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Form & Fitness Q & AGot a question about fitness, training, recovery from injury or a related subject? Drop us a line at fitness@cyclingnews.com. Please include as much information about yourself as possible, including your age, sex, and type of racing or riding. Due to the volume of questions we receive, we regret that we are unable to answer them all.
Back problems Back problemsI've always had right hand lower back pain when racing, sometimes it's not too bad, other times I've had to curl up in a ball on the floor until the pain lessens after a hard race. People have told me that I ride with my right shoulder lower than the left. When I'm on the bike and look straight down at the frame, the top tube is over to the left of the downtube. I tried weight training over the winter, concentrating on core muscles, particularly those on the right hand side to try to correct the problem. When I'm on the bike I make a point of trying to hold myself upright and not off to one side. However, I just did my first two races of the season, a one hour criterium and an 2 hour circuit race, and the back pain was still there, even though they're relatively short races, and I didn't ride them particularly hard. I'm a male 2nd category rider, age 36, 73kg, 184cm, and I typically ride 80-120k road races. I ride a frame with a 57cm top tube and 120mm stem. I did try a 110mm stem year before last, and this made the back pain worse, so I'm thinking of trying a 130mm stem. Any advice that you can give would be much appreciated. Simon Steve Hogg replies:
Skiing and heart rateI ski (alpine, aka downhill) 4 days a week combined with my regular workouts on the bike. For years I've noticed I'm blown after a big ski session. I wore my HRM yesterday for the heck of it and noticed by the time I get to the chair at the bottom my HR is at my LT. My runs are non-stop top to bottom which takes around 3 minutes haulin' ass, with a 7 minute high speed quad chair ride. Should this count as high intensity days in my journal? 3 X 7's? Paul Scott Saifer replies:
Diet envyI constantly look at riders profiles with weight / height information and am amazed by the figures. I would love to see a profile of some varying size riders and there actual diets to give a better idea of how they do it. I am 187 cm, so probably classed as way to big to cycle competitively but some of the weights I see for some my size leaves me jealous. I have tried all types of diets and a Dietician. I would be interested in portion sizes etc as an interest, as we all know they do a lot more kilometres than the average rider Can you help. Paul Scott Saifer replies:
Handling skillsI am desirous of some situation-specific extreme handling skills-drills and guidance as to how some pros are able to avoid injury by righting their bikes or minimizing impacts. For example, how to pull out of a front/rear wheel slide; how to fall without breaking bones (falling to the left/right or over the bars). I've done some casual tumbling (tuck and roll with no bike involved) and that has helped both in RR and XC but I'm sure there's more to safety than the tuck. Gale Scott Saifer replies:
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