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There's quite a bit out there on improving your speed but the basics are that you want to do hard workouts 2-3 times a week but have a day or two in between the hard workouts to recover. There's a few different types of intervals that focus on different things. For example, if you're working on your lactate threshold or climbing, you might do intervals that last for 5-15 minutes. Intervals for top end speed or to improve your sprinting might be anywhere from 15 seconds to 3 minutes.
If you're just going just trying to go fast in a century, you'll probably want to do the longer intervals and not really care about improving your jump. However the tricky part is figuring out how fast to go. You should probably read a book on bike racing or use google to find a page explaining this.
Oh, the speed that you finish a century depends a lot on whether you're doing it solo or with a group. With a good paceline, you should be able to do it in 4-5 hours easily since you're drafting for a bit of it and that makes things much easier. Solo is a little harder but still doable.
6:10 is amazing, Dan.
Why not set your sights on a 6-hour century that you feel good after?
There's quite a bit out there on improving your speed but the basics are that you want to do hard workouts 2-3 times a week but have a day or two in between the hard workouts to recover. There's a few different types of intervals that focus on different things. For example, if you're working on your lactate threshold or climbing, you might do intervals that last for 5-15 minutes. Intervals for top end speed or to improve your sprinting might be anywhere from 15 seconds to 3 minutes.
If you're just going just trying to go fast in a century, you'll probably want to do the longer intervals and not really care about improving your jump. However the tricky part is figuring out how fast to go. You should probably read a book on bike racing or use google to find a page explaining this.
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"junk miles" is what hardcore roadies call any distance you ride that isn't training or a race. i wouldn't avoid "junk miles."
oh.. yeah, i thought it was improperly spent training. yeah, im not gonna be a hardcore roadie.
ridedirty said:"junk miles" is what hardcore roadies call any distance you ride that isn't training or a race. i wouldn't avoid "junk miles."
It is, junk miles are basically miles and time spent where you ride a moderately hard pace. Basically, you're riding too hard to recover from a previous workout but not as hard as you would do in a workout. Your body is being stressed too much to heal and recover but not being stressed enough to improve your strength or endurance. So it just ends up doing nothing or hurting you in the long run, but it does let you brag about how much mileage you ride each week. It's surprisingly easy to end up doing these if you don't take the time to make sure that you either rest or ride easy days between intervals or hard workout days.
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