We all know that taking time to rest and adapt to training is crucial to any progression on the bike. But what should rest look like? And, just as important, how often should we be doing it?
The answers come down mostly to individual experience and there will be a lot of variation. However, there are certainly some sensible rules of thumb we can employ.
Why rest anyway?
Training is a process of breaking your body down, and rebuilding it – the new model of yourself being closer and closer to the optimum required for the task at hand.
But that new model of yourself can only be realised through rest and recovery, as your body repairs fatigued muscles and replenishes the glycogen stores that will enable you to ride hard again another day.
Matt Bottrill is a former National 25-mile champion, and these days he runs a successful racing team and is the owner of Matt Bottrill Performance Coaching. He tells Cycling Weekly: “Your body can only absorb so much load.”
How often should we rest?
For most riders, especially at this time of year, when training involves more of a slow build towards the summer months, Bottrill recommends two days off the bike each week.
“If we’re looking at the winter phase a couple of rest days would be sufficient for most people,” he says, but adds that racers might be OK to do more: “If you’re more geared towards performance, you might just want to go for one day.”
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
There are no hard and fast rules around how many days off you should take, he points out, as individual needs vary so much.
“That’s when coaching, or understanding how your own body works, kicks in. Because how one athlete adapts to training is so different to the next,” he says. The key thing is being able to recover sufficiently to be able to make your ‘quality’ days count – those when you are performing intervals or riding hills, for example.
Even if you feel like you could ride every day, the smart advice is not to, says Bottrill.
“It’s not worth it,” he cautions. “What happens is the quality of those sessions, it just starts to dwindle. For the majority of people, you just end up with a flat line in training, ultimately, because your body can only absorb so much. It’s definitely not a smart decision.”
But taking a day off the bike does not mean you have to take a day off, says Bottrill. In fact, he says, many would benefit from some mobility work and, if you’re a bit older, some strength work too.
“A rest day doesn’t necessarily mean you have to take the full day off,” he says. “Some of that should build in some mobility work, stretching… I think a lot of people would benefit from that. It’s about functional movement. That will only enhance performance really.
“Especially for a lot of older athletes, once you’re into your forties, you’re better off replacing sessions with some form of strength training than having a day off,” he adds. “You’re getting the most bang for your buck that way.”
When to take an unscheduled rest day
The rest days marked up on your calendar aren’t the only ones you’ll ever need to take though. There will be occasions when you’re tired or run-down that you’re going to be better off taking a duvet day.
“The tell-tale signs are when you wake up and you feel fatigued, a bit sleepy, you need that extra coffee,” Bottrill says. Sometimes all it takes is the first hill or effort on the bike to wake you up. But if your heart rate won’t rise like it usually does, “then you generally know that you’re going to be better off coming home.”
And be careful before you rush back into it the following day, he adds, because that initial day of tiredness could be a sign that you need a few days’ proper rest.
“If you wake up the next morning and you’re still tired, and that’s when you probably need to go, ‘you know what? I’m gonna back off. Let’s take, three days off here,’ right?” he says – whereas doing the opposite could see you end up getting ill.
Don’t be afraid to take the time off you need, advises Bottrill, and once you’re feeling recovered, be prepared to build back slowly.
He suggests a final “check-in” day with no hard riding, just to make sure your heart rate looks back to normal, and then a slow build back up to full speed, for which you should allow twice the time you were ill for.
“If you go out and smash it the first day after you’ve recovered, it’s going to come back and bite you,” he says, but adds: “Training is not about one day – it’s the consistency that’s key.”