Group Rides with the Big Boys
#27
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Would you really show up at a race having never done any track days to familiarize yourself with the dynamic of the track and other driver/riders?
Last edited by nycphotography; 09-11-18 at 11:07 AM.
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Not necessarily dumb - just depends on the type of group ride, e.g. club ride, open ride, hang-or-drop, no-drop, etc. There are a few large, open, hang-or-drop rides in Atlanta that I do occassionaly - (Tucker, Northlake, Pizza). These are 24++ rides with no regroup points. But, that's the sort of the point. They're not supposed to be easy. They are closer to a race format - no regroup points, no stops for mechanicals, no stops for crashes - unless it's really bad (and close enough to the front to be noticed). But, our club rides are the exact opposite - regroup points, all-stop for mechanicals, crashes, etc.
Group rides come in many flavors.
Group rides come in many flavors.
It's a group RIDE. It's not a race. Races drop people and leave them for dead. That's the fun/point of a race. Rides can have lots of race-like attributes, but leaving people for dead (especially mechanicals or crashes? WTF?) is absurd.
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Crashes are different. If there's a crash near the middle or front, the group will stop. If it's toward the back, the front may not know. And really, what does it matter? If a handful of guys stop, that's all that's needed - it doesn't take 74 riders to call 911 or call for a ride.
A hang-or-drop ride isn't some Thunderdome event. If someone is hurt, they're not getting left. I've NEVER heard of that happening at any of these big, open rides. In every one of these fast rides, there are several groups off the back. Riders who pop or have a mechanical regroup and ride in together. These little groups DO stop to help those with mechanicals.
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The only thing you'll learn showing up at an aggressive race ride without any experience is how quickly you can get dropped. Not particularly useful for most. Getting used to some group rides you can actually hang with and developing the fitness and skill you need to hang in a faster ride would be of help.
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Agreed. I wouldn't do a group ride that large. That's an entirely different beast altogether and one I don't particularly think should occur on open roads.
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Elsewhere, someone was preaching about how important it is to train solo if one is serious about racing, since we each have our "specialties" to develop, and group rides aren't geared for that.
I get that, but at the same time, I do find that when riding with spirited friends, there is a lot of mutual encouragement, both explicit and implicit. I tend to be lazy when I ride by myself. If some don't think that's serious enough to be called training or athletic, fine. But my friends and I, though we may not wind up on the podium, don't finish last either, and some do quite well in bona fide races and sportives. Someone has to be pack fodder.
I get that, but at the same time, I do find that when riding with spirited friends, there is a lot of mutual encouragement, both explicit and implicit. I tend to be lazy when I ride by myself. If some don't think that's serious enough to be called training or athletic, fine. But my friends and I, though we may not wind up on the podium, don't finish last either, and some do quite well in bona fide races and sportives. Someone has to be pack fodder.

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The only thing you'll learn showing up at an aggressive race ride without any experience is how quickly you can get dropped. Not particularly useful for most. Getting used to some group rides you can actually hang with and developing the fitness and skill you need to hang in a faster ride would be of help.
You may be idiotic to enough to do that, but everyone else "without any experience" is going to start with the C or B group.
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IME, fast group rides are generally 'drop'-
There may be a regroup or three, but you either keep up or you don't
& there's no expectation that the group will wait, except maybe someone will hang back for a mechanical.
The routes are generally well known (possibly to the point of boredom as pointed out),
at least on one's home turf.
There may be a regroup or three, but you either keep up or you don't
& there's no expectation that the group will wait, except maybe someone will hang back for a mechanical.
The routes are generally well known (possibly to the point of boredom as pointed out),
at least on one's home turf.
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A balance of both group and solo work is needed to develop into a good rider. Solo work allows you to work on aspects of cycling that need improvements in a very focused manner. Group rides help develop those apspects of riding that can only be developed around other riders. Most the time, if a rider shows up to a ride way over their head, the group lets them know in very short order.
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When I first got a "real" road bike I had been going on the Saturday River Ride for a couple months, pretty much getting dropped every week. But hanging on a little longer each week, so I was definitely getting stronger and fitter. And then one Saturday I made it the whole ride with the main group and I felt like I'd won a stage of the TdF.
Later that summer I was talking with a guy at my office who used to race and we were talking about local rides. I mentioned that I did the River Ride most Saturdays and he said "Oh, do you do the A ride or the B ride?"
"What? There's just the River Ride, I thought. It leaves from City Bike Works at 10."
He said, "Yeah, that's the A ride. The B ride leaves at 9:45, goes on a different route. Mostly older guys, some women, juniors. It's a bit easier than the 10 o'clock ride."
D'oh!
#41
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I have been on and led fast group rides where the objective was to see how small one could make the returning group. We had one ride where only the ride leader (not me) came in. We always hoped that their eaten-out torsos would be found in the spring. That's the true end point of drop rides. Riders would show up for more of that again the next Sunday. High point of the week. Not much to do on a rainy Sunday in Redmond. Gotta have a sense of humor and beer after. We have invariably ridden out of brew-pub parking lots. Must haves: free parking and beer in close walking distance. Pain solvent.
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#42
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A balance of both group and solo work is needed to develop into a good rider. Solo work allows you to work on aspects of cycling that need improvements in a very focused manner. Group rides help develop those apspects of riding that can only be developed around other riders. Most the time, if a rider shows up to a ride way over their head, the group lets them know in very short order.
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#44
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Elsewhere, someone was preaching about how important it is to train solo if one is serious about racing, since we each have our "specialties" to develop, and group rides aren't geared for that.
I get that, but at the same time, I do find that when riding with spirited friends, there is a lot of mutual encouragement, both explicit and implicit. I tend to be lazy when I ride by myself. If some don't think that's serious enough to be called training or athletic, fine. But my friends and I, though we may not wind up on the podium, don't finish last either, and some do quite well in bona fide races and sportives. Someone has to be pack fodder.
I get that, but at the same time, I do find that when riding with spirited friends, there is a lot of mutual encouragement, both explicit and implicit. I tend to be lazy when I ride by myself. If some don't think that's serious enough to be called training or athletic, fine. But my friends and I, though we may not wind up on the podium, don't finish last either, and some do quite well in bona fide races and sportives. Someone has to be pack fodder.

Fitness wise, training solo is vital for most people to maximize their abilities (some people have the talent to be brilliant by simply rolling their bike out the front door, 99.9% do not).
Racing, thankfully, is not solely about fitness.
Being able to ride efficiently and effectively in a group is probably THE most important aspect of racing. Once you're able to do that, however, you've got to work on the engine.
Like I said before, one of the first things that get the axe when people start structured training is excessive group rides (note the excessive part, especially for newer riders/racers). That's because you're at the whim of the group and can waste inordinate amounts of time coasting and the like when structured time may reap more rewards.
Someone has to be pack fodder, and everyone typically is at some point or another. Many people would rather not always be pack fodder, however.
#45
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Are you just confused about what you're reading, or are you just really craving my attention?
If you want some tips on how to be a better rider or how to race or something, you can just ask. As of now, your name-calling and trolling is reminiscent of a prepubescent boy trying to get his crush's attention by pulling hair and throwing dirt. I'm flattered and all, but it's not super effective.
#46
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Not having a regroup point isn't the same as ignoring a crash. Fast rides stay fast by dropping slow people. Riders in those groups build stamina by skipping rest stops.
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Fast rides can still be fast and regroup. I've done plenty
But building stamina? Is that like something people did in the 90s or something?
#48
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Is that supposed to be a joke? People who ride long distances build stamina. They do that by not stopping to rest (or regroup).
#49
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I've said that.
Fitness wise, training solo is vital for most people to maximize their abilities (some people have the talent to be brilliant by simply rolling their bike out the front door, 99.9% do not).
Racing, thankfully, is not solely about fitness.
Being able to ride efficiently and effectively in a group is probably THE most important aspect of racing. Once you're able to do that, however, you've got to work on the engine.
Like I said before, one of the first things that get the axe when people start structured training is excessive group rides (note the excessive part, especially for newer riders/racers). That's because you're at the whim of the group and can waste inordinate amounts of time coasting and the like when structured time may reap more rewards.
Someone has to be pack fodder, and everyone typically is at some point or another. Many people would rather not always be pack fodder, however.
Fitness wise, training solo is vital for most people to maximize their abilities (some people have the talent to be brilliant by simply rolling their bike out the front door, 99.9% do not).
Racing, thankfully, is not solely about fitness.
Being able to ride efficiently and effectively in a group is probably THE most important aspect of racing. Once you're able to do that, however, you've got to work on the engine.
Like I said before, one of the first things that get the axe when people start structured training is excessive group rides (note the excessive part, especially for newer riders/racers). That's because you're at the whim of the group and can waste inordinate amounts of time coasting and the like when structured time may reap more rewards.
Someone has to be pack fodder, and everyone typically is at some point or another. Many people would rather not always be pack fodder, however.
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#50
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Regrouping for 2-3 minutes at an intersection has zero effect on "stamina".
You realize that any time you're coasting you're "resting", right? 5 x 3 minute stops is a helluva lot less rest than 45 minutes of z1/coasting.
Last edited by rubiksoval; 09-11-18 at 03:45 PM.