Cycling
Cycling is an efficient, joint-friendly way to build aerobic capacity and leg endurance. But the fixed, repetitive position creates specific mobility demands — tight hip flexors, locked thoracic spines, and overworked quads with underactive glutes.
Fitness Considerations
Cycling is hip-flexion dominant with minimal hip extension, no lateral movement, and a sustained forward-flexed posture. Over time, this shortens the hip flexors, tightens the thoracic spine, and weakens the glutes. Pair cycling with hip mobility and thoracic work to counteract these patterns.
Stronger legs produce more watts. More importantly, a strong core and stable hips reduce energy waste from rocking and swaying on the bike. Include squats, deadlifts, and single-leg work from Lower Body Strength to improve both power and efficiency.
The most effective cycling programs follow a polarized approach: 80% of rides at easy, conversational pace and 20% at high intensity. Avoid the “moderate effort all the time” trap — it produces the least adaptation for the most fatigue.
Note
Cycling-specific training plans are being added. Check back soon for structured base-building, interval sessions, and cycling-specific strength work.