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Strength Training For Cyclists: A Practical View From A Cycling Coach

By: David Ertl  March 20, 2020

Some argue that strength training for cyclists is not necessary. They say cycling relies mostly on cardiovascular fitness and you can get all the leg strength you need by riding. They also claim off-the-bike strength training is not cycling-specific therefore useless.

While cycling is first and foremost a cardiovascular sport, leg strength is still imperative. But more importantly, the contribution changes dramatically with the nature of the competitive event. For BMX/Track, and to a lesser degree Mountain Bike and Cyclocross, leg strength and the resulting power generation plays a much more important role than for a 100-mile-a-day stage racer.

Cycling and Power

Cycling is a power sport. Power equals force times speed. Force is the amount of effort you put into the pedal stroke and speed is your leg rpm. And while some say strength training for cyclists is not required, it can be a beneficial component of a cycling training program.

Cycling requires leg strength. Stronger cyclists who can continuously crank out more power must also put out more force per pedal stroke. If two cyclists are pedaling at 90 rpm and one is putting out more power, s/he must be putting out more force on the pedals and using more strength to do so. This simple equation is power = strength x speed. If leg speed is equal, then the only other variable is force, which is driven by leg strength. You can work on increasing your cadence, but there is a ceiling on how fast you can pedal, as a result your power improvement potential from increased cadence is limited.

The more force you can continuously generate, the more power you can put out. Strength = increased force. The upward limit of strength is much more open ended than leg speed. Therefore, it makes sense to work on strength. Riding a bike will give you a lot of the strength you need to ride well. However, there are times when you could use more strength to turn the pedals, such as when you are accelerating, charging up a hill or sprinting. It is possible but difficult to build this type of strength just on the bike.

During the season, it’s recommended to do one strength workout on the bike each week. But in the off-season, it’s a good idea to do some off-the-bike lower body workouts. You can build more strength in the gym with resistance and weight training than you can on a bike. Even if gym strength training isn’t necessary, it is certainly more efficient and time-effective to work on strength training off the bike

Health Benefits of Strength Training

Strength training has the added benefit of increasing bone density. There is some indication that cyclists have less bone density than other athletes, perhaps due to the lack of impact (such as from running) and resistance training. It may also be due to all the sweating that cyclists do, which can leach calcium from the body. Whether or not this is true, there’s no doubt that resistance training can improve bone strength, muscular strength and more balanced fitness. This is especially important to the master’s rider where bone density and loss of muscle tissue are important health issues

Weight Training Brings Balance

Another reason for doing strength training is that you can work on muscles that don’t get used during cycling, or at least not very much, and therefore that athlete can achieve a more balanced approach to development. Cycling is a linear sport – we tend to move our legs in one plane and use only some of our leg and hip muscles.

Types of Leg Strength Training

Cycling requires several types of leg strength. It mostly requires strength-endurance, which is the ability to push the pedals around powerfully for long periods of time. It also requires absolute strength – the strength required to push very forcefully on the pedals when accelerating, climbing or sprinting.

Cycling also requires you to have the ability to generate force quickly. Think about the pedal stroke; the majority of the force to turn the cranks is generated from the 1 o’clock position to the 5 o’clock position (when looking at the right leg from the right side of the bike). This is one third of the pedal stroke. If you are pedaling at 90 rpm, you are doing 1.5 revolutions per second, or doing one revolution in 2/3 of a second. Therefore, you are generating all the down force during a pedal stroke in 0.22 of a second (1/3 times 2/3). That’s quite fast!

It’s important to consider some leg speed work, both with and without resistance, to train your muscles to fire quickly. Think about strength-endurance, max strength and strength-speed.

Muscle Groups Important To Cycling

In cycling, there are four basic muscle actions involved in a pedal stroke: 1 ) Knee Extension 2) Hip Extension 3) Knee Flexion 4) Hip Flexion.

Knee extension is the straightening of the knee joint such as when kicking a ball. During the pedal stroke, you are extending your knee from the 11 through 5 o’clock positions. Knee extension occurs by the contraction of the quadriceps and rectus femoris muscles – the big muscles on the front of the thigh.

Hip extension is extending the thigh from a bent or flexed position to a straight position where the thigh is parallel to your trunk. When you stand up out of a chair, you are extending your hip. On a bike, your hip extends from the 12 through 6 o’clock positions.

Hip extension on the bike occurs mainly from the contraction of the gluteal muscles (your butt muscles). The hamstring muscles are also involved in hip extension but not to a very large degree in the range of motion involved in the pedal stroke.

The hip and knee extension makes up approximately 80% of the force generated during a pedal with the knee and hip each contributing roughly half of the 80%. Therefore, these are important muscles to strengthen for cycling. Muscles tend to be strongest at the mid portion of their range of their motion.

For the two strongest muscles, the quads and glutes, their greatest force production is at the 3 o’clock position. This is good news because this is where the foot is pushing perpendicular to the crank resulting in the greatest force transfer from the foot to the bike. Whoever invented the bicycle knowingly or unknowingly had this figured out. The greatest muscle force production coincides with the physics of the pedal motion in an optimal manner.

Knee flexion is the bending of the knee such as kicking your foot back towards your butt. On the bike, knee flexion occurs from the 5 through 11 o’clock positions, where you are pulling back with the foot. The hamstrings are involved in flexing the knee. As you actively pull back on the pedals, you are engaging your hamstrings.

Hip flexion involves bringing the thigh up towards the chest such as when you step up and over something. On the bike, the hips flex from the 6 through 12 o’clock positions.

The psoas muscles are involved in flexing the thigh. In actuality, most of the force used to lift the leg up on the upstroke of the pedal stroke comes from the other leg pushing down on the pedals. Even when elite cyclists consciously pull up on the pedals, they just barely unload the leg, and really don’t produce enough force to propel the bike forward. However, anything you can do to help unload that leg means the other leg can use more of its down force energy propelling the bike forward rather than lifting the opposing leg, so it is worthwhile trying to improve the efficiency of your pedal stroke by working on the hip flexors.

So the muscle groups involved in the pedal stroke are the quads, glutes, hamstrings and hip flexors. The quads and glutes provide the vast majority of the force and power for turning the pedals. Many other accessory muscles are involved, such as the calf muscles, but typically they get strong enough just from cycling and they don’t contribute much to the overall force production.

Final Considerations

Another rationale for doing strength training in the offseason is that for those of us who live in a northern climate, riding outside during the winter is difficult and often impossible. Strength training a couple times a week is a great workout indoors and adds some diversity to your annual training routine. It can also simulate the effect of a long ride. One rule of thumb is that the day after a good lower body workout, your legs should feel like you’ve just ridden a hard 70 miles.

Finally, as you age, it becomes difficult to maintain muscle mass, even with training. You tend to lose your type II muscle fibers (the fast twitch ones) the most, and these are the same ones built most by strength training. If you don’t lift fairly heavy weights, you will likely lose muscle mass as you age even if you continue to ride a bike

About The Author


David Ertl, Ph.D., is a USA Cycling Level 1 Coach and a National Coach of the JDRF Ride To Cure Diabetes program. He has been competing in cycling for 46 years and coaching for 17 years. David is the author of ‘101 Cycling Workout’s and other eBooks, training plans and articles which are available on his website, www.CyclesportCoaching.com. Read more at http://www.peakscoachinggroup.com/DavidErtl.