Nutriton and strength

Alright to the point, I'm wondering if anyone can recommend me some books, sites, studies or just generally good sources of information on nutrition, timing and more.
I already eat a healthy diet, I'm more looking for knowledge on the subject, cycling (ie an endurance sport). Also with the off season starting and some gym work coming around, if anyone knows any good sources of information on balancing strength work and endurance training as well that would be great.
Thanks!
I already eat a healthy diet, I'm more looking for knowledge on the subject, cycling (ie an endurance sport). Also with the off season starting and some gym work coming around, if anyone knows any good sources of information on balancing strength work and endurance training as well that would be great.
Thanks!
0
Posts
In terms of winter gym training, unless you are a racer, I'd consider repairing the damage cycling does - strength training, flexibility and core strength. or you could do some interval training on a gym bike.
Stretching & Workout Vids
UV rays.
I was thinking more damage to the waist line from sitting in pub gardens and looking at my bike
Could also be the damage to the wallet after lusting over moar bike stuff
As a sub 60kg rider, even though my w/kg is good I would really like simply having more power even if it meant comprising my w/kg a little. Some reading I did on this recently suggested that combining low rep weight lifting with endurance cycling lead to and increase in max and 40m powers as well as increasing muscle mass.
And in terms of nutrition, I'd like to know about what and how to eat for strength training and for helping muscle hypertrophy. I already eat well around my riding but I've never done strenghth trainging before.
So in short I'm looking for information to make an informed decision before my off season starts shortly.
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/end ... erformance
Best of luck!
Alex R MSc
https://alexreaderfitness.com/
This looks suspiciously like an advert for your coaching service.
How will it be 'good' ..??
Priorities
The older you get the more protein you need. The body is less good at recovery/rebuilding for the older athlete.
If you can balance the strength training with your cycle training you will benefit. Strong legs and core plus a good cardio system = strong cyclist.
How tall are you? What else do you do (sports, etc). What are your goals?
De Sisti wrote:
This is one of the silliest threads I've come across.
Recognition at last Matthew, well done!, a justified honour
Indeed it does, what i found though was its two seperate issues, leg strength in the gym does not seem to equate to better performance on the bike, as i said for me it had the opposite effect somewhat, in that i started to lose that feeling of floating on the pedals when climbing, it became too much like a grinding sort of pedal stroke, effective as far as using bigger gears to push over smaller hills seated, but not what i wanted for sustained standing climbing
Just work on your endurance and mix up your training with 20 min efforts, seated sprints etc.
I can boast about 240kg+ squats, high max power figures and a 1,283w 20” effort, however, in the grand scheme of things, I’m still a mediocre Cat4 purely because I weigh 88kg. At that weight I need an FTP north of 400w to be any good, and as hard as I try, losing muscle mass is proving rather difficult.
IG: RhinosWorkshop
I still regret now that my ignorant intuition that my youthful skinny legs meant that I'd not have been a competitive cyclist (and so never tried club riding when I was super-fit). I look at some of the young beanstalks who are winning all sorts of races now, and I realise what I missed out on.
2012 Colnago CX-1
2015 Colnago AC-R
Exeter Wheelers
Obviously if you didn't have any 'strength in the legs', you wouldn't be able to stand up or walk around. The point is, the vast majority of human beings (whether existing cyclists or not) already have sufficient strength in their legs to enable them to cycle at a high level. What they may lack is the aerobic fitness to repeatedly turn the pedals. The actual 'strength' demand in terms of pedalling is very low to the point that almost anyone could do it.
It's quite possible that you are misunderstanding the meaning of 'strength' in this respect. But in terms of the relevant definition, and assuming you are generally healthy, able and with normal motor function, your leg strength itself will not be a limiter.
That is not a strength issue and it is not what is limiting you. What is limiting you is your fitness. Have a read of this thread - http://www.bikeradar.com/forums/viewtop ... t=12796394 - there are many others like it on here. But they all cover what is basically the same fundamental misunderstanding.
"You don't need much muscle mass or strength for a single turn of the cranks.....you do need a lot of fitness to supply oxygen to the muscle to keep it turning though"