Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Monday, February 22, 2010

Weekend Results from SE Athletes

Pace Bend Road Race, Austin, TX.

Men Cat 2:
Colton Jarisch, 5th

Men Cat 3:
Brian Darby, 3rd

Master's 35+:
Jerry Bueno, 10th.

Walburg Road Race. Austin, TX

Men Cat 2:
Colton Jarisch, 12th.

Men Cat 3: 
Brian Darby, 3rd

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Experience is a key to success


With a flick of the wrist, my ice axe gained purchase as I moved upward.  Years of climbing have me comfortable in the vertical world and the route was well within my physical ability.  As I stopped to place an ice screw, I began to get nervous.  I kept fumbling and almost dropping the screw as the prospect of falling 20 feet with pointy things attached to my feet and in my hands became more and more real.  Energy was wasted and a bit of panic had set in.  If we were on a route that was at my physical ability, the ending could have been very different.

So what does this have to do with bikes?  It illustrates the importance of skills that can seem easy but are very different when applied.  A giant screw should be easy to place in ice. But add bulky gloves, 20 pounds of gear, and fatigue to the equation and it gets a little more complicated in the same way riding a straight line gets a bit harder when you’re fighting for a wheel with your nose in the wind after being off the front for 10 miles.  Both skills are quickly improved, but many athletes stop worrying about simple tasks once they simply become comfortable.  There are many instances where pure fitness can permit some slop, but in the end, energy is still being wasted.  Think of a strong cross-wind as gaps form.  You struggle to stay with the front group, but slop earlier in the race may have taken a bit too much out of you as the space between your wheel and the next guy gets wider and wider.

Unfortunately the best method to hone these is through experience.  This where the infamous group ride comes in.  These are great training tools and can fit in to any part of the season, if they are ridden correctly.   Contrary to popular belief, you don’t have to hammer your brains out every Saturday morning.  In fact, I like my athletes to still do their group rides during their recover blocks.  But, they have strict instructions.  Similar to the goal of five by 8 min intervals in a workout, the goal is to work as LITTLE as possible.  They are to suck wheel the entire time.  Letting the wind touch their face is the painful equivalent of a 30 watt drop during an interval.  Many athletes who have power profiles beyond what they show in their results find themselves on a steep learning curve as they are forced to try new ways to stay protected.  If the purpose of the group ride is a head-banging slug fest that makes grown men cry, hone your skills of riding close when you’re at race speed about to see double.  After hard pulls or attacks, figure out how to squeeze a draft off of anybody near you.  Get in the habit of always riding like this.  When you’re in a race, you’ll automatically find shelter and recover for the next round without a second thought.

While this advice isn’t nearly as interesting as changes in muscle fibers or as beneficial as how to squeeze more out of your intervals, it is free speed.  It can help you learn to seek shelter so you’re not cooked halfway through a race or let you conserve enough to let you hang on until the pace eases and you can grab some precious recovery.

John Hobbs, Senior Consultant
jhobbs@source-e.net
http://www.source-e.net
cell 361.815.1100

Friday, February 12, 2010

SE Riders in the Results:

Kenny Hill Autoworks Criterium at the Driveway, Feb 7

Men P,1,2:
Colton Jarisch, 4th.

Comfort Marathon Mtb: 
Men 30-39:
Jon Toner 7th. 
 

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Epic One on the Trails

It's been snowing here.  Not enough to put a full stop on everything like in Washington DC, but enough to make everything gross.  Roads have been slushy, gravel roads are sloppy mud, but the trails were good.... yesterday.  Yup, yesterday was frozen and snowy but great traction.  Today, not the case......  We were going to quit early and call it a day, then the voice of reason says, "why not keep going?  The bikes are already trashed."  So, 2.5 hours of tough riding later it was all over.

It did this a couple days ago:

 

So Bill, Joe, myself, and Duke rode mountain bikes (Not Duke, he ran) , which got muddy, which froze, which got more muddy.....



and....



Epic!  Duke spent the rest of the day in this position, after a bath:



Sunday, February 7, 2010

Logan Von Bokel joins the Source Endurance family!

We're proud to announce the return of Logan VonBokel to the SE family!  Logan was with us once before heading off to college in Fort Collins, CO.  His demands as an athlete are unique relative to many other athletes in that he's balancing 3 seasons into one calendar year!  Collegiate racing with the CSU Rams, road racing with the Green Street Properties Cycling Team and Cyclo-Cross with KCCX.  Each team has their own sets of demands and Logan is taking the first step in trusting Source Endurance to help him get there.  Welcome back Logan!

Friday, February 5, 2010

Source Endurance looks for quick start to Belterra!

If you missed out on the first lap prime insanity last weekend at the Tour of New Braunfels... Source Endurance is offering you a second chance to go for gold on lap one at this Sunday's Kenny Hill Autowerks Spring Classic at Driveway Austin. They've kicked in another $50 for the first lap of the P12 Men's race making it $100 to the winner of the first lap. The Cat 3 Men and the 40+ Men will both have $50 primes on the first lap too. And... rumor has it there might be something for the Women's Open race. We'll just have to wait... We'll just have to see...

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Tour of New Braunfelds

Great job on "Opening Day" to every SE athlete!  Some are just starting to find form, others are on their way towards the first peak of the season and no one had any expectations for the ToNB.  After all, it IS still early!

Saturday Road Race
Men 3:
Andrew Ennis, 5th
Brian Darby, 6th

Men 4:
Jorge Martinez, 8th


Sunday Criterium
Men P,1,2:
Colton Jarisch, 11th.

Men 3:
Andrew Ennis, 7th.

Men 4:
Jorge Martinez, 11th.