Poging GOUD - Vrij
PEAKS PRACTICE
Cycling Weekly
|April 25, 2024
The Peak District is home turf for Manchester-based British pro riders and has been the formative terrain of top domestic riders for decades. Adam Becket finds out why it's so effective
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Riding up Snake Pass is taxing at the best of times. The gradient is not savage, but it works away at you, exhausting you long before you reach the top. It might not be an Alpine or Pyrenean monster, but at nearly 7km it’s about as long a climb as you get in the UK. Add in the incessant traffic – this is the most direct route between Manchester and Sheffield, after all – and the surrounding beauty barely eases the pain. And yet, this is where I find myself, on a freezing day in late 2023. A lovely day out in the Peak District.
Approaching through Glossop, Derbyshire, the weather doesn’t appear too bad, but as the road starts to rise and twist, I pass through freezing mist and the rain begins to hit my face, rendering my sunglasses useless. I’m here thanks to Jake Stewart, who now rides for IsraelPremier Tech, who sent me one of his regular training routes for me to try out. This wasn’t just an opportunity to test myself against Stewart’s benchmark, but also to figure out why this region is one of the best training grounds for British pros. Why I decided to do it at the end of October, on a particularly grim day, is another question.
The route begins in New Mills, in the High Peak, where I stayed the previous night in an inn which felt very gothic, isolated on the moor. It’s punchy from the beginning, with every kilometre pedalled early on done so with the knowledge that Snake Pass is to come.
The nastiest climb early on is Briargrove Road, 1.1km at 9.6%. It certainly wakes me up, and gives my biggest sprocket a workout early on. At this stage, the weather is nice, but as I delve deeper into the Peaks, the rain sets in, inevitably.
Dit verhaal komt uit de April 25, 2024-editie van Cycling Weekly.
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