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#61 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Powder Springs, GA
Posts: 90
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Quote:
Point taken. Like I said in a previous post, it is hard to think that what I have accomplished was almost a "gift". I have worked very hard to accomplish what I have, but I see your point that there was probably the proper genetic foundation to progress so quickly. I still don't have a cat1 license, and I certainly don't have a pro contract, so maybe I too will be part of the 1,000,000 people that make up the 1,000,000:1 ratio! I sure won't give up based on statistics though ![]()
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"To say that the race is the metaphor for life is to miss the point. The race is everything. It obliterates whatever isn't racing. Life is the metaphor for the race." |
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#62 |
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i went from cat5 to cat3 in once season... in 6 months. but i was always involved with sports when i was younger and i picked up cycling when i was 20. but prior to my first race, i did a 5-6 months of intense training. i was over weight and when i got to college i drank heavily... that's how i got bigger... lots of beer and late trips to steak n' shake, ihop, jimmy john's and etc...
and actually, i still do drink alot and last season i used to go out and got drunk the night before the race and i did ok during the race... but once i got to cat3 i couldn't do it. i do know some people who ride 200-300 miles a week and still struggle.... i just came to conclusion that they just suck ass. but i still think that one can be a damn good cyclist with structured training system and good diet. it takes a lot of work and time. but with a gifted athlete, it doesn't take much.
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Missing the empty roads in Indiana... |
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#63 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
Posts: 321
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#64 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 418
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I think it is more complicated than that. Suck ass in what??? What one usually does in the race? Sit in and until the final 500 meters and trying to win a field sprint against guys who can put out over 1000w for more than 5 sec????
If this is the way you intend to race, you better train in your sprint. So, riding over 200 miles a week won't do much good. Or, like me, always attacking and trying to get a break going. Since I am a smaller rider with a relatively low FTP, I couldn't hold the break effort more than 5 minutes without some serious help from other teams. If you find yourself getting dropped in a very long, hilly race, you are probably working too hard in the race and your lower FTP does not give you much room to save your energy. Quote:
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#65 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,017
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Quote:
I know some people who ride 10-15 hours a week and it took them 6 months to get to cat 3....my guess is they just suck ass. |
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#66 | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
nice..!
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Missing the empty roads in Indiana... |
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#67 | |
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Registered User
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I did too. About 6 races I think. I wish I had done a VO2 max then to test to see if it was genetics or pure desire and a Love for riding and racing. I think what undid the progress from Cat. 3 to 2 was a combo of overtraining and really poor diet and I just stunk at Crits. This was back in 80's and I just ate pasta and carboloaded on exceed products. Not good. But training with Cat 1's and 2's was so hard. They would put the hurting on you and be laughing as they rode away, barely breaking a sweat it seemed. Each step along the way to Pro ranks is exponenetially harder unless your super gifted. And as weve all discussed, the truly gifted waste no time in moving up fast, like from Cat 4 to Cat 2 in one season. |
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#68 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Charlotte, North Carolina
Posts: 556
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Tyler Hamilton started cycling when he was in college after he could no longer ski competitively due to an injury.
Justin England started at 24 and went from a Cat. 5 to a Cat. 2 in one year, he currently rides for the Health Net Pro Cycling team. Seeing that guys can become pro's after starting that late in the sport is encouraging to Juniors like me and I am currently a Cat. 4 , almost a Cat. 3 at 16. ( Only need a few more points)and hopefully I have good genetics, in my area there are a lot of training rides where some local pro's will do their hard day's such as a local office park crit and I can often go to the front to chase down breaks and/or breakaway myself ( Only for 1 or 2 laps) and the pace of the ride is 27.5-32 mph. for about an hour. I also finish top five in almost every junior race I enter and top 10-15 in every catergory race, although I still need to get the tactics down as I usually am one of the strongest guy's there but I do to much in the begining or I miss an oppurtunity to get in "the break"
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Ciocc 7005 with Colnago Carbon Fork and Ultegra 10 Last edited by Cyclist14 : 15-11.-2006 at 02:32 AM. |
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#69 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 611
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Sadly Graeme Obree's now got a low level mental illness - which I don't think extends to delusions of grandeur!! |
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#70 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 19
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Jr, you will never go pro, you are way too old. Do yourself a favor and trash that bike you have. You probably suck at riding anyways. I bet my recovery pace is your FTP...lol! Imagine me riding circles around you while you ride up a 10% gradient. Cat 5 huh? Do you understand how low Cat 5 is? You are a piece of shit in the cycling world
. I bet your girlfriend laughs at how small your dick is. |
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#71 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1
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You could be like the recent Cat 3 Crit Champ in AZ.
Move from Cat 5 to 2 with a Barry Bonds style medical program ![]() |
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#72 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: WA State
Posts: 1,268
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Well...... jr's (this thread's originator) 2nd to last post was in May of this year and he had just done his first 30 mile ride (at the blistering speed of 17mph), so I guess that he has not gone pro this year..... or maybe he has and that's why he stopped posting
Not that it is impossible, there is a guy around here in his 20's who went from cat 5 to domestic pro in 2 years, but he was already a gifted endurance athlete. He switched to cycling from cross country running (where he was national champion material) because of injuries caused by running. It's just not every joe that should expect a result like that though. If you want to address something though, in the women's field its like having to go from a 4 (cause we don't have 5's) directly to pros, whether you wish to or not, since we don't have any separate races for the in between categories (and yeah - there are one or two pro women who show their faces from time to time)....... sigh, we may get separate 3's scoring this year, which will be nice. |
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#73 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Seattle, WA/Vancouver BC
Posts: 321
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Quote:
Are you talking about Ian McKissick? If so, he was up here in the Vancouver area racing on the boards of the Burnaby Velodrome. You could tell he was out of his element but he was kicking our butt in the B (strong 4s and cat 3) category (I heard this was the first time he'd ever been track racing). He raced once in the A's (strong 3s and cat 1/2) and fared pretty well. |
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#74 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: WA State
Posts: 1,268
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Yup - that's our local made good (well relatively local, I think he's from Bellingham, which would make Vancouver an easy hop for him). I wouldn't doubt it was his first time on the track. Never saw him at the velodrome around here and I was there a lot (my husband started racing track this year and has announced once a week for the past two as well). Last edited by Eden : 18-11.-2007 at 06:25 PM. |
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#75 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 224
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Nice, dont need to rip this guy apart......your statement sounds like sour grapes, someone who has failed themselves, who cant make it as a pro either but thinks they can bash someone else in a lower catagory or just starting out because they have a high FTP, get in check, its not that good, your not a pro and your struggling yourself in races. If you are a pro with that kind of remark, you sure give that level of racing a bad reputation, a little egotistical, but then again your user name says it all.
Its amazing how the poster asked 1 question and there are 5 pages worth of replies, some good, some not as good, but this remark is totally uncalled for, what a loser. Quote:
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