The Final Corner

August 19, 2009

kirsten

Aussie Ben Kirstin comes first at the US Crit Championships.  Photo courtesy of Velonews – Casey B. Gibson

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I’m not a good sprinter.  It’s one skill that I’ve always wanted more than anything and haven’t been able to acquire.  This basic fact makes me watch and analyze the great sprinters to the Nth degree.  I always get sucked into buying those cycling magazines with the headlines on the cover “Sprint Like Cav”, or “Robbie’s Sprint Tips”.  All they usually say is to stay relaxed, keep at the front, and go like stink in the final 200m.  Absolutely nothing tangible in there!  These guys are so good that they barely have to think about what they’re doing. They just do it…and win.

One sprint secret that will make you more successful is this:  the final sprint isn’t in the last 200m, the real sprint is for the final corner.  I’m not saying that you go 100% into that final corner and then lose control and completely wipe everyone out. What I’m saying is that you need to do everything within your ability to get into that final corner in the top 3-6 or so places (depending on how far the finish is. Most crits are about 200-300m from the final corner).  You positioning going into that final corner will determine your success more than your ability to sprint the final 200m will.  If you arrive at the final corner in 1st position, it’s too far up.  If you come through in 10th position, it’s too far back.  Not many sprinters will win from over 10 bike lengths back over 200m – no matter how good you are (we’ve all seen McEwen do it though).

Everyone is fighting for these top places and it won’t be easy.  The pace will be ON and you’ll probably use precious energy to get there.  Getting through a tight pack in the middle of a race is one thing, but working your way to the front of a charging train of sprinters is another.   Watch out for the “swarms ” passing you on your left or right sides and jump in on them.  This way you won’t need to work your way to the front all by yourself.  Sprinters have great peripheral awareness and either see or sense riders coming up on their sides.

Once you get that good position into that final corner it’s all yours.  All you need to do is deliver everything you’ve got for 20 more seconds over the final 200m and you’re almost guaranteed finish with a decent placing.   Not to mention you won’t get caught up in the crashes.

If interested, here are a few more sprinter’s tricks that I’ve picked up from those sly foxes. If any of you sprinters are reading and have anything else to offer, I’m all ears.

Common Sprinting Mistakes

Old Sprinter’s Trick – Drop The Wheel

Cav’s Perfect Sprint Technique

  • Spinners are Winners
    Develop your ability to sustain a high cadence and learn to spin smooth circles. This allows you to be able to use an easier gear to quickly accelerate to any late surges and/or grab a good wheel. Sprinting is as much about finesse as it is about power, he who can spin the same gear fastest wins and power lets you spin bigger gears to maximise top end speed.
  • Pete
    My reading at the time was that Garmin took the inside line, and didn't give themselves a good angle out of the final corner for enough speed, creating the gap. Watching the video again, perhaps their line was fine, and they just didn't have the legs?
  • I think Garmin had to put on their breaks. You can see how quickly Columbia creates the gap when coming around the corner. I doubt they could pedal that much faster.

    Looks to me like Garmin were trying to come underneath (mistake #5 in http://www.cyclingtipsblog.com/2009/04/common-s...)
  • Pete
    Yeah, I think you might be right. Is this a result of taking the totally wrong line? They don't look like they are taking that bad a line in the replay, but maybe the small difference (compared to Columbia) was enough to require braking.
  • Pete
    Not totally related, but I can't get the Champs-Élysées stage of the last Tour de France out of my head! That stage really was decided in the last corner, courtesy of the Garmin boys…
  • Good call Pete. Renshaw and Cav completely edge out Garmin, create a gap, and take the win. Exciting stuff!

    See 1:30 onwards in vid below...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oB2zbf4vh1U&feat...
  • Leigh
    Its better to aim to finish your sprint 5 metres past the actual finish line so you keep going and don't fade @ the line.

    Big gear doesn't always mean the fastest gear, spinning madly can sometimes be sustained longer, than pounding a massive gear, especially up an incline or into a headwind. Best to practice this though. The track is a good place.
  • Way back before we had indexed gears, clipless pedals and even probably lycra (I think it was some horrible synthetic stuff or wool if you could find it) I was an average bike rider. The biggest thing I learnt from my first year to second in racing opens was that you would never win a bunch sprint if you weren't near the front, corners or not. Coming to the finish, 4th to say 6th or 7th wheel was where you needed to be, keeping an eye out for any bolters. Any further back you might place, but that'd be it. Any further up and you'd end up leading out or would miss the big jump from behind.

    But hey, was average then and below average now so ymmv.
  • Ritch
    The best position depends very much on the course. A good idea is to do a thorough recon of the last couple of corners to figure it out. The course at Eastern Creek in Sydney is/was on a dragstrip with the best part of 800m to the line from the last corner - 2nd or 3rd wheel around the corner is not the place to be. Another good idea is to talk to others that know the course - they should know the best spots.

    Third, look for which way the wind is blowing: a headwind will lengthen the sprint. If it's a cross wind, ride to the leeward side of the course to make sure no one gets a draft and that they can't sneak up the side.

    Finally, if you're a lowly club racer like me, use a bit of commonsense. Aggressive riding for position is fine to a point, but a weekly club race isn't really worth going to hospital for. Sometimes it just isn't your day, there's no point taking a really silly risk to get position.
  • Jeff
    Good advice Hollywade, *cough*....

    The other thing you might mention about getting to the last corner first, or at least in the top few riders and at top speed, is that your fellow sprinters can't pinch you off into the curb. Nothing sucks worse than being too patient and then having to hit the brakes and go the long way round.

    I disagree with some comments you've made about shifting in a sprint. Unless it's starting really slow, the time to shift is just before you commit. Cadence is key; shifting will usually leave you overgeared.
  • Thanks Jeff. Great advice from a guy who has won more sprints than Cav. I"ll take it on board. I should have started out with "a great sprinter friend once taught me..." as I got this from you.

    Any advice you have on other topics I'll dismiss as being rubbish though ;-)
  • As you implicitly point out Rich I should have qualified this advice as being geared slightly more towards the intermediate/advanced bike racer. I'd hate to see E graders having pile-ups in the final corner because of this. Take only as much risk as you can handle at your skill level (which is realistically 50% of what we all think it is!)
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