4.6 Article

Exercise Intensity and Pacing Pattern During a Cross-Country Olympic Mountain Bike Race

期刊

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.702415

关键词

mountain bike cycling; critical power; anaerobic capacity; maximal aerobic power; intermittent exercise intensity; pacing strategy

资金

  1. Department of Physical Performance at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences

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The study found that in XCO mountain bike races, athletes exhibit varying power output patterns and pacing strategies within different laps. As the race progresses, actions exceeding critical power tend to decrease in magnitude in later laps, while the number and duration of these actions remain relatively consistent.
Objective: To examine the power profiles and pacing patterns in relation to critical power (CP) and maximal aerobic power (MAP) output during a cross-country Olympic (XCO) mountain bike race. Methods: Five male and two female national competitive XCO cyclists completed a UCI Cat. 1 XCO race. The races were 19 km and 23 km and contained five (female) and six (male) laps, respectively. Power output (PO) during the race was measured with the cyclists' personal power meters. On two laboratory tests using their own bikes and power meters, CP and work capacity above CP (W') were calculated using three time trials of 12, 7, and 3 min, while MAP was established based on a 3-step submaximal test and the maximal oxygen uptake from the 7-min time trial. Results: Mean PO over the race duration (96 +/- 7 min) corresponded to 76 +/- 9% of CP and 63 +/- 4% of MAP. 40 +/- 8% of race time was spent with PO > CP, and the mean duration and magnitude of the bouts > CP was similar to 8 s and similar to 120% of CP. From the first to last lap, time > CP and accumulated W' per lap decreased with 9 +/-& nbsp;6% and 45 +/- 17%, respectively. For single > CP bouts, mean magnitude and mean W' expended decreased by 25 +/-& nbsp;8% and 38 +/- 15% from the first to the last lap, respectively. Number and duration of bouts did not change significantly between laps. Conclusion: The highly variable pacing pattern in XCO implies the need for rapid changes in metabolic power output, as a result of numerous separate short-lived > CP actions which decrease in magnitude in later laps, but with little lap-to-lap variation in number and duration.

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