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good supplemental excercise ?
what would be a good supplemental excercise that could be done at the gym that would have good carry over for useful cycling leg strength? maybe leg extensions, hamstring curls, calf raises, etc.....?
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None of those will do you any good except for short term distances like track sprinting. Weight training is good for overall conditioning and maybe avoiding injuries but lifting won't translate to better cycling to any degree.
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yoga.
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squats and deadlifts will give you the most overall benefit if you plan on lifting weights.
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This has come up many times. While weight training might not be the best use of time you could spend actually riding, my experience with strength training (not weight lifting) is that it has made me a better athlete, hence a better cyclist.
I have found that the older I get, the more benefit I seem to derive from my strength training in terms of more stamina, less injury etc. It just seems to me that I have more stamina in a lot of things. And I attribute it to my strength training program. Oh, I forgot to mention that my stamina, sex-wise, also benefited. No kidding! |
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If you could only do one then it's deadlifts. Generally speaking it won't make you faster but it will strengthen most of the same muscles used on the bike. Upper back, lower back, glutes, hams, quads, forearms, and many supporting muscles.
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Push ups, and weights.
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I started doing old fashioned sit ups, to strengthen the hip flexors. No idea if that's working but I can do almost 50 sit ups at a rapid pace versus 20 before :)
Seriously though I think that working the lats, the pull up muscles in the arm (biceps? but not really, if your hand is holding a bar like the drops of a bike), lower back, etc help with out of saddle sprinting efforts. And another observation. Usually when I lift I immediately feel some benefit, even just the pumped muscles right after the workout. I feel energetic, strong, etc. I usually see some reasonable strength gain at first (plateaus to known levels). This year is the first year where I've lifted and such and my muscles feel downright flabby, even after a couple weeks of work. It's really annoying. Same weights, curling (bar pointing forward, like the way the drops are) 22-23 lbs, but without the snap I used to have. Is this called "getting old"? |
Running. It has made me a better rider for so many reasons. Chief among them being core strength and balance. It also works back and shoulder muscles like you wouldn't believe.
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ball squats, burpees, plyometrics, power cleans
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Squats, seated rows and calf raises. To get more benefit you really need to figure out where you strengths and weaknesses are and work around that.
Or do what Stanseven says. |
lots of core to help keep the upper body stable and keep form for longer distances
cycling uses a lot of core but doesn't really strengthen it much |
Originally Posted by BCorn
(Post 13164897)
what would be a good supplemental excercise that could be done at the gym that would have good carry over for useful cycling leg strength?
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Originally Posted by gregf83
(Post 13167634)
It's not like you have to push very hard on the pedals.
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seriously? how did this post take off with lots of ideas when mine went straight to page 2?
http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...dination-power |
Originally Posted by zitter
(Post 13167641)
except when you're climbing, or sprinting, or taking pulls, or time trialing...
Cycling is ore about neuromuscular coordination, metabolic adaptations, and aerobic adaptation, not muscular strength. Aside from light upper body workouts you're far better riding more/harder when you ride and doing less/more rest when you're off. |
Originally Posted by monkeydentity
(Post 13167684)
seriously? how did this post take off with lots of ideas when mine went straight to page 2?
http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...dination-power |
Since the weakest part of many cyclists' spin is from the 11:00 to 2:00 position at the top, one good muscle group to work on is the hip-flexor.
Nate Loyal recommended this one to me, and my FTP immediately picked up 21 watts, and my spin is MUCH more fluid. |
Originally Posted by carpediemracing
(Post 13165419)
I started doing old fashioned sit ups, to strengthen the hip flexors. No idea if that's working but I can do almost 50 sit ups at a rapid pace versus 20 before :)
Seriously though I think that working the lats, the pull up muscles in the arm (biceps? but not really, if your hand is holding a bar like the drops of a bike), lower back, etc help with out of saddle sprinting efforts. And another observation. Usually when I lift I immediately feel some benefit, even just the pumped muscles right after the workout. I feel energetic, strong, etc. I usually see some reasonable strength gain at first (plateaus to known levels). This year is the first year where I've lifted and such and my muscles feel downright flabby, even after a couple weeks of work. It's really annoying. Same weights, curling (bar pointing forward, like the way the drops are) 22-23 lbs, but without the snap I used to have. Is this called "getting old"? |
My other two regimes are TRX training and Plyometrics. TRX is great core training and plyometrics helps maintain the fast twitch muscle fiber.
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Running, yoga, pushups.
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Originally Posted by zitter
(Post 13167641)
except when you're climbing, or sprinting, or taking pulls, or time trialing...
Weight training can be useful for sprinting, or old farts, but my original statement stands. |
Anything that operates on 2+ planes of motion, twisting, various planks and that works the stabilizer muscles (hint, the weights will be small). If that's too hard to remember just look around at everyone in the gym and don't do what they do. GL
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