By Selene Yeager
Before you go hard on race training, you need a strong endurance base. While some pros might take six weeks and multi-hour, low-intensity rides multiple days a week, you can build your foundation in less time. As spring makes it presence felt, and with the Old Mutual Wealth Double Century just three months away, building endurance needn’t be a laborious 12-week affair.
“For pros who can ride 20 to 30 hours a week, a long base training period is appropriate,” says expert coach Jeb Stewart, C.S.C.S., owner of the online coaching company Endurofit. “But if you struggle to squeeze in half that amount, it’s almost counterproductive because you aren’t clocking enough saddle time to elicit a training stress.”
Stress is key. If you don’t have hours to slowly tax your system, you need to do shorter rides with focused efforts to stimulate fitness adaptations, says Stewart. “You can get the same amount of training stress in a 90-minute tempo interval workout as you can in a three-hour endurance ride.”
You’ll still need to build in saddle time to condition your body to sit on a bike for longer rides, but Stewart’s focused four-week training plan will lay down a solid fitness foundation. To stave off early-season aches and pains, warm up and cool down before and after each workout, and recover for five minutes between intervals.
How to use this plan: First, check out the workouts below and familiarise yourself with each type and zone. Then follow the four-week plan to get fit fast.
Fast Pedalling: Spin quickly with proper form. Active and recovery periods are the same duration. This improves pedalling efficiency and increases workout intensity.
Big Gear Tempo: Ride a bigger gear at a specified cadence in the tempo zone. (If knees begin to hurt, decrease the gear and increase the cadence to do regular tempo work instead.) This improves muscular endurance and increases training stress.
Tempo: Ride intervals at 90+ rpm in the tempo zone. This increases aerobic fitness, muscular endurance, and training stress.
Endurance: Ride for two to five hours in the endurance zone at a comfortably high cadence. This boosts muscular endurance, aerobic fitness, and fat-burning capacity.
Hills: Ride in the endurance and tempo zones on hilly terrain using gearing and cadence to control effort. This improves muscular endurance and overall strength.
Monday: Off
Tuesday: 1 hour with 5 sets of 5 x 15-second Fast Pedalling intervals
Wednesday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Thursday: 1 hour with 3 x 10-minute Big Gear Tempo intervals at 50 to 70 rpm
Friday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Saturday: 2 to 3 hours in the Endurance zone
Sunday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Monday: Off
Tuesday: 1.5 hours with 4 sets of 5 x 30-second Fast Pedalling intervals
Wednesday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Thursday: 1.5 hours with 3 x 15-minute Big Gear Tempo intervals at 60 to 80 rpm
Friday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Saturday: 3 to 4 hours of Hills
Sunday: 1.5 to 2 hours in the Active Recovery zone
Monday: Off
Tuesday: 2 hours with 3 sets of 5 x 1-minute Fast Pedalling intervals
Wednesday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Thursday: 2 hours with 2 x 20-minute Tempo intervals
Friday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Saturday: 4.5 hours of Hills
Sunday: 1.5 to 2 hours in the Active Recovery zone
Monday: Off
Tuesday: 1 hour of easy pedalling
Wednesday: 1.5 hours. with 5 x 30-second Fast Pedalling intervals and 1 x 10-minute Tempo interval
Thursday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
Friday: Off
Saturday: Group ride, century, or hammerfest
Sunday: 1 hour in the Active Recovery zone
This article originally appeared on Bicycling South Africa.