How much training time is needed to improve your cycling fitness?

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
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Komentáře • 171

  • @davidryan4053
    @davidryan4053 Před 2 lety +63

    It's like taking training advice from Spud in Trainspotting. Great video without the BS. 👏

  • @melbournecyclingsegments7510

    Whenever my mates ask me for cycling tips, I come to your channel and find a video for them. You are good

  • @ilgour
    @ilgour Před 2 lety +12

    1 word ; consistency

  • @kingrolenecanencia5817
    @kingrolenecanencia5817 Před 2 lety +5

    Coach thanks for this.. Im learning so much.. 6 months from now im guessing your subscribers will double or triple.. Great content!! ✌️✌️

  • @EK-mx7zb
    @EK-mx7zb Před 2 lety +10

    I’ve been training like this for 2-3 months and am really happy with the progress. 2 intense days, the rest aerobic low heart rate rides (including 1 looong ride), take every 4th week off. I really like feeling that “ok, this is enough” instead of always feeling I have to ride more, more,more and as hard as possible (like most group rides). I need to improve my consistency though, because I mix in other types of exercise and it gets complicated. Might not have enough rest either.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Sounds like great progress even if you think consistency is poor. 👍👍👍👍

  • @mancampovestiminvatam1281

    I messed up things with too much variation in training time and intensity.
    Was trying to be smart by "converting" elevation gain to time.
    One week I was doing a 50k ride with hard climbs, the next two weeks mostly flat but way longer rides. Then back to climbs.
    I also had interval training every Wednesday.
    Ended up in repeated bonking after radically shorter distances.
    The last time I went to the gym to do steady-state intervals, I barely could accelerate to Zone 2 and keep it for one hour.
    Now, it's been ten days of no training. Just a Sunday short ride to assess recovery. That was las week. It took me 2 hours to ride 20 km.
    Tomorrow is the next Sunday ride. If I can do those 20k in 1.5 hours, that'd be great, compared to the last sessions.
    This should be a warning for anyone reading this, especially those beyond 40!

  • @alenbstn3
    @alenbstn3 Před rokem

    This under 15 minutes videos are great. Or clips from longer ones. I like your channel and humor, learned a lot from you last year watching you. 🚴‍♀️

  • @whiskeyromeo450
    @whiskeyromeo450 Před 2 lety +8

    I needed to hear this today, I just hit a plateau because I'm guilty of everything you said...

  • @sornii
    @sornii Před 2 lety +1

    Really enjoying your videos. Great work!

  • @anjanikumarsrivastava3613
    @anjanikumarsrivastava3613 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is fantastic coach! Loved it.

  • @raymondherrick1942
    @raymondherrick1942 Před 2 lety +3

    Good stuff, I’m going to give it a go. It totally makes sense, recovery is important & pushing the limits - but it has to be balanced!

  • @andysmith8877
    @andysmith8877 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video in its entirety Scott....

  • @waynesmith4589
    @waynesmith4589 Před 2 lety +3

    Massively underrated channel , great video Scott

  • @istvankovacs7779
    @istvankovacs7779 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Greetings from Hungary! Thanks for this video, I wish I understood these basics a couple of years ago. But maybe it’s not too late 😂
    Definitely I’ll try this method starting from today.

  • @ramsden35
    @ramsden35 Před 3 měsíci

    Really pleased I found this. I’m 49 and 5 months into cycling after years of CrossFit. I’ve lost 1.5 stone and my longest ride is 75 miles. I’ve just finished my first event, a hilly 42 mile challenge. I’d can train on an indoor watt bike (all to heart rate) now spring is here that will change. I’ve been so confused about training, hearing zone 2 and threshold statements all the time. This simple instruction of 2 insanely hard sessions a week makes sense along with the remaining sessions less so. Thank you

  • @andreitanasescu8869
    @andreitanasescu8869 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video, loved it. Supported by science, clearly supported by experience. Progressive overload, recovery, stress management, consistency. It's plenty plenty clear & useful !!

  • @christophermonson3214
    @christophermonson3214 Před 2 lety +1

    GREAT video! Thank you.

  • @JoalHarding
    @JoalHarding Před 2 lety +4

    2 a week for 3 weeks- PROGRESS each week.
    Switch off✅ feedback.
    Don’t add more than 1 hr extra per week. No 🪀 yo-yo.
    Treat it special like a new relationship.
    Up the intensity.
    Allow body to recover- sleep, eat clean, stress management.
    Work hard enough AND soft enough.
    Thx coach!! 😇💪🏻💥🤩

  • @transchristine
    @transchristine Před 2 lety +2

    You give great advice. I found your video on the foot sweep when peddling it really increased my power.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Got more tips to share Christine 👍👍👍

    • @melbman43
      @melbman43 Před 2 lety

      So did I, in fact, i really needed a rest day the following day after it.

  • @BrookhartCraig
    @BrookhartCraig Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks, all great tips!!

  • @gerryger1731
    @gerryger1731 Před 2 lety +2

    good stuff thanks coach!

  • @silverarrowslk
    @silverarrowslk Před rokem

    Bang on! It’s all about quality. Got to be some time for adaptation too, so a day or two off or really easy rides.

  • @thrillbilly6147
    @thrillbilly6147 Před 2 lety +1

    I needed this
    Thank you

  • @dave136
    @dave136 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a great point..I personally am always after guidance on this subject as I get out on my bike when I can but it fits around work ,family life etc.Which means I get 3 sessions in per week a 35-40 mile ride (approx 2.5 hour) on a Saturday..the same on a Sunday repeated and a 30mins Turbo session in the week.

  • @jtgrandtour4115
    @jtgrandtour4115 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you very much.

  • @michaelhoult9
    @michaelhoult9 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant!!!!!

  • @johntracey5366
    @johntracey5366 Před rokem

    Thanks👍

  • @superstrada6847
    @superstrada6847 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Excellent. Been cycling for 6 year now; Following your advice x last 2 years (well not necessarily your advice but similar advice). I have progressed enormously (compared to when I didn't understand this). So I summarize with a thought: Is it better to adjust recovery based on training, or it is better to adjust training based on recovery? They are totally different concepts. The interplay between the two is critical to making steady progress. The former is a recipe for stagnation and chronic fatigue, the latter is sustainable, comfortable and allows for progression at a natural (individual) rate. Another way to look at it is: Go easy until you feel good, then go hard . Thank you coach!

  • @whatsuphonkycat
    @whatsuphonkycat Před 2 lety +1

    this. is. gold.

  • @kevinhanna6112
    @kevinhanna6112 Před 2 lety +1

    damn !!! you make sense :)
    looking at my training log & reflection its easy to see when i get it right and painfully obvious when i get it wrong aka crap workouts
    thank you
    average rider in NJ USA

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Hey Kevin. No one gets it right buddy all the time. Training has loads of parameters that impact differently on everyone. But life also impacts on us. Sone days we feel shit and sone days we feel great and can’t explain. Just be consistent as much as you can with the steady builder workouts and be good to yourself 👍👍👍 enjoy NJ 👍👍👍

    • @kevinhanna6112
      @kevinhanna6112 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BulletproofCycling good words Coach. Kevin

  • @monoray3241
    @monoray3241 Před rokem +1

    Thanks from Sydney, Downunder Scott. Recovering from torn ligaments after 2yrs off. Never trained before, just rode lots. When you say don’t increase by more than 1hr/pw, is that in total or just to the hard (training) sessions, each ride or something else?
    Love your plain speaking, no complex data approach. Introducing my bunch friends to the The Big Yin of Cycling 😂 👏👏. Keep up the brilliant broadcasting !! Best wishes Mono

  • @ramilleheavenlou1868
    @ramilleheavenlou1868 Před 2 lety +1

    Gold Content 🙏🏻 thank you

  • @Jarek.
    @Jarek. Před 2 lety +1

    A comment mainly to bump up the video 😀 Anyway - I cannot agree more. Each and every reasonable training plan must have some progression. Either it comes from a trainer or an electronic training platform (such as TrainerRoad or xert). Regards!

  • @GP-fc7jv
    @GP-fc7jv Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks I can see how this can apply to weight training also

  • @joechamma
    @joechamma Před 2 lety +2

    Very true. I recently started riding with just over an hour. A week or so later started to pass the 2 hour mark. Today I rode for almost 3 hours...

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +1

      Well done Joe 👍

    • @tonyg3091
      @tonyg3091 Před 2 lety

      Que centuries and double centuries :) This road cycling thingy has that feature to it-to get out of hand rather quickly :)

  • @KromKromKromKrom
    @KromKromKromKrom Před 2 lety +1

    English accent makes everything sound better. You’ve got a new subscriber my man.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +2

      Haha I will work on my English accent - my family may not speak to me again though 😂

  • @MorningCarnival
    @MorningCarnival Před 2 lety +1

    I wish I had you as a coach when I was racing.

  • @elmerrichardson6413
    @elmerrichardson6413 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome video, coach! I'm going to try this with Zwift workouts for the next 4 weeks.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Keep me posted 👍

    • @elmerrichardson6413
      @elmerrichardson6413 Před 2 lety

      @@BulletproofCycling Will do!

    • @elmerrichardson6413
      @elmerrichardson6413 Před 2 lety

      @@BulletproofCycling I just finished week 3 and I feel a lot stronger. I have never done structured training before this is great. 1 more week to go...stay tuned.

    • @elmerrichardson6413
      @elmerrichardson6413 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BulletproofCycling Well coach, I finished the training this week. All I can say is, I'm different. My legs feel incredible. It was hard work, but I followed your advice to the letter. Tomorrow, I'm going out on a group ride with some fast friends...stay tuned.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      @@elmerrichardson6413 👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @wvjeepguy8178
    @wvjeepguy8178 Před 2 lety +3

    Did my longest ride ever today. 26 miles with nearly 3,000 feet of elevation gain.
    Been fighting leg cramps ever since I got home..lol.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +1

      Great ride. Rest those legs 👍👍

    • @JasonDBike
      @JasonDBike Před 2 lety

      Drink more, don't go so hard.

    • @gvnrchmnd
      @gvnrchmnd Před 2 lety +2

      Take an electrolyte drink. Muscles cramp up due to sweating out salt. Magnesium and potassium in your diet will also help with muscle twitches.

  • @matthewkramer6509
    @matthewkramer6509 Před 2 lety +2

    Sensible, easy to understand and yet hard to do. I'm wondering when it comes to volume (hours) if there is a range for which a cyclist will see significant gains in fitness (fatigue resistance). As an example, an athlete has been training at a max of 10 hours per week and they work there way up to 15 hours per week, when do you get the area of diminishing returns? I know this differs per individual, but wanted to see if there was general guidance. Thanks and keep the great content coming.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Matthew - if you are able to recovery from your 15 hours then if you stay consistent it with it over 3-6 months then you see bigger returns. As long as it fits in with your lifestyle. The increase is mainly low intensity work but this still needs careful planning. I guess it all depends on your goals. Moving to 15 hours is where I see a lot of cat 2-3 racers. They have full time jobs but most are younger with no kids. They can be 20 hours in off season. However, I see folks use 10 hours really well who are over 40-50 years old.
      We are as good as what we can recover from!

    • @matthewkramer6509
      @matthewkramer6509 Před 2 lety +2

      Great I put gentlemen. I’m 51 kids are older now and I’m working a lot less these days. Been on the 15 hour plan for about 3 months with lots of zone 2 and recovery time. The 80/20 (or 90/10) makes training so much more fun than feeling like you always need to go hard. Takes the guess work out of it.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      @@matthewkramer6509 👍👍

  • @cyclingadventureswithspeed1697

    Hi Scott just found your channel, love it and didn't realise you were so local to me, would love to have a catchup 👍

  • @dreamer6345
    @dreamer6345 Před rokem

    Great advise and presentation thank you for the advise I’ve gone vegan at the start of the year and I’m a new man but now I’m doing average 10 hours a week but I’ve found the mental struggles so hard to get through sometime any advise to push pass this?

  • @melbman43
    @melbman43 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Coach, very informative indeed. Its called periodization or the step ladder approach . So, in your fourth week as you are in the easy week, is this a good time to do an FTP test due to the fact you are fresh(or should be). Also, does one really need a power meter to train with? Most that have one really are not sure how to train with them anyway.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +1

      yep lots of version of periodization training you can follow but doing FTP tests every 4 weeks may be overkill to be honest. I see it often in fitness apps but only do it if you it's meaningful for your training and goals etc. Remember that it's a range and a number a single number anyway (the number uses means folks can apply behavioral approaches to make sire they beat it each time!) AND certainly NO, you don't need a power meter to train. It can be incredibly useful if used correctly but even using for specific indoor sessions only and riding with HR and 'feel' outdoors can be very rewarding. If racing or doing TT's then it becomes more important. Hope this helps

  • @gregfields293
    @gregfields293 Před 2 lety +1

    Love the content, and really enjoy hearing your voice (I've got proud MacDonalds and McLeods in the fam). I couldn't watch the video for long though as all the edits resulted in a slightly jerky video ... a bit too much eye strain.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      My grandmother is a McLeod from the Isle of Harris 👍👍👍👍

  • @TheBarts27
    @TheBarts27 Před 2 lety +5

    Consistency and don't push all the time. Work really hard twice a week and ride slow(er) on other moments.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Defo 👍

    • @stuartmclean3843
      @stuartmclean3843 Před 2 lety

      @@BulletproofCycling back on the bike after 20 years away, this is exactly how i want to train, with my job i can train 20 hours a week (after i build up my fitness), im struggling with motivation at the moment as starting from the beginning again (fitness wise) is really frustrating but i will get there, power zones, zwift is all new to me as there was no such thing really 20 years ago, back on the bike now for few months and im starting to feel like a cyclist again, really want to get back into racing next year, one question i have is .... week 4 do you cut out the 2 interval or hard sessions completely or cut it down to say x1? My master plan is to build up to 20 hours a week with x3 zone 2 rides of 4 to 5 hours with x2 interval sessions inbetween on tues and Thursday, just abit confused as to week number 4, cut out the intervals all 2gether or limit it to x1, any advice much appreciated 😀

  • @fpartidafpartida
    @fpartidafpartida Před 7 dny

    This is the way.

  • @austincaley5007
    @austincaley5007 Před 2 lety +3

    There is some Great advice in here we can all follow,well done for conveying the information in a way that's black and white..and to the point.
    My question is due to shift work l have 2 days of one week to train and 4 the following week but struggle to structure it a bit and prob don't take enough rest weeks off.
    And prob spend to much time@tempo and not enough in z5/6 lol

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +2

      You are doing well to structure around shifts and stay motivated. Keep me posted how you progress. 👍👍👍👍

  • @gerrykelly979
    @gerrykelly979 Před 2 lety +1

    I am really enjoying your videos, I will definitely try the approach you have outlined. Two hard workouts per week for 3 weeks and then an easier week sounds fine. However did you say you must increase the length of time of each hard workout by 1 hour each week or did I misunderstand something.............or should I practice understanding your wonderful Scottish accent :))) (Only kidding as in general people understand my Irish accent except when I speak too fast :)) )

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Thank you
      Yeh defo misunderstanding somewhere 😂😂
      Always feel free to drop me an email. I might not get back to you immediately but I’ll defo send a reply as I love your comment

  • @swites
    @swites Před 2 lety +1

    Great tips! Yeah I think I'm guilty of chopping and changing too much recently. Good hrs one week, poor the next ,so have missed out on the consistency. My body never knows what its getting!

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +1

      It’s very common. The main thing is that you are still moving in those poorer weeks. So don’t be to down on yourself 👍👍👍

  • @rupert802
    @rupert802 Před 10 měsíci +1

    One question, if in the 4th week i have to lower the volume down do I need to increase it the next week also only 1hour at a time, of can i go back to the volume of week 3 + 1hour?

  • @MrRaschel
    @MrRaschel Před 2 lety +2

    That always depends on how advanced you are. For a beginner, a few small rides are enough to get better. With a Pro. several hours are not enough!

  • @thedmxtube
    @thedmxtube Před 2 lety +1

    I currently 'exercise' rather than train but wanting to take things to a higher level. Do you have any guidance for a weekly plan that would include on-bike training as well as weights etc. Difficult to know where to start! 🤔
    2 rides per week seems very doable though, and can mix in some other workouts / HIIT session etc which is what I currently do.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety

      Hi David you can check out my profile on Training Peaks. I have free plans there 👍

  • @twistedtwig2000
    @twistedtwig2000 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for all the content.
    Do you include weight training as an intensity day? I.e. if I have the following week, is this 1 or 2 hard days?
    Monday: zone 2
    Tuesday: Leg day in the gym (45 - 60 mins in the gym. Front and backsquats, deadlift, lunges, hip thrusts)
    Wednesday: zone2
    Thursday: upper body gym
    Friday: rest day
    Saturday: hard ride outside or hiit intervals on Zwift
    Sunday: zone 2
    I wonder if that is 1 or 2 hard workouts, and if I need to remove a zone 2. Not sure I could always fit a hiit or the like on Thursday as well as the gym..
    Thanks again

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před rokem +1

      Weight training will be intense if you are lifting close to max reps. But if it’s maintenance type work then you’ll know yourself. I set hard lifts after cycle efforts on the same day but I mainly prescribe body resistance work.

    • @twistedtwig2000
      @twistedtwig2000 Před rokem +1

      @@BulletproofCycling Thx. I aim for 6-8 reps with 3-4 sets normally. progressively upping the weight each set. Often close to or get to failure on the last set.
      appreciate the advice and all your content.

  • @cathalkenneally1614
    @cathalkenneally1614 Před rokem

    Great video as usual. Recently people have been saying about how much weight I have lost lately and I attribute this to cycling. I don’t want to stop. I have also been watching what I eat but not living like a monk. I still have my takeaways. I’m not going to be boring for anyone

  • @truthseeker8273
    @truthseeker8273 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I've started cycling again after 2 years of non activity due to an accident and post COVID laziness. However, now I'm motivated and disciplined again and have been riding throughout August and September pretty much consistently. My question is this, is it OK for me to structure the 2 hard sessions per week around climbing the local.miuntains where I have a minimum of 1000m elevation to cover and then work out the rest days in zone 2 on flatland? I've been riding 11 hours this week and I want to put more structure in my training.

  • @Chazza..
    @Chazza.. Před 27 dny

    So if i ride a bit 1 day and more the next day, then have a day off etc etc and so on.... I wont get any fitter?

  • @lukkevin
    @lukkevin Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for the tips Coach. I’m a 45 years old rider started 2 years ago. I progressed from having a 2W/Kg FTP to 3.4W/Kg but have been plateauing a bit. I feel the 3 weeks on / 1 weeks off a bit too hard for my body to handle. What do you think about 2 weeks on/ 1 off schedule?

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +2

      Hi, you are spot on. When I am trying I do 2 weeks on and one week off. Sometimes I move key sessions to have over 72 hours gap between them. I will also be sharing more of my BFR work for older riders 👍

    • @gweflj
      @gweflj Před 2 lety

      3.4w/kg is probably above average.

  • @mokotramp
    @mokotramp Před 2 lety +2

    80/20 works well for me. Usually one tempo a week, VO2 max session every other week, one Z3 ride and the rest of the week is taken up with short Z2 walk/run sessions. Active recovery seems to work better for me, than actually doing nothing at all!

  • @invain143
    @invain143 Před rokem +1

    I would but i have a day job. I can't keep up with consistency of free time.

  • @gugapilar2083
    @gugapilar2083 Před 2 lety +2

    Siga postando os viideos! Lhe desejo muita sorte com o canal! Continue firme com os viideos!
    Um abraço e fique bem!

  • @Gledii
    @Gledii Před 8 měsíci +1

    Couch, understood, but what would be my starting point? FTP? W/kg? lets say, should i create a training plan in order to increaase my average power by 10% for example? Cheers Coach

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 8 měsíci

      I like couch better ... Start with FTP - it's easier to create your zones and get your training habits in place

    • @Gledii
      @Gledii Před 8 měsíci

      @@BulletproofCycling thanks "Couch" :P

  • @annalewis2114
    @annalewis2114 Před rokem +1

    Can you advise how I can get a plan from you please 😊

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před rokem

      I mostly coach directly with people Anna. My new Skool group get monthly training templates and the chance to ride with my live each week. I’ll be sharing this link in my next live video on Monday 13th March 2023

  • @gerryger1731
    @gerryger1731 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi have you ever had an achilles tendon problem and if so what did you do? Thanks

    • @joerenner8334
      @joerenner8334 Před 2 lety +1

      I did once. Crippled me. Someone suggested I stop wearing flip flops. I did. Supported my arches with proper footwear. Problem went away. May not be your problem but my point is how something simple can be almost catastrophic

    • @gerryger1731
      @gerryger1731 Před 2 lety +1

      @@joerenner8334 glad to hear it went away! I just tried the shoe lifts last week and they really help.
      I am 50 and ruptured my achilles a few years ago and didn't get the surgery.(I am dumb!)
      I started biking again and was doing 20-50 miles everyday on a forward crank cruiser at 16-18 mph pace with no problems. I cut back on miles and ramped up intensity and whamo pain for the last 2 years. Should've stayed with high miles low intensity.
      Just trying to see if anyone has a good trick or massage that may work I haven't tried. Thanks

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +1

      Sounds like you have just overloading the tendon!!!
      I only suffered once but was because I had panniers on bike and was doing 100miles a day for 10 days. The load was too much for Achilles as I was still riding fairly hard!
      I often see it with people who are very toe dominate in pedal stroke. So try and pull cleats further back. This can take pressure of calf muscle.
      I would also suggest some rest and get the inflammation under control!
      Hope you get on top of things

    • @gerryger1731
      @gerryger1731 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BulletproofCycling yes good call I am bit toe dominant in the pedals and will try your advice. I got the forward crank bicycle to help my knees and now knees are great but bad tendons.hahaha. Years of bad form and age is getting me. Keep making these quality videos! Thanks

    • @lucberthelotte6196
      @lucberthelotte6196 Před 2 lety +1

      Try massaging deepply just above the calf muscles. It will release the tightness and relieve the pain. On the way to recovery again. Good luck Gerry

  • @tonyg3091
    @tonyg3091 Před 2 lety +1

    I like how “workouts” in the accent of this guy sounds like ‘war codes” for let’s be honest, it IS a war :):)

  • @freeffree4133
    @freeffree4133 Před 2 lety +1

    I love your accent 😁

  • @ruibui4388
    @ruibui4388 Před 2 lety +1

    Do you have cycling jersey that has your KCC logo for sell?

  • @oneschance
    @oneschance Před 2 lety +2

    So I guess this means that all of the videos about zone 2 training are wrong?

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +3

      Sorry, think you possibly misunderstood - I mention breakthrough sessions wrapped around with steady state work. The more time you have the more steady state work you do. More time doesn’t correlate with more harder work. 2 sessions are enough. However, no breakthrough sessions are various points in the year are important as well. Most of my athletes are 90% steady state or at least VT1 all week regardless of whether they train for 3-4 hours or 15-20. Sorry for any confusion 👍

    • @oneschance
      @oneschance Před 2 lety +1

      @@BulletproofCycling A most awesome reply. Thank you for elaborating. I’ll rewatch a few times.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +1

      @@oneschance feel free to send through any questions. I have coached for 30 years and worked with some awesome folks but new to this online world but learning fast 👍

  • @darrinkulyk9560
    @darrinkulyk9560 Před 2 lety +1

    200 km / Week Will Do It .

  • @ds6914
    @ds6914 Před 5 měsíci +1

    15 hours

  • @thejeffinvade
    @thejeffinvade Před 26 dny

    More time than what you are currently doing

  • @PaddleDogC5
    @PaddleDogC5 Před 2 lety +1

    Scotch split meals?😅

  • @annukun7318
    @annukun7318 Před 2 lety +1

    hi there i train zome 2 for 5 weeks than do a hard efforta later

  • @BenAroundo
    @BenAroundo Před 2 lety +3

    I like your confidence and enthusiasm but I'm sorry to tell you that muscle cells don't have a four week training, recovery and development cycle. Tapering on the fourth week for best growth and recovery is sadly a believed myth ( obviously there is some recovery ) is non scientific and created five decades ago by a swimming coach for a better training structure and wrongly adopted by Greg Lamond in his first book as a training regimen. I sat in an university classroom to learn how and when ( time between workouts ) those muscle cells really rest and grow and so must you. Going hard is only necessary one day a week when practicing training skills "at racing speed", to be sport specific and to use all the energy systems (zones). Yes your body will develop resistance and defense. There is only one "BEST" way to develop your cardio system and grow your mitochondria ( the REAL weapons that you need to win bike races ) and it's not by going hard. I know it's counterintuitive but it's proven science.

    • @BulletproofCycling
      @BulletproofCycling  Před 2 lety +3

      Hi Aldo, thank you for your comment and your knowledge. I share in lots of videos the key to fitness is your cardio vascular fitness and your ability to promote health metrics. I don’t stick riders to specific rotations and often use one breakthrough session a week or 2 week work and rest cycles. You can check out some of my live podcasts where I discuss many of these matters. I appreciate there are lots of approaches and as a sports scientist I have also DNA tested athletes and witnessed the wide and varied needs for individuals. So please don’t judge me on one thing I may have said. Thank you though for engaging in my content. I am looking forward to creating better videos in the near future

  • @gerritfourie2239
    @gerritfourie2239 Před 2 lety +1

    SCOTTman???,,,,our 64y Vets, need a lot,,,I mean:,,ALOT of mitocondrea,,,,,,which way is the BEST to INCREASE it???,,,,,5-6h00 LSSD/LSD-rides??
    Wellington, RSA.
    still mad about ur Scottsh accent,,,

  • @wrightwoodwork
    @wrightwoodwork Před 2 lety +1

    Train like a pro not a headless chicken

  • @youtuber1650
    @youtuber1650 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm gonna be civil. I like your channel and especially your topics which I'm really interested in. But, please, talk English, I have a hard time understanding what you say.