NEWS RELEASE
July 20, 2005
For immediate release
CYCLING STUDIES ON COURSE
Training regimen, Tour times examined
INDIANAPOLIS – A pair of studies published recently in Medicine
& Science in Sports & Exercise® (MSSE®), the official
scientific journal of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM),
underscore the relevance of sports and exercise research to this
year’s Tour de France. One study accurately predicted Lance
Armstrong’s time in a stage of the 2004 race, while another points
to an effective training technique for aspiring cyclists.
Leg strength gets a push from training technique
Untrained subjects who were not cyclists showed significant gains in leg
strength from a training technique known as maximal strength training,
in what is thought to be the first study to measure the effect of
strength training on cycling economy in subjects who were also not doing
cycle training. The research was published in the July issue of
MSSE®.
The study measured gains in cycling economy, which is the energy cost
of performing a given amount of work on the cycle ergometer. A reduction
in the energy cost of doing a given amount of work implies improved
cycling economy. “We were surprised that subjects showed a boost
in cycling economy for high-intensity cycling, but not low- or
moderate-intensity cycling,” said Donald A. Schneider, Ph.D., who
headed the Australian research team. “Also, cycling economy
improved without a significant change in aerobic capacity or the blood
lactate threshold.” The blood lactate threshold indicates the work
intensity at which lactic acid concentration in blood rises
significantly above the resting level, influencing exercise
performance.
Schneider and associates followed seven male subjects in their 20s
who were neither training nor participating in exercise more than twice
a week. They measured leg strength, maximal oxygen uptake, peak cycling
power, and cycling economy before training, after four weeks, and again
at the completion of the eight-week experiment.
In contrast to traditional resistance training, maximal strength
training consists of fewer than six high-intensity repetitions with the
concentric phase of lifting performed as quickly as possible. The
training was performed on a hack-squat apparatus (weight-lifting machine
used to strengthen the legs and buttocks). Subjects in this study lifted
85 percent of their one-repetition maximum in four sets of five
repetitions each for three sessions per week.
“What’s distinctive about this study,” said
Schneider, “is that the regimen consisted solely of maximal
leg-strength training. Normally, cyclists train for endurance but may
not include conventional strength training off the cycle in their
training regimen. Other studies have examined the effects of traditional
strength training in cyclists who were also participating in endurance
training. The design of this experiment allowed us to isolate the
effects of maximal strength training in untrained individuals, which we
found very revealing.”
Participants showed significant increases in lean-leg muscle mass in
the first four weeks of the study, with no significant increase after
eight weeks of training. Leg strength increased significantly over the
training period.
Schneider cautioned that, while the study revealed benefits of
maximal strength training for subjects who also were not doing cycle
training, it is possible that highly trained cyclists who also were
undergoing cycle training might not see the same effects. More research
is needed to determine if maximal strength training improves cycling
economy in highly trained athletes who also are undergoing cycle
training.
Model nails tour time
A new mathematical model predicted—within one
second—Lance Armstrong’s time in Stage 16 of the 2004 Tour
de France. Armstrong won the grueling l’Alpe-d’Huez time
trial in 39 minutes, 41 seconds. The model developed by Daniel P. Heil,
Ph.D., FACSM, predicted 39:40 (99.958 percent accuracy). Heil’s
calculations for the 15.5-km run included grade or slope, aerodynamic
drag, gravity, and Armstrong’s power supply and body position. His
research was presented last month at ACSM’s Annual Meeting in
Nashville, Tennessee.
“A model like this requires many extrapolations,” said
Heil. “We must have done something right. Some things must have
been off, but it’s a good start at modeling what someone can do in
a time trial.”
A cyclist himself, Heil chose to model the l’Alpe-d’Huez
stage, which race officials had established as a time trial event for
individual riders in 2004. Team events present many more variables,
making calculations much more complex. Compared with time trials,
“Road cycling has a huge dose of applied physiology and physics
intermingling to predict complex behavior,” said Heil.
“There’s no way any model can accurately predict
it.”
Heil’s model calculated the net power required to overcome
gravity, aerodynamic drag, and rolling resistance, compared with
Armstrong’s ability to generate power for forward movement.
Assumptions included the racer’s body mass, equipment (shoes and
helmet) and bike mass, as well as a 500-watt power output. Other factors
included race officials’ 16 published combinations of road
distance and average grade for the l’Alpe-d’Huez.
The American College of Sports Medicine is the largest sports
medicine and exercise science organization in the world. More than
20,000 International, National, and Regional members are dedicated to
advancing and integrating scientific research to provide educational and
practical applications of exercise science and sports medicine.
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NOTE: Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise® is
the official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine, and is
available from Lippincott Williams & Wilkins at 1-800-638-6423. For
a complete copy of the Schneider research paper (Vol. 37, No. 7, pages
1231-1236) or to speak with a leading sports medicine expert on the
topic, contact the Department of Communications and Public Information
at 317-637-9200 ext. 127 or 117. Visit ACSM online at www.acsm.org. The
conclusions outlined in this news release are those of the researchers
only, and should not be construed as an official statement of the
American College of Sports Medicine.
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