How to
Perfect Your Riding Position & Technique
By Ed Pavelka of www.RoadBikeRider.com
Cycling is full of prodigious numbers—the
distances ridden, the calories consumed, the tires trashed. Another
statistic that can seem astounding is the number of pedal strokes made.
Let’s suppose it takes you six hours to ride a
century and you pedal at the rate of 90 rpm throughout. As you cross the
finish line, you will be making pedal stroke number 64,800.
Whoa, that’s a lot! But it barely registers on
the scale of what happens during a full season. For example, during the year
in which I had my biggest mileage total, I figure that I got there by
pushing the pedals around approximately 13,340,000 times.
Can you say, repetitive use injury? You can see
why cyclists are good candidates, especially if we aren’t pedaling from a
nearly perfect position.
Your body and bike must fit together and work
together in near-perfect harmony for you to be efficient, comfortable, and
injury-free. The more you ride, the more essential this is. If even one
thing is out of whack, it’s a good bet that it will cause a problem during
thousands of pedal strokes.
Fortunately, it isn’t difficult to arrive at an
excellent riding position. But it does take time and attention. You need to
be careful with your initial bike set-up, then conscientiously stay aware of
your body and the need for occasional refinements. As time goes by, your
position will stabilize and you’ll be riding in a smooth groove.
The following guidelines come from my experience
and the advice of various experts. One is Andy Pruitt, Ed.D., the director
of Colorado’s Boulder Center for Sports Medicine. Andy has probably solved
more position problems than anyone during his years of work with elite
cyclists.
As you work on your riding position, always
remember Pruitt Rule No. 1:
“Adjust your bike to fit your body. Don’t
force your body to fit the bike.”
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Frame: Measure your inseam from
crotch to floor with bare feet 6 inches apart, then multiply by 0.68. The
answer is a good approximation of your road frame size, measured along the
seat tube from the center of the crank axle to the center of the top tube.
As a double check, this should produce 4 to 5 inches of exposed seatpost
when your saddle height is correct. When the crankarms are horizontal, the
top tube should be right between your knees when you squeeze them
together.
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Arms: Keep your elbows bent and
relaxed to absorb shock and prevent veering when you hit a bump or brush
another rider. Hold arms in line with your body, not splayed to the side,
to be more compact and aerodynamic.
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Upper Body/Shoulders: Don’t be
rigid, but do be fairly still. Imagine the energy wasted by rocking side
to side with every pedal stroke on a 25-mile ride. Save it for pedaling.
Also, beware of creeping forward on the saddle and hunching your
shoulders. There’s a tendency to do this when pushing for more speed.
Shift to a higher gear and stand periodically to prevent stiffness in your
hips and back.
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Head and Neck: Resist the
temptation to put your head down when you’re going hard or getting tired.
It takes just a second for something dangerous to pop out of nowhere.
Occasionally tilt your head to one side and the other instead of holding
it dead center. Change your hand location to reposition your upper body
and give your neck a new angle.
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Hands: Prevent finger numbness
by moving your hands frequently. Grip the bar firmly enough to keep hands
from bouncing off on unexpected bumps, but not so tightly that it tenses
your arms. For the same safety reason, keep your thumbs wrapped around the
bar instead of resting on top. Move to the drops for descents or
high-speed riding, and the brake lever hoods for relaxed cruising. On long
climbs, grip the top of the bar to sit upright and open your chest for
easier breathing. When standing, hold the lever hoods lightly and sway the
bike side to side in synch with your pedal strokes, directly driving each
pedal with your body weight.
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Handlebar: Bar width should
equal shoulder width to open your chest for better breathing. A bit too
wide is better than too narrow. Make sure the hooks are large enough for
your hands. Modified “anatomic” curves may feel more comfortable to your
palms. Position the bottom, flat portion of the bar horizontal or pointed
slightly down toward the rear brake.
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Brake Levers: Move them around
the curve of the bar to give you the best compromise between holding the
hoods and braking when your hands are in the hooks. Most riders do best if
the lever tips touch a straightedge extended forward from under the flat,
bottom portion of the bar. The levers don’t have to be positioned
symmetrically—remember Andy Pruitt’s rule. If your reach is more
comfortable with one lever closer to you than the other, put ‘em that way.
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Stem Height: Start with the top
of the stem about one inch below the top of the saddle. This should give
you comfortable access to every hand position. As time goes by, think
about lowering the stem as much as another inch (not all at once) to
improve your aerodynamics. If your lower back or neck starts complaining,
or if you notice you’ve stopped using the drops, go back up. Never put the
stem so high that its maximum extension line shows, or it could be snapped
off by your weight on the bar.
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Top-tube and Stem Lengths:
Combined, these two dimensions determine “reach.” Depending on your
anatomy and flexibility, your reach could be longer for better
aerodynamics, or it may need to be shorter for back or neck comfort. For
most riders, when they’re comfortably seated with their elbows slightly
bent and their hands on the lever hoods, the front hub will be obscured by
the handlebar.
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Back: A flat back is the
defining mark of a stylish rider. Notice I didn’t say a great rider.
Anatomy and flexibility have a lot to do with how flat you can get. Lance
Armstrong, for instance, has a rounded back that’s not picture perfect and
yet he still manages to go down the road pretty well. The same was true
for John Howard, once America’s dominant road racer. I’m in their boat
(back-wise, not speed-wise). Once you have the correct reach, work on
flattening your back by imagining touching the top tube with your belly
button. This helps your hips rotate forward. You don't want to ride this
way all of the time, but it'll help you get more aero when you need to.
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Saddle Height: This is the
biggie. You’ll find various methods for calculating this critical number.
Here’s the one I like best. It has become known as the LeMond Method,
because Greg brought it to us from his Renault team in the 1980s. (Invite
a friend over so you can help each other and both wind up with primo
positions.)
Begin by standing on a hard surface with your
shoes off and your feet about 6 inches apart. Using a metric tape, measure
from the floor to your crotch, pressing with the same force that a saddle
does. Multiply this number by 0.883. The result is your saddle
height, measured from the middle of the crank axle, along the seat tube,
to the top of the saddle.
Add 2 or 3 mm if you have long feet in
proportion to your height. If you suffer from chondromalacia (knee pain
caused by damage to the underside of the kneecap), a slightly higher
saddle may feel better. However, it should never be so high that your hips
must rock to help you reach the pedals. If this formula results in a big
change from the height you’ve been using, make the adjustment by 2 or 3 mm
per week, with several rides between, till you reach the new position.
Changing too fast could strain something.
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Saddle Tilt: The saddle should
be level, which you can check by laying a yardstick along its length and
comparing it to something horizontal like a tabletop or windowsill. A
slight downward tilt may be more comfortable, but be careful. More than a
degree or two could cause you to continually slide forward, putting
pressure on your arms and hands.
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Fore/Aft Saddle Position: Sit
comfortably in the center of the saddle, click into the pedals, and set
the crankarms horizontal. Hold a weighted string to the front of your
forward kneecap. For most of us, the string should touch the end of the
crankarm. This is known as the neutral position. Loosen the seatpost clamp
so you can slide the saddle to get it right. Seated climbers, time
trialists, and some road racers may like the line to fall a centimeter or
two behind the end of the crankarm to increase pedaling leverage. On the
other hand, track and criterium racers may like a more forward position
that breeds leg speed. Remember, if your reach to the handlebar is
wrong, use stem length to correct it, not fore/aft saddle position.
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Butt: By sliding fore or aft on
the saddle you can bring some muscles into play while resting others. This
is a technique favored by Skip Hamilton, my teammate in the 1996 Race
Across America. Moving forward emphasizes the quadriceps muscles on the
front of the thighs, while moving back highlights the hamstrings and
glutes—the powerful butt muscles.
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Feet: Some of us walk like
pigeons, others like Charlie Chaplin. Your footprints as you leave a
swimming pool will tip you off. To make cycling easier on your knees, shoe
cleats must put your feet at their natural angle. This is a snap with
clipless pedal systems that allow feet to pivot freely (“float”) several
degrees before release. Then all you need to do is set the cleats’
fore/aft position, which is easy. Simply position them so the widest part
of each foot is centered on the pedal axle. If you experience discomfort
such as tingling, numbness or burning (especially on long rides), move the
cleats rearward as much as a centimeter.
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Crankarm Length: In general, if
your inseam is less than 29 inches, use 165-mm crankarms; 29-32 inches,
170 mm; 33-34 inches, 172.5; and more than 34 inches, 175 mm. A crankarm’s
length is measured from the center of its fixing bolt to the center of the
pedal mounting hole. The length is usually stamped on the back of the arm.
If you use longer crankarms than recommended, you’ll gain leverage for
pushing big gears but lose some pedaling speed.
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