Alpine Cols

2.1K posts

Alpine Cols banner
Alpine Cols

Alpine Cols

@AlpineCols

Coaching for road cycling; training camps in the French Alps. Official coaching & training partner to the Marmotte & Tour du Mont Blanc. Posts by Marvin Faure.

Alps, France Se unió Ekim 2013
187 Siguiendo358 Seguidores
Alan Couzens
Alan Couzens@Alan_Couzens·
If 1.5-2mmol/L feels "too easy" to you... You're not fit enough.
English
9
5
164
25.7K
Alpine Cols
Alpine Cols@AlpineCols·
@Alan_Couzens Well, I’m sitting on my indoor bike riding in Z1. Is that OK? 🤣
English
0
0
1
291
Alan Couzens
Alan Couzens@Alan_Couzens·
If you’re sitting down while scrolling posts about metabolic health… You’re missing the point.
English
14
1
129
10K
Alpine Cols retuiteado
Iñaki de la Parra
Iñaki de la Parra@inaki_delaparra·
Most people get this backwards. I’ve been saying this for years together with @Alan_Couzens and now the GOAT @kilianj puts it in the simplest possible way. 1) First creat work capacity = oxidation, real metabolic engine flexibility 2) Second ensure absorption = gut capacity, “training the gut” 3) Third give opportunity = fuel availability Build capacity first. Complexity comes later. But what most do is the opposite: - They start with the fueling - They move to training the gut - They want to graduate from base and work capacity, skipping the engine development Result? You end up learning to eat more, not to use more. Big intake + small engine = wasted fuel, GI issues, early fatigue. Principle > protocol mtnath.com/energy-expendi…
Iñaki de la Parra tweet media
English
3
6
134
9.2K
Alpine Cols
Alpine Cols@AlpineCols·
@inaki_delaparra Also known as ‘feedforward’: “next time, try this” A coach using this approach sidesteps reactive resistance.
English
1
0
1
46
Iñaki de la Parra
Iñaki de la Parra@inaki_delaparra·
Feedback is part of the problem. Ego, fear and status sit between feedback & learning. Most of times feedback becomes a verdict, not direction, blocking the receptor. Good coaches change the feedback to advise: - Less “How did I do?” - More “What should I do next?” That’s the shift: - From past to future. - From feedback to advice.
English
2
0
8
1.3K
Gordo Byrn
Gordo Byrn@feelthebyrn1·
@AlpineCols The 23% was as an elite - that was after many years of volume The 19% was when I came back in my 50s The 21% was tested in Helsinki after two years of focused training (~700-ish annual hours)
English
1
0
1
105
Gordo Byrn
Gordo Byrn@feelthebyrn1·
Kicking off a multipart series on efficiency and economy on Endurance Essentials. I've always felt there was a paradox between exercise science showing a limited rise in VO2max vs my sports performance rocketing (each time I return to structured training). I have a hunch efficiency and economy explain a good amount of the "gap." Part One starts by defining terms and offering you a case study of how a moderate burn of 1,000 kcal per hour means very different things to athletes with different size engines. Then we move on to using my Gross Efficiency numbers to make a point about its importance... ++ Gross Efficiency There is more going on than a comparison of relative intensity (vs VO2 max). There is the yield, in mechanical work, from the energy we burn. Recall my efficiency has been measured from 19% to 23%. The table below shows what this is worth in power output. At this stage, your mind should be blown. For the same internal burn (1,000 kcal per hour), the range in power output is 221 to 267w.
Gordo Byrn tweet media
English
2
0
22
2.5K
Alpine Cols
Alpine Cols@AlpineCols·
Great post. If you are a 40-something amateur cyclist trying to train like a professional, just stop and THINK for a moment.
Anthony Walsh | Roadman Podcast@Roadman_Podcast

Pro cyclists are optimizing for a career that ends at 35. You're optimizing for... what exactly? I watched one of our group ride get a complete hunger flat (bonk) last Saturday. Not because he lacked fitness. Because he'd been doing fasted morning rides all week, copying some protocol he saw from a WorldTour training camp. He's 47 years old. Works in tech. Has two kids. And he's systematically destroying his health chasing marginal gains (without context) that only matter if you're chasing UCI points. This is everywhere in amateur cycling now. Weekend warriors running pro-level training stress on amateur recovery capacity. Fasted rides. Extreme calorie deficits at the wrong times. Training through illness because "pros push through." Every club has riders doing this. It never ends well. Pro cyclists aren't aiming for health. They're performance machines with expiration dates. Their job is squeezing every watt out of their body before it gives out, then retiring at an age when most of us are just hitting our stride. Hormonal disruption, immune suppression, bone density issues, chronic inflammation - these are features of the pro system, not bugs. The performance is extraordinary. The cost is brutal. And they're getting paid to make that trade. You're not getting paid. So why are you making the same trade? I see this mistake in business constantly. Copies strategies without context doesn't work. Silicon Valley talks about "move fast and break things" - brilliant for a startup racing for market dominance, terrible for a profitable company trying to maintain customer trust. Same principle applies to your cycling. Performance can be downstream of health, but health isn't always downstream of performance. That's the critical asymmetry everyone misses. Build your training on a foundation of health - proper recovery, sustainable stress, adequate nutrition, consistent sleep - and performance follows naturally over time. Do it backwards, chase performance while neglecting health, and you might get faster temporarily. Then you get injured. Or sick. Or burned out. Strava created a culture where riding yourself into the ground is celebrated. Overtraining is a badge of honor. (festive 500) Most riders I know could be faster, healthier, and still riding strong at 60 if they just stopped asking "What would Pogačar do?" and started asking "What serves my actual goals?" PS. I'm building something very special for riders who want to make 2026 their best year ever. The distilled knowledge from 1400 Roadman Podcasts, coaching, nutrition, mindset (it ain't free). Comment "not done yet" and I'll DM you a link. Official launch in January.

English
0
0
0
83
Alpine Cols retuiteado
Bas Van Hooren
Bas Van Hooren@BasVanHooren·
How much energy can the world’s best endurance athletes sustain over long periods? Find our in our new paper: Longitudinal Assessment of Total Daily Energy Expenditure in Professional Cyclists Supports a Maximal Sustainable Metabolic Ceiling More details and link in comment
Bas Van Hooren tweet media
English
4
19
93
21.8K
Iñaki de la Parra
Iñaki de la Parra@inaki_delaparra·
There is no graduation from base work. Stop looking for shortcuts with intensity or fancy sessions. Train consistently, for years. Do that and your health and your performance will go upwards 🔝 All in all sustainable way.
Iñaki de la Parra tweet media
English
11
3
122
6K
Alpine Cols retuiteado
Anthony Walsh | Roadman Podcast
Anthony Walsh | Roadman Podcast@Roadman_Podcast·
This guy tried to convince he doping is good for sport. It's the first time i've lost my cool on the podcast. Aron D'Souza, president of the Enhanced Games, just spent an hour trying to convince me that doping should be legal in sport. He's polished, he's persuasive, and he's got answers for everything. As someone who lives and breathes cycling – a sport that's watched people die from this exact vision – I should have been able to dismantle his arguments immediately. The problem is, he sounds reasonable. And that terrifies me. Because D'Souza isn't some fringe lunatic. He's an Oxford-educated lawyer who's raised serious money and has elite athletes already signed up. He asks compelling questions about fairness, about athlete welfare, about why we accept some technologies but not others. And if you're not paying close attention, you might actually believe him. He's really selling a sanitised version of the same underground doping culture that's destroyed careers, ended lives, and corrupted sport for decades. He calls it "medical supervision" and "transparency," but it's still asking young athletes to chemically modify their bodies to compete. He talks about "choice," but once the Enhanced Games exists, every athlete who wants to see their full potential will face impossible pressure to participate. His economic argument sounds good on paper. Elite swimmers making $30,000 a year is shameful, and he's right about that. But the solution isn't to create a pharmaceutical arms race with million-dollar prizes for whoever's willing to push their body furthest. That's not fixing the problem – it's exploiting it. D'Souza kept comparing performance enhancement to other technological advances. We don't limit surgeons to 1950s techniques, he said. We don't cap engineering progress. But sport isn't surgery or engineering. The entire point of athletic competition is testing human limits within agreed constraints. Remove those constraints and you're not watching sport anymore – you're watching a biochemistry experiment with human subjects. He promised comprehensive health monitoring, professional medical teams, elimination of dangerous self-experimentation. But who's monitoring the monitors? What happens when an athlete's health markers start declining but they're three weeks from a million-dollar payday? What happens when the medical team is employed by the same organisation that profits from record-breaking performances? We've seen this movie before in cycling, and it ended with body bags. The most insidious part of his argument is how he frames the current anti-doping system as bureaucratic and hypocritical. Sure, anti-doping has problems. Yes, there's hypocrisy in what we allow versus what we ban. But the answer to an imperfect system isn't to abandon all limits – it's to fix the system. D'Souza isn't interested in reform. He's interested in profit. And make no mistake, this is about money. He talks about athlete welfare, but he's creating a product for spectators who want to see superhuman performances without caring about the cost. He's banking on our collective inability to look away from a car crash. Faster times, bigger performances, world records tumbling – all while athletes mortgage their long-term health for short-term glory and financial survival. What really bothers me is his vision of "different tiers" of competition coexisting. That's not choice – that's segregation. Within a generation, you'd have "natural" sport as the minor leagues and enhanced sport as the real competition. Every young athlete with Olympic dreams would face a simple calculation: stay clean and stay poor, or enhance and maybe make a living. That's not freedom. That's coercion with extra steps. D'Souza kept asking what we're protecting. Here's my answer: we're protecting the kid who discovers they're talented at cycling and wants to see how far that talent can take them without having to become a chemistry experiment. We're protecting the fundamental idea that sport should test what your body can do, not what your pharmacology team can do. We're protecting athletes from having to choose between their dreams and their health. I left that conversation more convinced than ever that the Enhanced Games is exactly what it sounds like: a game. But the stakes are real athletes' lives, and the house always wins. D'Souza is charismatic and his arguments sound sophisticated. That's what makes this dangerous. Because somewhere, a young athlete is going to hear his pitch and think it sounds reasonable. And that might be the decision that destroys their life. So no, I'm not convinced. I'm alarmed. We need to share this and push back against this worrying trend. Don't watch it, support it or celebrate it. These aren't our champions!
Anthony Walsh | Roadman Podcast tweet media
English
23
32
116
24.8K
Alpine Cols retuiteado
BikeRadar
BikeRadar@bikeradar·
Research shows that failure of cognition, not lack of visibility, needs to be addressed. Read more 👉 bikeradar.com/features/tech/…
BikeRadar tweet media
English
0
1
3
3.3K
Alpine Cols retuiteado
William A. Wallace, Ph.D.
William A. Wallace, Ph.D.@drwilliamwallac·
Most people think “protein is protein”… but this chart tells a very different story. Some foods deliver far more usable amino acids per calorie than others, and when you line them up side-by-side, the differences are apparent. A new comprehensive review broke down protein quality, not just protein grams, using the most advanced scoring system we have (DIAAS). And here’s the takeaway in plain English: Not all protein builds the body the same way. Protein quality depends on two big things: 🔹 Amino acid profile: especially essential amino acids 🔹 Digestibility: how much your body can actually absorb and use Why this matters: • Older adults need more high-quality protein to maintain muscle • Athletes need more usable amino acids per meal to recover • Plant-based eaters may need a higher total protein intake • Low-income regions relying on cereal grains face a real risk of deficiency • And when calories are low, protein quality becomes critical This review also explains why the U.N. recommended switching from PDCAAS to DIAAS: 👉 PDCAAS measures what comes out in feces 👉 DIAAS measures what actually reaches the end of the small intestine - i.e., the amino acids you can absorb That means DIAAS reflects the real biological value of a protein source. A few eye-opening findings: • Grains are typically low in lysine • Legumes improve with soaking/fermentation • Animal proteins score higher because they provide more essential amino acids per calorie • Complementary proteins (rice + beans, bread + peanut butter, hummus + pita) can fill amino acid gaps • Older adults may benefit from easier-to-chew or liquid protein sources • And yes, plant-based diets can build muscle when intelligently combined Even with perfect scoring systems, protein quality is only one part of the full picture. Diet, inflammation, age, health status, and digestion all matter too. But understanding which foods deliver usable protein vs. just grams on a label is important The image: Protein sources, scored using the DIAAS Source: Examine Citation: Matthews JJ, Arentson-Lantz EJ, Moughan PJ, Wolfe RR, Ferrando AA, Church DDUnderstanding Dietary Protein Quality: Digestible Indispensable Amino Acid Scores and Beyond.J Nutr.(2025 Oct)
William A. Wallace, Ph.D. tweet media
English
32
83
471
40K
Alpine Cols
Alpine Cols@AlpineCols·
@feelthebyrn1 Hi Gordo! My wife is in the 16th right now and has just called the pool in Auteuil. They have some lines set out for laps. You have to get lucky with the number of other swimmers. Hard to predict. Good luck! Marvin
English
1
0
1
69
Gordo Byrn
Gordo Byrn@feelthebyrn1·
Paris Lap Swim 🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷 Looking for a Sunday option in, or near, the 16th Grok recommending: - Piscine d'Auteuil - Piscine Municipale Armand Mehdi - Piscine Keller in the 15th Auteuil opens 0800, is a reasonable walk from the hotel and looks OK All ideas gratefully accepted
English
6
0
8
1.9K
Iñaki de la Parra
Iñaki de la Parra@inaki_delaparra·
When the Body Says “No”: Reflections on UTMB Mont-Blanc 2025 📷 Manuel Uribe Photography Watching an athlete DNF is heartbreaking. Not because of weakness of mind, but because the body suddenly says “no.” In an instant, everything changes. I often think of the performance equation @justindaerr developed: Preparation + Opportunity + Execution = Performance At this year’s UTMB, Katarzyna Dombrowska arrived ready, backed by years of training, discipline, and resilience. She earned the rare chance to line up with the best in the world and held her place in the top 3 for much of the race. But after 3 ankle twists on the trail, her body finally gave out around 80 km into the 176 km course. In pain, she was forced to limp to the next aid station, carrying not only a badly twisted ankle, but also the weight of an unfinished race. Sometimes, no matter how strong the preparation or how rare the opportunity is, Execution is taken out of our hands. On paper J. Daerr's performance formula looks neat. In reality, each piece is fragile. We can do everything right, arrive ready, and still, the body may not allow us to execute. In that moment, the equation collapses, leaving only the raw experience of being human. As a coach and crew member, I felt not judgment but empathy, acceptance, and unconditional regard. Because performance is never the sum total of a human being. Health always comes first. No medal, no finish line is more important than the person. Real strength is not just in continuing, it is also in knowing when to stop, with courage, to protect the future. Yesterday wasn’t the day for Kasia’s body to execute. But the Preparation remains. The Opportunity will come again. And when Execution finally aligns, it can lead to those rare, transcendent moments Justin has describes in many of his performance writings. For me, the true relevance lies in the dignity of effort, the honesty to accept what is, and the courage to keep going: another day, another race, another chance. This is sport, this is life. Brutal, but beautiful. 🤙❤️🚀
Iñaki de la Parra tweet mediaIñaki de la Parra tweet mediaIñaki de la Parra tweet mediaIñaki de la Parra tweet media
English
6
0
48
4.1K
Alpine Cols retuiteado
Greg Mushen
Greg Mushen@gregmushen·
VO2Max - How Walking Can Create an Elite VO2Max Many people think that the only way to raise VO2Max is by doing HIIT. But you can achieve a high VO2Max just with walking. Walking is arguably the superior way to build it 🧵
English
91
188
1.9K
419.2K
Alpine Cols
Alpine Cols@AlpineCols·
@Alan_Couzens Now working on this for a cycling objective in Sept. 2027… Started with establishing consistency and regularity.
English
0
0
1
51
Alan Couzens
Alan Couzens@Alan_Couzens·
You're not looking to challenge your *today self* You're looking to slowly build your *annual average self* Once you start living this distinction, everything will change
English
3
0
135
10.3K