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Jeff Lenosky has put together a 23-year-long career that includes three national championships and a Guinness World Record for highest bunny hop on a mountain bike.
Jeff Lenosky has put together a 23-year-long career that includes three national championships and a Guinness World Record for highest bunny hop on a mountain bike. (Photo: JVargus)

Jeff Lenosky’s World-Record-Breaking Training Tips

Jeff Lenosky travels the U.S. knocking out mountain biking's toughest trails. Here's how he stays fit.

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Jeff Lenosky has put together a 23-year-long career that includes three national championships and a Guinness World Record for highest bunny hop on a mountain bike.
(Photo: JVargus)

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Farlow Gap is one of the most notoriously difficult mountain-bike trails in North Carolina鈥檚 Pisgah National Forest. Riddled with boulder-heavy creek crossings, big drops, steep switchbacks, and the occasional 34 percent grade, it鈥檚 a boogeyman that gives mountain bikers nightmares. But not Jeff Lenosky. The 48-year-old pro mountain biker like a beginner flow trail at a county park, picking apart the technical bits with a smooth combo of track stands and bunny hops that make him look weightless.

But then, that鈥檚 what Jeff Lenosky does. With a start as a听trials rider,biking听over picnic tables and pickup trucks, he has put together a 23-year career that includes three national championships and a Guinness World Record for highest bunny hop on a mountain bike (45.5 inches, or roughly the height of an average four-year-old). Now, instead of competing, Lenosky travels around the country, knocking out mountain biking鈥檚 toughest trails for a popular YouTube series called听. With each ride and video, he brings his physical, trials-style riding to technical singletrack that takes him deep into the backcountry.

鈥淚 always liked trying to ride my bike over stuff, and when I first started, trials was the only place I could really do that,鈥 Lenosky says from his home in New Jersey. That desire to 鈥渞ide over stuff鈥 has translated well to the technical riding he鈥檚 now known for. It鈥檚 a graceful听but physical style that demands incredible balance and strength. 鈥淚鈥檝e always loved challenging myself on a technical line. Now I can do it ten听miles into the woods instead of just in the parking lot,鈥 he听says.

Lenosky started mountain biking during听his senior year of high school. He grew up skateboarding in New Jersey, trying to skate obstacles like stairs, rails, and trash cans, which helped hone his street-skate sensibility to biking. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 really interested in a 15-mile cross-country ride back then,鈥 Lenosky says. When he was younger, Lenosky only trained while riding his bike, spending day after day sessioning, riding听the same obstacles repeatedly. But听as he鈥檚 gotten older, he鈥檚 gravitated toward more gym-centric exercises. 鈥淚 realized years ago that the trail can鈥檛 be the hardest thing you do,鈥 Lenosky says. 鈥淚t can鈥檛 be your hardest effort.听So I鈥檓 in the gym lifting weights to build the strength I need on the trail.鈥

While most cyclists focus their energy on building endurance, training their legs and lungs, Lenosky says the key to riding technical terrain is building strength in the hips. 鈥淪o many movements on the bike engage your core and require a hip pop. You have to keep your lower back and hips strong,鈥 he says.听

Watch Lenosky demonstrate or the punch,听an alternative to the bunny hop that allows mountain bikers to climb stairs or boulders, and you鈥檒l see how important these areas are while you鈥檙e navigating technical terrain. Both moves require the hip pop, in which听the body compresses and provides power that hinges from the hips. To re-create this necessary movement, Lenosky focuses on exercises in the gym that build full-body strength, like the rowing machine鈥擫enosky says rowing for 15 minutes is essentially like doing 50,000 bunny hops in a row. He also focuses on kettlebell swings and deadlifts, which help develop听strength from the knees to the shoulders, as well as听the box jump, a key plyometric drill that re-creates the compression and explosion needed when mountain biking, whether you鈥檙e climbing over roots, hitting kickers, or launching drops.

As for bike drills that help improve technical skills, Lenosky takes it back to the basics. 鈥淭rack stands,鈥 he听says, referring to the move where a rider is balanced on the bike without moving. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the foundation of technical riding. And once you get track stands down, try small wheel pivots, where you lift and move your back wheel to the left听and then to the right,听while holding the track stand. Then work on moving the front tire.鈥

If you have that balance, Lenosky says, you can come to a standstill on the trail, and if you lose momentum and start to wobble, you鈥檒l have the skills to give you a few more seconds to regroup and keep moving. Being able to hold that track stand, and move from it, also听comes down to having strong hips and a strong lower back.

But training in the gym and practicing bike drills will only get you so far. If you truly want to master technical terrain,听Lenosky听says, you have to spend more time riding technical terrain, over and over and over. 鈥淲hen riders suck at riding technical stuff, it鈥檚 because they don鈥檛 take the time to session things,鈥 he听says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 take the time to practice something on the trail in a group ride. You have to play and have fun. Go out one time a week and just play on your bike, hop some curbs, find a tabletop, ride a skinny. Don鈥檛 worry about your heart rate or calories. Forget about Strava. Just go play.鈥

Lenosky will spend the rest of 2019 hitting the biggest mountain-bike festivals in the country with ,leading group rides on local trails. The idea is to stop and session different tech zones with the locals to听help听them conquer their own boogeyman trails. 鈥淵ou can never master everything,鈥 Lenosky says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what keeps mountain biking interesting after 23 years. I travel around enough to know that there鈥檚 always new sections of trail that people say are unrideable. I love finding these spots and trying to figure them out.鈥

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