No matter what type of race or event you are doing there is always a need to “warm up”!

So what does “warming up” mean? 

The obvious answer is that it actually gets you warm, or at least will cause your core temperature to rise, and will make your joints and muscles more mobile and ready to perform. More importantly, it sends messages to your body that it needs to devote resources (blood flow, oxygen, and nutrients) to the skeletal muscles (the muscles of movement) rather than the internal organs, and so diverts blood flow and activates a host of processes that allow these muscles to perform under load. This takes time, and more time than you probably think! There are so many prescribed formats for this out there, but generally a warm up will vary between 15-45 mins. The trick is to find which one works for you, and also to remember the length and intensity of a warm up will vary according to the length and intensity of the race/event!

There are some overriding general principles though, and for the sake of this article and the fact many of us are currently engaged in the Tri-Alliance virtual race series, we will focus on warming up for a short intense time trial or criterium (cycling) type event. Remember the bike leg in a triathlon is essentially a time trial (unless its draft legal).

Generally the shorter the race, the longer and more intense the warm up! Sounds odd, eh! But in a short event you have to be ready to hit your racing heart rate (T4-T5), or power zone (100-120% FTP) from the start so your warm up should include efforts at this intensity.

Let’s look at some broad recommendations: 

  • Firstly, have a plan – anything is better than nothing.
  • Decide whether you will warm up on the road or a trainer.
  • Time it: work back from the race start time so there is only a small waiting time until the race starts.
  • Be prepared with time, HR, power, and speed gauges.
  • Have nutrition and hydration ready, and know what, and when you will use it.
  • Know your HR or power zones

 

The Warm Up

The warm up itself will generally include a 5-10 min easy roll at T2 or ~50% FTP, then there will be a gradual increase in intensity for short intervals, with rests in between. (These need to reach race intensity (T4 or 100%+ of FTP)). Then a ~5min easing down before race time. I like to use high cadences in the warm up, so I’m using my cardiovascular system in preference to just raw power. I know I’m generalising here, but you get the idea! This is where I like to remind people that when you are fit enough to compete in these type events, you won’t burn yourself out! So don’t be tentative and really hit out in the hard intervals! You’ll be OK, you really will, you are all really fit and you will easily recover and manage these events, so when the heat is on (and it will be) you’ll be ready for it!

 

Before we get into some specific work outs, some people will even suggest a protocol that includes a warm up ride the day before! This could include a ~60min ride with 10-15min at 85% of FTP (high T3), and a couple efforts for 3min at 115% FTP (high T4 /T5). This may be a bit excessive for most of us, but some sort of ride the day before is probably a good idea. 

 

Examples 

Here are two suggested warm up sessions but they can be individualised and don’t take them as gospel:   

Time Power Cadence OR Time HR Zone Cadence
5min 50% FTP 80-90RPM 5min T2 80-90RPM
5min 60% FTP 80-90RPM 4min Low T3 100RPM
2min 75% FTP 90RPM 3min High T3 100RPM
1min 80% FTP 95RPM 2min Low T4 100RPM
1min 90% FTP 100RPM 1min High T4 100+ RPM
2min 50% FTP 90RPM 2min T2 80 RPM
1.5min 80%FTP 90RPM 4min T3 80-90RPM
1min Easy 3min T4 90RPM
1.5min 90% FTP 90RPM 1min High T4 90RPM
1min Easy
1.5min 100% FTP 90-100RPM 3min T2 80 RPM
1min Easy 2min T3 80-90RPM
1.5min 105% FTP 90-100RPM 1min T4 100RPM
1min Easy 1min T4-T5 100RPM
1min 110% FTP 90-100RPM
5min Easy 5min T2 80 RPM
Total Time = 32min Total Time = 37min

 

Or try this one, it’s a bit different: 

Time Power HR Zone
7min 50% FTP T2
8min 85% FTP
2.5min 50% FTP T2
1min 100% FTP T4
5min 50% FTP T2
5 x (10 sec sprints
20 sec recovery)
150% FTP T5
50% FTP T2
*These are done until racing HR is reached so it could take more than 5 repeats
5min 50% FTP T2
Total Time = 31min

Can you see a recurring theme here? The short intensity efforts build until you are touching your racing HR or power.

 

So you thought the TT was enough fun in itself! Ha! Now you know that the suffering doesn’t stop there, or more precisely, doesn’t start there! What you need to practice now is how to “dose your effort”, so that you get the most out of yourself and completely empty the tank by the time you cross that finish line! But that would take another article……………………….:)

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