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Of all the training tools I've
benefited from over the years, three primary standouts, um, standout: the
heart-rate monitor, the power meter and my PowerCranks. The first two enabled
me to accurately gage the intensities of any given workout (or, as it was in my
case, all given workouts!), while the
PowerCranks helped to improve a number of factors, specifically my pedal stroke
and hip flexor strength. Without any of these I am sure I would never have made
the gains I had. So important were these items, in fact, that if asked to loan
them out, my reply was quite simply, "no". No excuses, no himming or
hawing, just plain ol' "no". Sometimes, for good measure, I'd even
throw a "get your own" response out there. To me, letting others
borrow such priceless gear would be like "loaning out" toilet paper
on a camping trip. Toilet paper is trail money and you wouldn't go throwing out
money, would you?
It gets me wondering why anyone
would just as soon drop a whopping four grand for a carbon-fiber bike with all
the bells and whistles but yet refrain from picking up the gear that would really help them. My suggestion: save
your money and buy a two-grand bike and invest the rest into your body's performance. After all, your
body is the only thing you'll truly have for the rest of your life and it is,
without a doubt, the single most amazing, wonderful, phenomenal instrument
you'll ever own.
The PowerCranks come pretty close
however.
Before I let you in on a few
secrets, let me first say that I am not sponsored by PowerCranks in any way,
shape, or form. I had to purchase my pair and it's partly why I hate loaning
them out! "I'll loan 'em to ya," I'd tell a friend. "If you let
me borrow your wife for a week or two." He knew he'd get his wife back
eventually, but I knew I'd never see the cranks again.
Now for the secrets. The biggest
secret is that there are no secrets. If you want to reach your potential as an
athlete you need to make use of every street-legal avenue available to you;
don't take the high road and avoid this fact, as regret is the biggest injury
you'll ever face. Trust me on that one.
The PowerCranks are one of those
avenues. I have owned a pair since their inception in late '98, when I could
barely manage a measly two minutes on them. On that fateful day I loaded up my
jersey pockets with gels and bars and fruit and left as though I was heading
out for a day-long ride. Indeed, that was
the plan. Two minutes later I returned home, however, hip flexors a-burning. I
knew right then I had to improving to do.
So I went about it by slowly
increasing the time I spent on them. At first it was two minutes a few times a
day, with my bike attached to the indoor trainer. Then, very gradually, I
worked up to ten or fifteen minutes at a stretch, outdoors. Within a month I
was able to ride close to an hour nonstop. Songbirds sang, girls swooned,
smiles were had.
There were hassles though. I was
unable to spin much over 80RPM without blowing a gasket, nor could I use the
PowerCranks in my aero-bars or whilst standing on the pedals. I went about
working on these things and a month later I was spinning at my customary 100RPM
and able to do so in the aero-bars. The standing up part would take a little
longer to master, but eventually I had ingrained that into my system as well.
The effects of all this were
immediate and profound, and not just on my cycling, but primarily on my running
and my kick-boxing. (Okay, okay, I don't actually kick-box, but if I were to
have I'm sure it would've improved as well.) This came as a surprise, of
course, as Frank, the head hauncho at PowerCranks, hadn't originally thought of
the benefits the cranks might provide to a runner. My cycling steadily improved
throughout 1999 and I began to win races that I had been eternally second or
third in. But it was my running that made the difference and the PowerCranks
were the only training stimuli I had changed from previous years. Sure,
training is an accumulative thing and maybe '99 was when all those years
finally added up in my favor, but I'm inclined to think (and, in fact, know) that it was the implementation of
the PowerCranks and power meter that made the difference.
Here are a few examples of tests
I performed during that season. While they may not be entirely systematic and
scientific, they meant (and mean) something to me.
Test #1. First ride on PowerCranks, Dec '98: two minutes to
complete and utter failure. Hip flexors give out and inform me it's time to
start training them. (Hip flexors, for those of you unaware, are the muscles
that essentially lift your knees, and while you don't necessarily want high
knee-lift in a half or full Ironman, you do
want those muscles to be resilient, as they're a big part of what propels you).
Test #2. Fifth ride on PowerCranks, Jan '99: thirty minutes to fatigue,
nonstop pedaling. An achy knee of mine, my right, no longer aches and would
cease to on all but one or two minor occasions for the remainder of my career.
Hmmm.
Test #3. Five months on PowerCranks, May '99: By now I can ride the
cranks as long as I want and my race results begin to progress. Third place at
Wildflower, third place at Ironman Lanzarote. One training ride lasts more than
seven hours on the cranks, in Northern California's mountainous countryside; I
come home hungry and a bit too tanned but otherwise in fine shape.
Test #4. Eight plus months on PowerCranks, Aug '99: At this point
my average power output is hovering near its highest levels ever, 310 watts
sustained aerobically, for hours on end. Second place while training through Vineman
and a win at Ironman Canada
tell me all I need to know. Standing and pedaling with the cranks is now no
longer a chore.
Test #5. Ten months on the PowerCranks, Oct '99: Hawaii Ironman is
the only race that doesn't go according to plan that year, but an illegally
accepted handout in the form of a beer might have had something to do with it.
I assist Frank at the PowerCranks booth and bet $5 of my own hard-earned cash
that any bystander who wants to give the cranks a try cannot ride them for two
minutes straight. None do thankfully. (With my limited income, $5 of mine is
like $500 of yours.)
Test #6, ongoing. Eleven months on PowerCranks, Nov '99: The test
from this point forward is to learn to say "no" to people who want to
borrow my PowerCranks.
-Chuckie V
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