Wednesday, April 25, 2012

VeloSF... Not your average spin class...

A training ride with my husband should not be a difficult thing to get right. We’re both competitive athletes, challenging for spots on the 40-44 podium in triathlon races. We are training for the same races and we share the same triathlon coach who understands that we like to align our schedules… And yet, it’s almost an impossible challenge to achieve our goal of spending time together, accomplishing our training goals and enjoying the ride. What’s the problem? It’s simple. We don’t ride the same speed… his 6ft frame and 175lb lean muscle mass and higher W/kg makes him stronger and faster.

Friends often point out to me, how wonderful it is that we share the same hobby and that we can train together (triathlon is the reason we met) but in actual fact, it’s a cause of stress in our relationship. He debates whether to wait for me at the top of hills. He encourages me to sit on his wheel on flat and rolling terrain… but I feel guilty for being *slower* on the hills and then I don’t want to draft on the flats as it then makes my ride too easy. Riding outside together has become a difficult conundrum to solve without one of us compromising on our training plans.

Thankfully, we discovered an antidote for our riding (and marital) harmony at VeloSF, a San Francisco based studio offering 28 indoor cycling classes a week. Indoor riding is the great equalizer. Setting up our bikes side by side on Computrainers at VeloSF, we are able to execute a ride with specificity to our fitness and performance objectives without leaving the other behind. To put it more finely, my husband cannot put the hammer down and drop me like a bad habit while his rear wheel is securely anchored in place!  

However, to describe VeloSF as an indoor cycling studio is a grave injustice. It is certainly nothing like a spin class you might encounter at a regular gym. Kate Ligler, general manager of VeloSF describes the facility as follows: “It’s a cycling based performance center that offers small group (up to 20) cycling classes on a periodized training cycle.”

Sounds fancy but what does that really mean? 

Step one: Visit VeloSF for blood lactate testing. The test takes about an hour and consists of cycling on your own bike, attached to a Computrainer while a physiologist staff member adds increased load at regular intervals.

When I tested, I warmed up for 15 minutes and then began the test. I started cycling at 100 watts with the load increasing by 20 watts every three minutes. Ligler, who is a trained physiologist and member of the coaching staff alongside her management duties, took a sample of blood and noted my heart rate at the end of each three minute interval. This continued through eight rounds until I flamed out spectacularly, heaving over the front of my bike, unable to pedal any more as she moved the load to 260 watts. My legs and heart were having none of it. I softly spun for another 10 minutes, trying to flush out the lactate that was now clogging my quads, and hoping that my heart rate would come down from its elevated levels. It did after a minute or two of easy spinning

Step two: A VeloSF staff member analyzes the results and prints out a personalized power profile before discussing with you how the information will be used in your training plan. The results are in the form of prescribed zones (1 through 5) with a personalized range of watts for each zone. VeloSF even has a sticker with the zones so you can plaster the information on your top tube for easy reference while riding!

In my case, riding at less than 145 watts corresponds to zone 1 and should be considered very easy. Zone 2 (150-180 watts for me) is endurance riding, still comfortable. In fact, the high end of zone 2 corresponds with my typical ironman effort. Zone 3 is tempo riding (185-205 watts) and in my experience is in line with my half-ironman bike efforts. Zone 4 was set at 205-225w and zone 5 was anything above 230 watts. I annotated the zone 5 on my sticker, writing “hurtbox” alongside the prescribed power zone.

Step three: Sign up for a scheduled class to fit your schedule. VeloSF coaches recommend that you take two 90 minute classes per week. This forms the basis of the facility’s periodized training plan. Each period comprises 12 weeks of training that adjusts focus as you go through the calendar year. The winter months focus on longer, base training intervals while the spring and summer months aim to prepare you for race season and will include higher power and higher intensity, building on the base you developed earlier in the year. Each class is scripted down to the minute by Matt Dixon, an elite triathlon coach and owner of PurplePatch Fitness (www.purplepatchfitness.com), however, the VeloSF coaches are encouraged to tweak based on their knowledge of the individuals in the class and their own coaching and cycling experience.

I typically attend classes every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon but have been known to add a third session on Saturday if the weather forecast calls for rain. Of course, my husband sets up his bike right next to mine as often as our work schedules allow.

Step four: Retest every 3 to 6 months and adjust your training plan accordingly. 

What makes VeloSF unique? You’re probably wondering why my husband and I don’t just ride a trainer a home, using the data. While I could certainly attempt to write my own interval sets or scour the internet for plans, I keep going back to VeloSF for the community, the camaraderie and I confess, that extra little push to get through tough intervals. Also, even after 11 years of riding and racing competitively, I haven’t stopped learning. The educational value of being surrounded by knowledgeable and experienced coaching staff is very valuable.

Last month I attended a Saturday class, coached by Tyler Stewart. Tyler is an elite triathlete, a Cat 1 cyclist and ultra-runner (www.tyler-stewart.com) and she coaches three packed classes each week at VeloSF. Tyler  has held numerous Ironman bike course records over the years, including the former Ironman (M-dot) bike course world record for her 4:42:40 ride at Ironman Texas in 2011.

For the first thirty minutes of a two hour class, we focused exclusively on drills. Really? I thought to myself. A quarter of class doing drills? I quickly discovered that you learn a lot about your pedal stroke during 10 minutes of cycling with only your left shoe clipped in. Tyler instructed the class to vary cadence and power as we worked our way through 10 minutes on each leg. She urged us to think about elongating the pedal stroke, imagining an elliptical movement, avoiding dead spots in our pedaling motion. The clacking sound of a slack chain was a major giveaway to Tyler, even over the class’ musical soundtrack, that you weren’t holding tension on the chain. On several occasions it elicited the suggestion to athletes to reduce cadence and watts to a level where they could pedal with constant tension. Shifting around in the saddle and leaning to one side by athletes also caught her attention and each time she spotted someone twitching she made suggestions to help the individual adjust their cycling form. Tyler encouraged us of the benefit of this 30 minute set: “Cycling with two legs at higher cadences will hide bad form. Bad form means you’re giving up watts. You cannot hide during these drills!”

The *main course* of the class was quite simple” 6 x 5 minutes in high zone 2 (~175-180 watts for me) with 5 minutes recovery in low zone 2 in between each interval. On paper, this seemed like a piece of cake. I can hold 180 watts for five hours at a time in an ironman triathlon, I wouldn’t even need to lower the watts for the rest interval in between the sets! However, Tyler quickly explained that the theme of today’s class was leg speed, getting our legs used to riding at different cadences, in particular higher cadences that should feel uncomfortable to us. She targeted a cadence of 110 rpm for the intervals but also advised athletes to adjust up or down based on their typical *base* cadence, i.e. where they usually feel comfortable. I settled in for the first interval and 110rpm felt fine. Tyler picked up on this and suggested that 115+ rpm might be a better guide for my uncomfortable cadence. She was right, the next intervals were more challenging and uncomfortable for me. While I had set the Computrainer to a constant 180 watts, upper zone 2, for the 5 minute interval, it felt very challenging and I noticed that my heart rate was more in line with what I would expect with zone 4 riding. I needed every minute of the recovery 5 minutes at lower watts and lower cadence! 

The cadre of coaching staff at VeloSF is highly decorated in the fields of cycling and triathlon. One of the most popular coaches is Meredith Kessler who joined Velo as a member with a dream of being a successful triathlete 5 years ago. Meredith’s dream came true as she worked her way through the amateur ranks before turning professional two years ago. So far in 2012, she has won Ironman New Zealand and placed second at Ironman California 70.3. Two professional cyclists are also on staff: Olivia Dillon rides for Team NOW and Novartis and is a former Irish road and time-trial champion and Alison Starnes rides for team Exergy Twenty12 and is a member of the USA national team.

In spite of the decorated resumes, members consistently attest to the accessibility of the coaching staff. Coaches endeavor to get to know and understand the goals of athletes that regularly attend classes, offering advice and support, before, during and after each workout. As general manager, Ligler explains: “on a daily basis our coaches do a fantastic job of staying in close touch with athletes in their class. The classes truly become supportive communities where we all understand that we are doing our own personalized wattage zones. Community is absolutely our greatest asset as a facility.”

What does that VeloSF Community look like? Are they all budding professionals like Meredith Kessler? While you would be hard pressed to find a single member that isn’t training for an event of some sort; a century ride, a Gran Fondo, a triathlon or a full season of bike racing, a lot of the athletes describe themselves as recreational rather than competitive. The age range of members is also broad: the oldest member is 84 years old and he’s right at home in class alongside junior cyclists (14-16 years). Ligler estimates that two thirds of the member base are triathletes with the other third focused solely on cycling.

VeloSF has also developed a capability to work with hand cyclists, unique in the Bay Area. Ligler recalls: “I remember the first time Carrie Finale came through the door. She was the first handcyclist to visit the facility and she wanted to know if we could figure out how to make the Computrainers work with a handcycle. We had to reinvent everything, from how we positioned the load generator on the bike, to how we calibrated the trainer, to the way we ran our physiological assessments. She challenged us as a facility but we made it work and she trained with us, started racing and then started winning almost everything!  Carrie is now a member of the US Paralympic Team. It’s been inspiring to work with her.”

If you want to learn more about VeloSF, check out their website at www.velosf.com.

2 comments:

Janelle said...

Nicely said Jordan, great piece! Good luck with your season!

jameson said...

sounds rad... I thing I need to open a similar studio in SD!