Completed my first century ride yesterday -- the North Shore. Had a blast despite the rain.

 

Anyway, my achilles tendons started hurting about the 70-mile mark and are really sore today - took forever to get up the stairs this morning. Never had this particular kind of hurt before. Can anyone offer any ideas as to (a) why and (b) how to prevent this in the future?

 

Wondering if it's some adjustment I can make to the bike, or if it's just my 50-year-old legs and I should just deal with it.

 

Thanks all!

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Hi Dave;

Achilles pain can come from a couple of reasons - seat height, cleat position, foot alignment. It is basically an inbalance in how the muscles are used in the cycling motion.

Is the pain more pronounced at the heel or at the calf muscle?

Right above the heel. Probably should have mentioned that I'm using toe cages.

oh, well in that case, excessive dorsiflexion of the foot due to use of running shoes is likely the cause.

Curious to know what your longest ride usually is? You must have been putting on some significant mileage to do a century, but you owe it to yourself to use a rigid sole such as in a cycling shoe to do those distances comfortably.

Longest previous ride was a metric back in June. Don't remember having this problem then. I was actually wearing rigid-sole cycling shoes for the century, but normally I'm wearing, yes, running shoes.


I'll try to get a 20-25 mile ride in at least once a week, with 5-10 milers as often as the weather permits. So yeah, yesterday's ride was a *significant* jump from my usual neighborhood puttering. Maybe I just need to start taking longer rides more often!

There's a couple of things you can do to help reduce the pain.  I'd try a few stretching exercises and then eccentric exercises for the achilles.  Basically, raise yourself onto tip-toes, then raise one leg and slowly lower yourself on just one leg until your heel is on the ground again.  Do 2 sets of 15 or 3 sets of 10 everyday, and that should help with the pain.  There's also a brace you can get that relieves some of the pressure off of the achilles just above the heel that will probably help you with moving around.  Also, it's probably good to back off and let your achilles heal.  I'd also ice it down once or twice a day. The tendon doesn't get much blood supply so it tends to heal slowly so be careful otherwise you may get chronic tendonitis which is not fun at all.

Yikes - hadn't thought about the tendinitis angle. Good takeaways here: warmup exercises and wearing the rigid-sole shoes regularly. Thanks all!

I'd be careful about that stair stretch, it's hard to control the stretch and if your achilles is inflamed, you may end up rupturing it.  The risk isn't super high but it's higher than doing something like this.

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