2012
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2012.711487
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Mechanical work and physiological responses to simulated cross country mountain bike racing

Abstract: The purpose was to assess the mechanical work and physiological responses to cross country mountain bike racing. Participants (n = 7) cycled on a cross country track at race speed whilst VO2, power, cadence, speed, and geographical position were recorded. Mean power during the designated start section (68.5 ± 5.5 s) was 481 ± 122 W, incurring an O2 deficit of 1.58 ± 0.67 L - min(-1) highlighting a significant initial anaerobic (32.4 ± 10.2%) contribution. Complete lap data produced mean (243 ± 12 W) and normal… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Concomitantly, the lower RERpost in group MC (approaching a value of 1) suggests the greater use of Laas a substrate in oxidative metabolism (Emhoff et al 2013, Gladden 2008, Robergs et al 2004 and also improvements in the shuttling of lactate at the intracellular and extracellular level so to be utilized via oxidation or converted to glucose and glycogen (Brooks 2000, Brooks 2007. It is therefore possible that the specificity of cross-country MTB training and competition can enhance lactate production and oxidization during exercise and improve post-exercise lactate transport capacity from muscle to blood (Impellizzeri et al 2002, MacDermid andStannard 2012). Conversely, the longer endurance steady-state activity typical of road cycling could be less conducive to lactate production and efficient disposal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Concomitantly, the lower RERpost in group MC (approaching a value of 1) suggests the greater use of Laas a substrate in oxidative metabolism (Emhoff et al 2013, Gladden 2008, Robergs et al 2004 and also improvements in the shuttling of lactate at the intracellular and extracellular level so to be utilized via oxidation or converted to glucose and glycogen (Brooks 2000, Brooks 2007. It is therefore possible that the specificity of cross-country MTB training and competition can enhance lactate production and oxidization during exercise and improve post-exercise lactate transport capacity from muscle to blood (Impellizzeri et al 2002, MacDermid andStannard 2012). Conversely, the longer endurance steady-state activity typical of road cycling could be less conducive to lactate production and efficient disposal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, the specificity of each cycling discipline suggests differences in those physiological and performance characteristics that relate to performance. MacDermid and Stannard (2012) quantified the power output of a simulated mountain biking race to find that highest power was produced immediately after the start and during uphill segments, incurring a significant oxygen deficit. Therefore, the high-intensity yet intermittent nature of MTB racing has led to suggestions that anaerobic metabolism is just as an important determinant of performance as aerobic metabolism (Impellizzeri and Marcora 2007, MacDermid and Stannard 2012, Stapelfeldt et al 2004.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Furthermore, we did not include mountain bikers in our comparisons. Mountain bikers tend to opt for reduced pedaling cadence [32] and longer crank arms [33] than road cyclists, which would require larger muscle force per pedal stroke. On the other hand, track cyclists use higher pedaling cadence [34] and sustain larger power outputs which may lead, in turn, to large force produc-tion per pedal stroke.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Un-typical of other endurance sports starting on mass, XCO-MTB requires maximal effort from the start to gain or hold positional advantage so as not to impair overall performance. As such initial field based research identifies that 82% of total race time corresponds to power outputs greater than the Lactate Threshold (LT) equating to 90% HR max and 84% VO 2max .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%