2manyoranges
Old School Grand Master
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Taking the Retrobike date cutoffs, my pre-1997 body is not in quite the same shape as my son’s post-1998 (his was founded in 2005) body. He’s been scouted by sports organisations so he is no Slouch. He can roast me in singletrack and barbecues me in the pump track and jump park. But there are two things I notice, both consistent with sports psychology research on skills decay….
The first is the role of stamina. Boy can I keep going, when youngsters blast off and then fade - round about out at the 15 mile mark, I see them slacken off and I start to hear ‘hang on, slow down a bit’ rather than ‘keep up….’. It’s probable that this is a combination of physiological and psychological factors - heart and lung physiology does change if you have exercised and trained hard for forty years. And then you just know better to pace yourself through a longer challenge, such as a six hour ride in the hills.
The second is skill, and ‘remembered tactics’. My son acquires a new skill incredibly quickly. But I notice that I sometimes can gain on him in singletrack through much better line choice and micro routing. Only one things worries me about this. He’s beginning to accumulate that store of technique regarding wise choice in gear ratio, braking technique, and other implicit skills which I have deep in my pocket.
What I do know is this - at the current 63 years versus 16 years I can still pull ground on various points on a ride;.…a fantasy thought….if my current 63 year performance was up against him at 63 he would probably be utterly impossible to catch.
The first is the role of stamina. Boy can I keep going, when youngsters blast off and then fade - round about out at the 15 mile mark, I see them slacken off and I start to hear ‘hang on, slow down a bit’ rather than ‘keep up….’. It’s probable that this is a combination of physiological and psychological factors - heart and lung physiology does change if you have exercised and trained hard for forty years. And then you just know better to pace yourself through a longer challenge, such as a six hour ride in the hills.
The second is skill, and ‘remembered tactics’. My son acquires a new skill incredibly quickly. But I notice that I sometimes can gain on him in singletrack through much better line choice and micro routing. Only one things worries me about this. He’s beginning to accumulate that store of technique regarding wise choice in gear ratio, braking technique, and other implicit skills which I have deep in my pocket.
What I do know is this - at the current 63 years versus 16 years I can still pull ground on various points on a ride;.…a fantasy thought….if my current 63 year performance was up against him at 63 he would probably be utterly impossible to catch.
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