Old 06-01-17 | 09:08 AM
  #45  
PepeM's Avatar
PepeM
Senior Member
 
Joined: Apr 2015
Posts: 6,861
Likes: 120
Originally Posted by Carbonfiberboy
For information about lifting when you're not getting paid, try this thread: http://www.bikeforums.net/training-n...e-athlete.html

I think CTS has more experience coaching cyclists than most of us do.
So, does strength training make you faster on the bike? Probably not in a direct sense. Even though squats, for instance, use the same muscles you use to push on the pedals, the rate of force production is far slower during a squat than it is during a pedal stroke. You don’t squat at the leg speed of a 90rpm cadence. However, in an indirect sense, the fact that strength training makes you a more well-rounded athlete, increases the range of activities you can participate in, and increases your chances of exercising on a more consistent basis, means you can apply a greater training stimulus more frequently than you could otherwise. And that can definitely make you a faster cyclist.
Is Carmichael wrong then?
PepeM is offline  
Reply