Training is soul crushing. I avoid it like a hot-tub norovirus. Don鈥檛 get me wrong, I like riding bikes (mountain, gravel, and road) and skiing (Nordic, backcountry, and alpine) and generally consider myself a fit guy. But the few times I鈥檝e tried to actually train for cycling, with all the rigmarole of power meters, rigid scheduling, midweek intervals, and back-to-back five-hour weekend rides, I burned out on the drudgery by week two and quickly reverted to my status quo: having fun hammering with friends.
The problem with choosing recreation over training, though, is that the body adapts to routine stress (exercise) and quickly finds homeostasis. Your fitness flatlines. And when it鈥檚 time to compete in an event like a 50-mile summer mountain bike race, fall gravel grinder, or even a beery Saturday cyclocross jamboree with snow threatening, you won鈥檛 live up to your potential. Riding ain鈥檛 racing.
To get fast, most coaches will tell you, one must embrace a periodized plan of polarization, meaning a schedule (the periodized part) in which an athlete mixes high-volume work at low intensity and high-intensity work at low volume (polarization) to hit peak form on race day. A polarized week might involve two extended weekend rides at a steady pace, plus two to three high-intensity midweek workouts. There鈥檚 no arguing that polarized training works鈥攊t鈥檚 a training staple for Tour de France cyclists. But even for recreational cyclists, it can pretty quickly suck up 16 to 20 hours in a week, which is why I鈥檝e never been able to commit to such a plan.
Luckily, though, there is another way to ramp up your fitness for an endurance event. It鈥檚 called sweet spot training, and it involves focusing your effort on moderately hard weekend riding with just a dash of threshold (race pace) work and moderate efforts thrown in midweek. Which happen to be the things that give me cycling joy. If I could somehow make that work in a periodized schedule, there was hope that I could get faster without boring myself into a roadside ditch or kicking myself for my half-assed attempts at intervals.
Sweet spot training dates back to 2004, when Frank Overton, of Boulder, Colorado鈥揵ased , was just breaking into the business. At the same time, power meters, which gauge how much work you鈥檙e doing on a bike far more accurately than a heart rate monitor or perceived exertion, were becoming widely available.
As an early test, Overton worked with famed exercise physiologist to graph a few months of power meter data from Overton and a dozen other athletes. The result was that offered a tantalizing training secret: Focus the bulk of your workouts in the middle of the bell curve, and you鈥檒l maximize your efficiency on the bike and recover faster than you do from high-intensity intervals. Coggan drew a circle on the graph: the sweet spot.
If you鈥檙e climbing with friends and going hard but not trying to attack, you鈥檙e probably sweet-spotting.
Intrigued, Overton built himself a periodization schedule heavy on moderately hard riding backed by attainable threshold intervals (those sustained efforts just beyond the sweet spot curve) and promptly earned his best placement ever at the 2005 Colorado State Time Trial Championships. 鈥淚 produced the most power of my entire life,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 just smashed my A race.鈥
In the years since, Overton has incorporated sweet spot training into thousands of personalized plans and web-based programs for pro and recreational athletes with similar success. You still bake in the rest days and recovery blocks of a periodized plan, but the activity better emulates what most workaday athletes do for fun and with time commitments that are attainable. So I set out to see if it could work for me, too.
Late last summer, with no direction, I started incorporating my own interpretation of sweet spot training into my ride schedule. For me that meant that on weekends, instead of riding for six hours with my heart rate around 135, I went out and climbed for three hours with my heart rate at 155. I did this for about five weeks; by September, I was riding noticeably faster.
This summer, I decided to see what a formal plan could do for me and signed up for one of FasCat鈥檚 six-week, $50 web-based training programs. It would culminate with me racing the Firecracker 50 in Breckenridge, Colorado. I鈥檇 raced the Firecracker a few years earlier and finished with a respectable time in my category, but I was sure I could improve my result with some structured training. FasCat鈥檚 description of the plan promised that I would soon be 鈥渟weet spotting up the wahzoo.鈥

My six-week plan included eight to 12 hours a week of riding鈥攁s opposed to training鈥攚ith one big week where I bumped up to 16 hours. (I typically ride eight to 12 hours a week anyway.) The big week involved a masochistic six-hour mountain bike ride, plus some extra-credit spinning with my son, but the rest of the plan was easily incorporated into my normal ride schedule. To compare: An equivalent big week on a polarized regimen would require 16 to 20 hours of riding.
Before we could find my sweet spot zone, which differs for everyone, Overton needed some data. I was tasked with performing what鈥檚 called a functional threshold power (FTP) test, which is exercise jargon for going as hard as you can sustain for 20 minutes up a steady climb.
Plugging that heart rate information and the power data from the meter on my bike into a FasCat spreadsheet told me what I already knew from years of riding with a heart rate monitor: My sweet spot target was between 148 and 164 bpm, 90 to 98聽percent of my FTP. During my first summer of self-directed sweet spot training, I鈥檇 guesstimated it at 155 bpm, which, as an aging athlete, is exactly 90 percent of my max heart rate. My target wattage was in the 193 to 226 range, which is so tiny compared to bigger, stronger professional riders that I鈥檓 embarrassed to even type it. Anyway, that was the last time during the six-week program that I paid a whiff of attention to my power rankings.
Moderately hard riding is sweet spot riding. The pace is harder than an easy tempo, a speed you could sustain for hours while chatting on and off, but not as hard as the upper reaches of threshold, where talking is nearly impossible. At the sweet spot, you鈥檙e audibly breathing but not gasping. Your tolerance of suffering may vary, but on a perceived exertion scale of one to ten, I鈥檇 put my sweet spot zone in the five-to-seven range. (Hard-ass Overton says it鈥檚 from four to six.) If you鈥檙e climbing with friends and going hard but not trying to attack, you鈥檙e probably sweet-spotting. And in fact, group rides are rife with sweet spot efforts鈥攅specially if you move to the front and pull the peloton into the wind if the pace feels too easy.
By week three of the sweet spot program, the benefits were kicking in, and I was riding comfortably with faster groups.
All of which is why FasCat鈥檚 six-week plan worked so well for me: I just incorporated the prescribed efforts into my weekly rides. A typical sweet spot week involved one three-to-four-hour ride on the weekend, eventually riding in the sweet spot half the time. Then I did three 90-minute rides midweek. One focused on threshold work鈥攅ssentially race pace. A second outing would involve what are called tempo bursts鈥攃ranking up the speed for 30 seconds while riding in that chatty tempo zone. And a third outing might require 20 to 40 minutes of sweet spot efforts. Throw in an optional recovery ride, where you鈥檙e simply spinning the pedals at an all-day pace, and call it nine to ten hours all together. And yes, those periodized rest days are baked in. For the weekend ride, I just rode with faster friends to stay in the sweet spot.
By week three of the sweet spot program, the benefits were kicking in, and I was riding comfortably with faster groups. Ten days before the Firecracker, I entered a 17-mile mountain bike race at altitude and surprised myself by nabbing third on the expert podium in my age group. A recovery block just prior to the Firecracker had me feeling well-rested and superhuman on the weekly club ride. And then came the big race.
Overton had promised that riding at the sweet spot gives you a second advantage over polarization: Because it simulates racing, going moderately hard better prepares your legs for the sustained effort of a long mountain bike race. When I raced the Firecracker two years prior, I let the lead group roll away from me as I found my comfortable pace. But this year, I had the legs to hold their wheels until we entered the singletrack. Looking around, I鈥檇 already improved my positioning by five places over the previous year. Now I just needed to hold on and settle into the top end of my sweet spot pace.
And then, rocketing down a fire road strewn with talus, I exploded the air out of my rear tire and somehow broke the valve stem. An epic flat-tire scenario ensued, which eventually saw me pull out of the race. But I had another test coming just five weeks later: the Steamboat Stinger. The race is 53 miles long (90 percent of it on singletrack) with 7,000 feet of climbing. Despite the expert coaching, I鈥檓 not really much of a racer. I screwed up the start and got behind a line of slower riders I couldn鈥檛 pass. But even after losing my mojo鈥擨 race better when I have rabbits in sight and back off when I鈥檓 isolated鈥擨 took ten minutes off my 2015 time and finished feeling kind of fresh.
Meaning I went easier but finished faster鈥攚hich is the ultimate testament to a conditioning program.
Find Your Sweet Spot
Want to guesstimate your sweet spot zone without a power meter? A dedicated heart rate monitor or even a smartwatch with heart rate at the wrist will do. First, find a gradual climb without any dips in the road to let you recover. Warm up as you would for a race, and then hit your timer and ride for 20 minutes at your maximum sustained effort. If you鈥檙e an extrinsically motivated slacker like I am, ask a faster friend to pace you, staying a few bike lengths in front so you don鈥檛 cheat in their draft. Your average heart rate after 20 minutes is your functional threshold. That鈥檚 the extreme top end of your sweet spot zone. Multiply it by 90 percent to find the bottom of the zone. After six weeks, retest yourself to fine-tune.
Sweet Spot for Cyclocrossers
Since cyclocross races are relatively short, 90-minute efforts, many casual racers assume you don鈥檛 need to train much for distance. Overton, who also specializes in cross, will dissuade you of that opinion. In summer, his cross athletes sweet spot train for six, 12, or 18 weeks before he redirects them to shorter and more intense efforts. 鈥淭he trick,鈥 Overton says, 鈥渋s to leave time post鈥搒weet spot training to allow for cross-specific intervals鈥攗sually that鈥檚 three to six weeks.鈥
Trick Yourself into Training
My 鈥淪ix Weeks to the Sweet Spot鈥 plan was tailored exclusively to the demands of a largely solitary and prolonged effort like a 50-mile mountain bike race or a long time trial, where you鈥檙e actively avoiding redlining and trying not to surge. But road races, cyclocross, and sub-three-hour mountain bike races require more top-end power to chase down breakaways, get the hole shot, or pass on that final ramp before the downhill. In such cases, adding high-intensity interval training to top off your sweet spot form is a must. FasCat coaching with a plan. Can鈥檛 make yourself do intervals solo? On your next group ride, let yourself drift off the back of the peloton and then chase back on. Do this six times鈥攐r until you get spit out.