, and we averaged 25mph for 45mins (flat circuit). A local cat 2/3/4 race averaged 30mph on a flat course...

You'll probably not get dropped in a cat4 only race, especially if you rest for a day or so beforehand... This will give you chance to get used to pack racing and tactics.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:32 pm
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Oh and from my own experience doing another sport where I was much fitter than most roadies I raced, the changes in pace are actually the hard bit to deal with if you're not used to that. If you do lots of miles at steady pace (even if that pace is quite hard/fast) then you'll struggle with the on/off nature of road racing.

We always found that at the start of the summer (when our main sport season ended and we started road racing) we struggled with road racing if the pace changed a lot. By the end of the summer after lots of time on the bikes and racing, we did much much better as we got used to that.

This + 1000

Guy in our club was a very handy time trial and triathlete but couldn't cope with the changes in pace in 4th cat races. He raced all year last year and kept attacking and he finally won a race around august.

he said wasn't used to the constant pace changes and he felt he didn't recover quick enough


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 1:32 pm
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are these kind of road races fun? is it all about the excitement?
sounds a bit of a ball-ache!


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 2:11 pm
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Like any race it's a masochistic sort of fun! Personally I get put off by the slightly random nature of it - the winner is often just a sit in sprinter (arguably someone who's judged things just right, but can be frustrating if you're trying to be proactive and get some good training in), and there's a good chance some random will take you out sprinting for 40th!


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 2:16 pm
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weeksy - Member
Kryton57 - Member
I would add, I had been through a morning sprint interval training on hills so that didn't help
Why would you do that ?

Just unfortunately timing. There was a 10 mile TT before that to, but I didn't mention it becuase the whole club was in it as well as me. So yes, 90 mins of hill intervals, 10mile TT and then a 1hr cat 4 race.

But I think Kryton is ripe for it, and I do (vaguely) know him IRL, so I'd like to hope he knows it's not personal.

My last comment was sincere too, that he puts in the hours so I'd suggest the fitness is there, it's perhaps the race craft -including not doing interval sessions just before racing - that's letting him down.

Yes to that - the next one on Saturday is a "true" BC event. I'll be turbo training race-sim intervals on Thursday, and will rest Friday. I probably shouldnt base it on one event, and am not going to chuck the towel in, but 2014 is going to be my virgin road "race" year and I want to make sure that I'm not just crap, other wise 2015 on an I'll relax and enjoy the club runs & MTB instead. I don't want to be thrashing myself blind to the fact I just may not be designed for road racing, neither do to miss the opportuntiy to do something better/differently to be more successful*

*within the remit of time outside work family etc committments which we all not does not necessarily and elite racer make 😀


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 2:24 pm
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You might be fit enough just not experienced. Take time to learn how to race.

That was my hardest lesson when I first started.
We were bundled in with the Vets race and I couldn't believe I was getting dropped so quick ,when all these old chunky guys were still there at the finish.
I then got some lessons from one of them ,and he showed me where to sit in the bunch and when to spot when things were kicking off,or if it was just a bit of nonsense.
He had a belly that needed the top tube for support,but he never used any energy he didn't need to and could spot any moves coming a mile off. 🙂


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 2:35 pm
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As njee20 sort of insinuates, there can be a rather random nature to lower category events. Sometimes, riders are simply there to get a fast chaingang. Some go because it’s good training and they’ll do suicide attacks off the front all the time until they die, then pull out but they’ve had a good workout. Some just want to sit at the back and learn the ropes. Some are desperate to win and earn their last couple of points to move up to 3rd.

The trick is learning who these people are – who’s launching the stupid attacks, who is always first to the front to pull it back, who is just sitting there. And then avoiding them! Ride your own race – you can’t control what others are doing so don’t try. Watch and learn. Try and enjoy it!


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 2:39 pm
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the next one on Saturday is a "true" BC event. I'll be turbo training race-sim intervals on Thursday, and will rest Friday.
Would many road or xc racers do intervals 2 days before a race? I've only trained for very different kind of riding but a worth-doing intervals or hard hill-reps session on a thursday and I'm not feeling much punchy freshness in my legs on saturday.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 2:54 pm
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I'd avoid big intervals two days before an important race, but wouldn't worry too much if I was 'training through', particularly with road racing otherwise you never do any real training!

As njee20 sort of insinuates, there can be a rather random nature to lower category events. Sometimes, riders are simply there to get a fast chaingang. Some go because it’s good training and they’ll so suicide attacks off the front all the time until they die, then pull out but they’ve had a good workout. Some just want to sit and the back and learn the ropes. Some are desperate to win and earn their last couple of points to move up to 3rd.

The trick is learning who these people are – who’s launching the stupid attacks, who is always first to the front to pull it back, who is just sitting there. And then avoiding them! Ride your own race – you can’t control what others are doing so don’t try. Watch and learn. Try and enjoy it!

Good advice that.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 3:08 pm
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Well, until tomorrow I'm away from home and can't get any riding in so I've Weds-Fri as my only opportunty.

Would you suggest doing the intervals on wednesday and resting Thurs/Fri?

Or perhaps a slow pootle later in the week to keep my legs turning?


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 3:14 pm
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Although some of these races are supposed to be 3/4th cat, its quite clear that there are much better riders involved sometimes and there is no equal standard. Either they've dropped down from 2nd cat or want to stay at 3/4 to just beat up everyone. So, if you get dropped in a race, put it behind you and aim for the next one.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 3:24 pm
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Well, until tomorrow I'm away from home and can't get any riding in so I've Weds-Fri as my only opportunty.

Would you suggest doing the intervals on wednesday and resting Thurs/Fri?

Or perhaps a slow pootle later in the week to keep my legs turning?

I have no idea what works but have my first 4th cat on Saturday, was planning on a steady hour on the turbo Wednesday night. Somewhere comfortably under threshold, certainly nothing intense.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 3:37 pm
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So lets get this right you did a 10 mile TT, then 90 mins of hill intervals and then a road race? And you know wonder why the road race didn't go well? You sound a bit lost to me, I think a better evaluation of goals and priorities would be smart.

Out of interest what was your 10 mile TT time?

As for this week, I'd interval Wednesday, easy spin ether Thursday or Friday (1-1.5 hrs max). All the books tend to recommend an easy spin the day before a race, but I never found it worked for me.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 3:52 pm
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I think I'd feel totally wrecked after 10mile TT then 90mins intervals - to then go and race....who were you trying to impress 🙄

Reading this with interest, cos I'm also thinking of having a go this year, but it seems as though race events in the North West don't pick up until Spring.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 6:13 pm
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Would you suggest doing the intervals on wednesday and resting Thurs/Fri?
No idea here as I only ever train for one longer ride now and then, not a season or series of races (reading threads like this for tips myself). Any meaningful interval-level training you do within a week of a race may only leave you less fresh rather than more fit. I've read that significant training efforts take a week-10 days to fully recover from and have any impact on your fitness. I guess it depends on how often you're used to riding hard but however fit you are, intervals should leave you good for nothing ) otherwise why do them. So it depends on whether you race for training or if the race is the aim itself.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 6:30 pm
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I think xc racing is very good training for crits. If you think about it an xc race is all about constant changes in pace/power.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 7:17 pm
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Kryton I seem to remember you saying that you had a bit of an anxiety issue with all this stuff .
I would have to say after years of doing races that you won't do well unless you are happy and relaxed.
Did you enjoy it or was it just stress ?

Nervousness is fine but only if it is a positive exited sort.

Have a think about it , I trained myself not to give a toss.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 7:55 pm
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My first thought was what a crappy time of year to start.

Anyway all good advice, have to say that don't I 😉

I'd just add ignore the correlation between Sunday rides and racing. My old club, a new club? built it's race team around who was fast on Sunday but come race day 95% of them were shit.
It's not all about speed, sometimes you go very very slow. It's much more, of course you need it, but you need knowledge as well. For example you'll probably see the same blokes over the season, you'll get to know who will do the work that counts. How many 'pop's' they'll make. It can get quite predictable, even I have a signature move that everyone expects.
Then there's finesse. There's trust in others, you can't be worried about anything. And be an ambassador of your own riding, all racers like a good rider wether you win or lose. Good riding is always welcome and will get you far, quite literally.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 8:49 pm
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Come on, look at [url= http://aephotos.co.uk/p829620319/h3bb05bd3#h37e2b12d ]this[/url] photo and tell me you don't want to get out there this weekend 😉 . Report on last Saturday's race [url= http://www.twickenhamcc.co.uk/tcc/race-report-imperial-winter-series-cat-4-race-7/ ]here[/url].

Kryton, have you heard of "Race Tapering". Seems not. I normally wind down with an easy commute on Friday, a lie in and big cooked breakfast, then a ride out to the race on Saturday. It took a year to become properly competitive, even in Cat 4. In the Imperial Winter Series the level is very high and the races over-subscribed. Immense fun, good quality riding, but not a place for nerves. Intervals, lots of them, but not nerves.

Come down to Hillingdon, say hello (I'm on the front for TCC) and get racing.

EDIT :

The problem with 4th cat - as Crazy_legs said, is that it's every man for himself, and it's carnage!

Not at Hillingdon. Clubs like ours, Kingston and London Dynamos do have team plans and we do try and put them into practice. We've had breakaways succeed in a couple of races, with blocking and lead-outs.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 9:32 pm
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Kryton I seem to remember you saying that you had a bit of an anxiety issue with all this stuff .
I would have to say after years of doing races that you won't do well unless you are happy and relaxed.
Did you enjoy it or was it just stress ?

Nervousness is fine but only if it is a positive exited sort.

Have a think about it , I trained myself not to give a toss.

Not just this, everything. But I have used Obree's methods pre race to success on a longer event and from an anxiety perspective I'm following some guidance in a book advised in the Chat forum, within one of my anxiety threads 😀

TIRed - I'm aiming for Hog Hill as it's close to me - some if ours ride at Hillingdon though. I have heard and used Race tapering yes, but I am following the Time Crunched Training Plan which schedules intervals on Tuesday (light) and Thursday (sprints plus just over and just under Lactic threshold). I appreciate I need to learn what's right for me I'm just trying to follow some generalised advice. With a bit of luck I may have some colleagues in the 4's on Saturday but those competing were competing in cat 2.

So lets get this right you did a 10 mile TT, then 90 mins of hill intervals and then a road race? And you know wonder why the road race didn't go well? You sound a bit lost to me, I think a better evaluation of goals and priorities would be smart.

Out of interest what was your 10 mile TT time? It should be noted that this was a coincidental scheduling of a paid training course and inter club event. I was going to sit out the TT but one of the chaps was missing a partner...

As for this week, I'd interval Wednesday, easy spin ether Thursday or Friday (1-1.5 hrs max). All the books tend to recommend an easy spin the day before a race, but I never found it worked for me.

I think I'll do that. FWIW actually it was 7.5miles two up TT and my/our time was 14mins.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:11 pm
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Not at Hillingdon. Clubs like ours, Kingston and London Dynamos do have team plans and we do try and put them into practice. We've had breakaways succeed in a couple of races, with blocking and lead-outs

It was an absolute smash fest last time I went. Ambulance, the lot...

Don't train/tt/sprint on the morning of the race. Or the day before. Or the day before that. Jesus....it's not rocket science..,


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:29 pm
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The best training for racing is ... racing. That's why 60 of us are out every Saturday and not all chasing Cat 3. I've also followed the Time Crunched Cyclist in parts, but essentially my training is:

Tuesday evening club ride, Five day commute with some intervals and a Thursday Sufferfest. Saturday is 1hr race - read intervals. Or when this series finishes, longer club ride.

I never ride on a Saturday morning, much as I would like to take out our beginners on a steady ride for coaching, I just know I would be finished for the afternoon race at 1PM. The 10 mile steady ride in is, however a good warm up.

And I too was off the back in my first Cat 4 road race on a windy circuit. Get over it and get on. Getting dropped is as much as racing as winning.

EDIT:

It was an absolute smash fest last time I went. Ambulance, the lot...

Some Cat 4 races in the summer have been terrible. But... the E123 races have been crashing regularly and had the air ambulance a week ago 😯 . Cat 4 has been almost crash-free (one in seven races) and showing the experienced racers how to handle a bike 😉


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:30 pm
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I know that flange, as I've said, it was a coincidental arrangement of some training I've paid for and a club event. Everyone rode the TT so it's a level playing field with the exception of the Training.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:32 pm
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It's not though is it. Did everyone put the same effort as you into the tt and reps? Knowing that they had a race afterwards? Seriously, even if you've paid for it - if you had to pay to race you've wasted your money.

You're a new 4th cat rider trying to do well in what is essentially a crit. Don't do anything much from Wednesday onwards. On the day Have a decent breakfast, a light snack for lunch and warm up on the rollers or turbo. Sit near the front but not on the front, don't chase down groups and don't be out psych'd buy people shouting, flash kit, fake tans (there will be a lot this time of year). Be assertive, hold your line and shout if you need to. Lean on folk too, think about if you're on the m25 at rush hour - don't let lane jumpers push in but if they do, don't be rattled by them.

My mates a decent 1st cat. He gets his mrs to drive to the race so he puts minimal effort in prior to getting there..


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:40 pm
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I didn't pay for the race. And I "won" all my hill sprints in the training, obviously a mistake but difficult to fake with a Shane-Sutton-alike swearing at you - this was a general field not the club attending.

But thanks for the second para, advice noted. I have a turbo based warm up plan (learned and given from BC) and I've a year of group riding with club but appreciate it will be much more aggressive.


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:45 pm
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Dude - You're on a wind up surely? 'Winning' hill sets? I'm pretty certain the bloke who crossed the line first in the race didn't think 'ah, but it's not a real win as I didn't clean up in the intervals this morning'...it's like being fastest on a track day...it doesn't count! EDIT!! Just read yours! Fairy snuff

On a serious note, be careful pushing yourself this early on in the season. If you want to gain your third cat (I'm thinking you might), maybe ease off a bit and pick some more competitive races. If you can get across to dunsfold on a Friday they have a fourth cat only race there, starting around Easter time. Added bonus, it's the top gear test track.

As mentioned, the best training for racing IS racing. Don't over think things and don't over train. The last bit is key...


 
Posted : 14/01/2014 10:51 pm
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TiRed - Member
The best training for racing is ... racing

Well that may not actually be true... It really comes down to how well you plan your training and how effectively you stick to that.

For example, a 4th cat might go to Hillingdon, sit in the bunch the whole race doing little work and then sprint for the line. Compare that to doing an effective training session...


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 9:00 am
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Some Cat 4 races in the summer have been terrible. But... the E123 races have been crashing regularly and had the air ambulance a week ago . Cat 4 has been almost crash-free (one in seven races) and showing the experienced racers how to handle a bike

and this is why i love cross so much. I got so tired of witnessing crashes and dodgy handling every week at castle comb and it always finishing in a sprint.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 9:57 am
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Thursday sufferfest would affect your Saturday race performance IMO. If I was racing (time trialling) on Saturday I wouldn't do a full interval session after Wednesday.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 10:01 am
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I think I'll do that. FWIW actually it was 7.5miles two up TT and my/our time was 14mins.

Are you sure ? That's bloody quick even for a 2 up if you can time trial at that pace there is no way you should be getting dropped in a 4th cat road race .


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:04 am
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7.5miles two up TT and my/our time was 14mins.

That's 32mph! If you can do that, you should be finding 4th cat races a doddle.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:10 am
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Are you sure ? That's bloody quick even for a 2 up if you can time trial at that pace there is no way you should be getting dropped in a 4th cat road race .

Unless of course, you do that and a hill sprints interval session on the morning of the race... as has already been pointed out several times. 😉


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:26 am
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7.4[b]KM[/b] actually about 8.8 I forgot to switch on the garmin at the start. Strava says 28.8 average. Actually slower than the 29.9 I averaged for the race so I was saving myself, see.....

Sorry.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:39 am
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I would like to add I KOM'd a corner at 47.8kmph, probably the highlight of my day 😀


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:40 am
 adsh
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Balls - my xc training now feels very inadequate.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:55 am
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Takes time to learn how to race, and it's less about out and out horsepower than people think.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:57 am
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adsh - Member
Balls - my xc training now feels very inadequate.
. I'm doing 150k a week 80 of which is on a Turbo intervals around family and work to achieve that. 😐

Thanks Crikey. On Saturday my goal will be to stay with the bunch. If I'm feeling good with 2 to go I might attempt to bridge / sprint just to join in the fun but hanging on to wheels is my main priority.

I've change the intervals from Turbo tonight to the track I'll be riding Saturday for familiarisation.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 1:35 pm
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Takes time to learn how to race, and it's less about out and out horsepower than people think.

This (thankfully based on my FTP). And when I said racing = training, it's not all intervals and cardiovascular, training can also be close group riding, cornering, taking food, pushing up in the last few laps. But if you are happy to attack, it's a good workout too - I'm always caught 😉


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 1:44 pm
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Thursday sufferfest would affect your Saturday race performance IMO. If I was racing (time trialling) on Saturday I wouldn't do a full interval session after Wednesday.

Not to any considerable degree, if you stopped doing any proper training three days before a race and you raced regularly you'd never get any proper training in. You can't taper for everything, you won't get fitter that way. Although intense training on the same day is not such a good idea. If you're doing sessions that take longer than 48 hours to recover from, either they're too hard, your recovery procedure is poor (food/sleep) or you're being a pansy.

You've just gotta remember 4th cat racing is all about making it to the end and having a decent sprint in most cases. I've got instances where I didn't even have to average 170 watts (that's jack all even at my weight) to sit in a 3/4 bunch (I suspect they go a bit faster than a 4ths only), you just need to learn to position yourself well.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 3:18 pm
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Thanks Crikey. On Saturday my goal will be to stay with the bunch. If I'm feeling good with 2 to go I might attempt to bridge / sprint just to join in the fun but hanging on to wheels is my main priority.

Everyone new to racing thinks that the only way to win is, to quote Joe Parkin, to be the only guy in the photo.

Lower cat racing in the UK is negative in the extreme; people will chase you down so you don't win rather than winning themselves.

The way to get out of this is to [b]learn to sprint[/b].

You don't learn to sprint doing TTs, you don't learn to sprint doing hill repeats, you don't learn to sprint doing anything other than sprinting.

To be able to sprint, you train to be there at the end, then watch and learn how and when to sprint.

There is no other way out of 4th cat unless you are an amazing physical specimen.

Then, you learn to race.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 3:24 pm
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My "training" looks positively slack as **** thanks to this thread!


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 3:39 pm
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are these kind of road races fun
yes, most fun you can have on a bike imo 😀

Its a steep learning curve IME, you might find certain courses suit you better than others but you find this out the hard way through racing lots on a variety of courses. You won't find out much though if you go in tired - rest day 2 days before the race, then day before spin out your legs easy. Decent warm up of around 20mins on the turbo or rollers, gel on the start line.

With your intervals/TT etc before hand you effectively tried to do a stage race without the fitness/race knowledge and experience to back that up effectively.

Depending on how long you've been training for, it might just be you aren't fit enough at the moment (no bad thing if you are looking to race on a regular basis til September IMO).

I think road racing attracts a certain type of personality too - you have to be able to pick yourself up from getting dropped and keep going back for more no matter how humiliating it is (my coach and i got my taper badly wrong for the British National RR Champs which had Lizzie Armistead and the Wiggle Honda team in it, i got dropped before i should have and raced the remainder of the race in a 2 up round Glasgow city centre with EVERYONE i knew watching, it was so humiliating for me as my legs were simply too rested to work but i learnt a lot from that experience and came out of it stronger in the long run). Try things out, make mistakes and learn, all the time.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 4:03 pm
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Crikey, you just have to find a circuit with a reasonable hill and get a few placings....


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 4:08 pm
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To be able to sprint, you train to be there at the end, then watch and learn how and when to sprint.

A quicker way to learn how to sprint is the Monday / Wednesday evening training / racing at Herne Hill - you miss out the first 45 minutes of a road circuit and get straight down to the finish, so you get lots of finishes in an evening.

They have people of all abilities (although I think all would be quicker than 30kph in a 7.5km TT).

Once you're winning at Herne Hill you should be able to apply that at the end of a road race.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 4:15 pm
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The way to get out of this is to learn to sprint.

I thought that. Then I won a race because the two guys in front crashed into each other (going up the Hillingdon finishing hill with no one else near... seriously), politely fell to either side of the road and I solo'd through to glory(!).

So, actually the way to win is to not crash 🙂


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 4:31 pm
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kryton are you in a hurry to get points (as in I've ticked off the 3rd cat thing) Or do you want to be a good racer.

I'm thinking about the way my crits usually pan out. If forty guys turn up only about twelve will be in it for the race.
The majority are fit and fast enough, but would rather finish a race a lap down than test themselves and fail.
Comfort zone in racing sounds odd, but if you don't come out of it now and then you won't improve.
It sounds big headed, but I almost treat those that never do a thing with contempt, though I should add only those that I see month in month out never helping, working or really trying.
What I'm trying to say rather badly is that you almost have to lose to learn how to win.
Sort of?


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 5:48 pm
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I did my first ever crit at Hillingdon this autumn. Attacked mid-way as I felt everyone was going too slow and saving themselves. Got reeled in and swamped in the final lap, but didn't mind.

Have got a new mantra for this season (a variation on my 'Death or Glory' mantra for last years' xc racing)

'I don't mind going down in flames; as long as there are some flames!'


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 6:06 pm
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7.5 miles in 14 minutes equates to an 18.50 ten which would put you about 24th on the fastest of all time list for time trials.So as said above hanging in with the 4th cats should be easy


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 6:11 pm
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Edric, it was KMH.

Oldgit, I want to learn and be a good racer, I don't see the point of not doing any work in cat 4, moving to Cat 3 and then being shat on for the rest of my life.

My aim is to do well in the televised abercyclefest cat 4 crit in May, this and the LRVC are effectively pre-cursors to that.

I've just done an 1:15 solo in the dark and rain at Hog Hill averaging 29kmph including warm up/familiarity laps. If I'm last on Saturday its that bloody hill's fault, but I picked up some tips from the locals, and know I'll race faster than that.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 8:56 pm
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Thursday sufferfest would affect your Saturday race performance IMO. If I was racing (time trialling) on Saturday I wouldn't do a full interval session after Wednesday.

Stay to the left up the hill, be near the front for the downs, you do not need to brake for any of the corners if you are in the first 10 wheels (assuming you are surrounded by competent bike riders). The hill really isn't that bad when you're in the bunch. If it's wet, don't run silly thin tyres, flint will probably end your ride early. It is my favourite circuit though!


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 10:13 pm
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If I'm last on Saturday its that bloody hill's fault

Ride E1234 with the fast old men (masters/vets) in the summer - they don't go up the hill. I must get over to Hog Hill, it's the last SE circuit I have yet to race. Bit of a trek though when Hillingdon is a nice flat 9 miles away.


 
Posted : 15/01/2014 11:05 pm
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I can't speak from experience, but from what I've read and hear you do your dedicated training in the off season, and then either maintain or taper during the season depending on how seriously you target race results.

If it were me I'd probably check my level by dropping to maintenance training to concentrate on racing for a bit, and then switch back to the usual training plan where any races attended are for the training.

Being early season though many riders will still be training instead of even thinking of going racing. There's always give and take between improving and performing, it's just a matter of timing unless you only ever really maintain and go racing all the time.

Maintaining is largely what I used to do, basically finding 1 or 2 races per week whenever available throughout the year, whether it was mtb, cyclocross, or road. It's a slow and poor way to improve though, so it's hard to ever be more than middling even with several years in your legs. I think you're going about better for the long term but either training or results will probably have to give in your first season.

As a side note, a road training camp overseas for a week or two sometime in the Spring is a fantastic tune up for getting in the miles. I went to Mallorca three times which was my only really serious training putting in 120-200km each day with a similar ability peloton.


 
Posted : 16/01/2014 6:06 am
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Thinking about this a bit more, I'm going to swap one of my intervals for Tempo. My week should look like this:

Sat: Crit
Sun: Rest
Mon: Intervals, 15 mins warm up, 4 x 2min powerintervals, 8 mins rest then 9 mins over/under (2 mins under, 1 min over x 3)
Tues:rest
Weds : Intervals, 15 mins Z2 warm up, 30 mins Tempo, 15 mins Z2 cool down
Thurs: Rest
Fri: Rest

Thoughts? I'm wondering if I should swap Monday & Wednesday around? However, doing the Tempo on Wednesday is less damaging than doing the sprints before the crit.


 
Posted : 25/01/2014 10:59 pm
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You're never doing anything over an hour?

Don't do nothing in the two days before the crit - a gentle spin, either on the turbo or outside, with a couple of short (1 min) efforts will better.


 
Posted : 25/01/2014 11:02 pm
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You're never doing anything over an hour?

Saturdays and Sundays are all I've got for that, and the Crit takes away that time. Although I do at the weekend / during time off if possible (3h or 86k yesterday for example)

I bought perhaps training in the sweet spot might go some way to alleviate that.


 
Posted : 26/01/2014 8:18 am
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Does that training week include everything you are doing or are road miles on top of that? 4 rest days a week is too much.


 
Posted : 26/01/2014 9:50 am
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That seems like very little riding with no endurance base mileage.I agree that 4 rest days seems a lot couldnt you get some road miles in then ,even if its only 30 or 40 miles?


 
Posted : 26/01/2014 9:54 am
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