Outside Magazine, January 2013
Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Secrets of the Seriously E-Fit

Do you have a healthy social-fitness life? It all depends on your motivation.

By:
Baker Baker HIll Climb Biking Cycle Cycling Hill Climb Mount Baker Road Bike Road Race
The Mount Baker Hill Climb road race. Photo: Garrett Grove

Last January, Matt Carnal, a cycling coach and endurance athlete in Colorado Springs, logged an astonishing 3,347 miles on his bike in 26 days. And while the distance alone is impressive (128 miles per day!), what’s more intriguing is that his primary motivation was to claim bragging rights in a month-long online competition, Strava’s Ride Base Mile Blast. “I would have been training anyway, but not like that,” admits Carnal. “Strava gave me the motivation to really push myself and see what I could do.”

Tens of millions of people now share their workout data on social-fitness platforms like Strava, MapMyRide, Nike+, and Endomondo. And for good reason. A Michigan State study last year showed that the presence of a virtual cycling partner can boost the likelihood that you’ll stick with your training program—by as much as 100 percent. You also get accountability, since your workouts are viewed by friends. And with leaderboards like the ones created by Strava and Nike+, you have constant fuel for your competitive fire. No need to wait for organized races; now you can compete whenever you want.

There are downsides. Turning every training ride or weekday run into a race can distract you from the slow-build periodization that coaches recommend for achieving peak performance. “Too much Strava chasing inevitably turns recovery rides into hammer sessions, which can blow a training plan,” says Lynda Wallenfels, who coaches some of the country’s top endurance mountain bikers. “But used properly, these sites are great for motivation and amusement—two positive things for an athlete logging long, hard hours.”

PLAY NICELY
Apps like Strava come with unspoken etiquette. In short: don't be an ass.

Obey traffic laws: If you really think it's worth risking trail closures or car or pedestrian accidents to set a virtual record, go to EntitlementIssues.com, not Strava.

Annotate dodgy rides: Use detailed notes, or, better yet, make the rides private. Nobody wants to repeat your 10-mile hike-a-bike to 13,000 feet.

Facebook when it matters: It's OK to share your ride if: (1) it's actually impressive, and (2) you do so infrequently—think quarterly. Truthfully, nobody cares all that much.

Don't goad: If you're that desperate to compete against someone, pay for a real race—or an MMA session.

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