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Critical power, work capacity, and recovery characteristics of team-pursuit cyclists

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posted on 2023-04-18, 12:45 authored by Charles F. Pugh, C. Martyn Beaven, Richard FergusonRichard Ferguson, Matthew W. Driller, Craig D. Palmer, Carl D. Paton

Purpose: Leading a 4-km team pursuit (TP) requires high-intensity efforts above critical power (CP) that deplete riders' finite work capacity (W'), whereas riders following in the aerodynamic draft may experience some recovery due to reduced power demands. This study aimed to determine how rider ability and CP and W' measures impact TP performance and the extent to which W' can reconstitute during recovery positions in a TP race. 

Methods: Three TP teams, each consisting of 4 males, completed individual performance tests to determine their CP and W'. Teams were classified based on their performance level as international (INT), national (NAT), or regional (REG). Each team performed a TP on an indoor velodrome (INT: 3:49.9; NAT: 3:56.7; and REG: 4:05.4; min:s). Ergometer-based TP simulations with an open-ended interval to exhaustion were performed to measure individual ability to reconstitute W' at 25 to 100 W below CP. 

Results: The INT team possessed higher CP (407 [4] W) than both NAT (381 [13] W) and REG (376 [15] W) (P < .05), whereas W' was similar between teams (INT: 27.2 [2.8] kJ; NAT: 29.3 [2.4] kJ; and REG: 28.8 [1.6] kJ; P > .05). The INT team expended 104% (5%) of their initial W' during the TP and possessed faster rates of recovery than NAT and REG at 25 and 50 W below CP (P < .05). 

Conclusions: The CP and rate of W' reconstitution have a greater impact on TP performance than W' magnitude and can differentiate TP performance level.

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance

Volume

17

Issue

11

Pages

1606 - 1613

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Human Kinetics, Inc.

Publisher statement

Accepted author manuscript version reprinted, by permission, from International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance, 2023, 17 (11): 1606-1613, https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2021-0478. © Human Kinetics, Inc.

Publication date

2022-09-06

Copyright date

2022

ISSN

1555-0265

eISSN

1555-0273

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Richard Ferguson. Deposit date: 13 March 2023

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