The Forgotten Way To Win More Cycling Races

One of the most common questions people ask me is strengthening their weaknesses. It’s tempting to serve them some practical training advice to help them improve hopeless climbing skills. It’s tempting to optimize their weak time trials with a specific time trial training plan. And it would be easy for me to show them some efficient exercises to improve their poor sprinting performance.

But I won’t do that. Instead, I think it is better to re-think why they ask me how to improve skills that will never be their speciality.

Let’s look at an example: Mike races in Category B in his national league. Mike is among the best five riders uphill but has mediocre sprinting and time trial skills. He makes a top 15 position in mass sprints but rarely in the top 10. And that’s why Mike wants to improve his sprinting performance.

It’s a fair question, but let’s face it: Mike will never win that bunch sprint. Never. It would be unrealistic to see him as the fastest guy in a bunch sprint, even in a lower category. And that is why I believe it is crucial to realize why he wants to sprint faster.

I think Mike’s question is a symptom of wrong focus. He focuses on fixing his weaknesses instead of fine-tuning his excellent climbing performance. Also, it might be a lack of confidence because he is already among the best climbers in his category. “I’m already a good climber, so there is no need to train that…”

But if he paid more attention to his best weapon, climbing, I think it seems reasonable that he could make it to the top of the podium. Not every week, but maybe a few times during the season.

Now, if Mike had asked me how to win more races, I wouldn’t make his poor sprinting skills a topic. Instead, I would focus on improving his ‘Watts to Kilogram’ and carefully selecting the hilly events he should peak. In these races, Mike is a potential winner, and that’s where I would like him to use his best weapon to the maximum. That’s a winner’s strategy.

If you are a competitive cyclist, you should aim to build a physiological profile that can help you win races. However, sometimes it makes sense to focus on improving your best skills, and don’t be afraid that you will sacrifice your mediocre skills.

Why? Because it’s funnier to win (or at least have a chance to win) a few races during the season than finishing top 10 – week after week – without ever having a real opportunity to succeed.

Remember, emphasizing your strength is far more lucrative and enjoyable than fixing weaknesses that will never be highly competitive.

How to Pick the Perfect Cycling Race for Winning

There are different physiological profiles for sprinters, finisseurs, time trialists, climbers, stage race specialists, etc. You might already have an idea of where you fit in. If not, try to think of what kind of races you will have the best chances of winning. It’s worth remembering that if you don’t compete internationally, most of your competitors are not specialists. And then it’s not impossible to beat them.

Though I advocate specializing, we must keep in mind that most road cycling races fit several kinds of rider styles, and after all, that’s great. There are small hills, technical parts, crosswind sections, and many of the races end up with a sprint in a smaller or bigger group.

So it is still necessary to train a vast repertoire of physiological skills, but it certainly makes sense to point out where it can be possible for you to make the difference that will make you a winner. So find out where you can make the winning move and train the skills to help you succeed.

You can wait for the last 150 meters before showing your superiority if you are a sprinter. So often, the best sprinters are the most successful riders with the most wins during a season. Maybe that is why so many riders wait for the sprint as their sole tactic.

Typically 5 to 10 riders rely on their sprinting skills as their chance to win the party. More riders will wait for the sprint at lower category events because they are inexperienced and hope to become the new Marc Cavendish. But most riders are not sprinters. Far from.

That’s why so many different riders dream of winning every time they enter a race.

It’s questionable if it is a reasonable tactic to count yourself as a sprinter with a chance to win a race if you know you are not the fastest sprinter. Instead, why not realize that you have to attack the race differently to have a realistic chance to win?

As I have said before: If you already know that the sprinters are faster than you, then you have three options: Attack, attack, attack – Does it sound reasonable?

Jesper Bondo Medhus

I am a medical doctor with a special interest in cycling training. I work at the Hospital of Vejle using clinical physiology and nuclear medicine to diagnose cancer and heart patients. I have written two e-books: Time Effective Cycling Training and 12-Week Winter Training Program.

View Comments

  • Hi Jesper,

    Thanks for reminding us about that we can't all be the next Cavendish. It's so true that most riders are dreaming of being the next big sprinter or climber - without considering where their best winning chances actually are.

  • Exactly my thoughts. I know I never will be a sprinter, although most races are flat crits, I try to improve on my sprinting abilities but I never wait for the bunch sprint. I always try to eliminate much of the competition before the finish line. So yes, attack, attack and attack is the way to go, sometimes it even leaves you as the last man standing ;)

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