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Jeremiah Bishop

Jeremiah_loAthlete Profile

Name/Age: Jeremiah Bishop/34
Discipline: Sometimes
Category/Distance: Beginner Jedi/ Long technical
Training Location: Massenutten/George Washington National forest VA

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TRAINING TOOLS

 PowerBeamPro Rollers


Training and Racing

What are your most important power training metrics?

Normalized power. Heart rate and current power.

What are your goals for 2010?

Beat the Green Gobblin at US nationals. Take on Doc Octopus for the World Marathon Title in Germany.

What are you pre-event rituals?

 I like rain the rain dance. The Sun Dance it good too but very painful; too much like racing a 24 hr race.

What are your must-haves on race day?

Coffee, fruit recovery drink

What is your favorite pre-event meal?

Eggs toast jam. Oatmeal.

What is your favorite post-event meal?

Kleins hand made ice cream, or breakfast night!

What is your greatest achievement/proudest moment in your sport?

Wins at the 2008 USA National Short Track and Marathon Championships and racing clean!

What is your favorite race?

Shenandoah 100 or Massenutten Hoo Ha

For Fun

What was your favorite cartoon growing up?

Spiderman!

What is your favorite training song?

Going the distance. Cake.

What is your guilty pleasure?

Chocolate. But that’s not guilty unless I eat it for breakfast.

What do you do when you’re not training?

Playing with my wild 14 month old soccer phenom Conrad! Every morning 7 am its “baw baw BAW!

What did you want to be when you grew up?

 Spider man…. Go figure. I wonder if Oakley can make me a mask?

Blog Entries

October 17, 2010

Jeremiah Bishop 2008 USA National Champion of Short Track Cross Country and Marathon Mountain Bike, Jeremiah Bishop has the experience to take power-based training and turn it into race winning performances. Working alongside his coach Hunter Allen, Jeremiah has used power-based training to prepare for and win Olympic-distance cross country, short track, marathon mountain bike, 100-mile, multi-day stage races, road racing and cyclocross events. In Jeremiah's latest entry, he writes about the much-feared detraining effects of taking time off the bike.

 

by Jeremiah Bishop

 

Despite its invisible interior, a black hole can be observed through its interaction with objects nearby. And though there is no metric for detraining, the effects of not training have a big impact on fitness.

 

Metaphorically, my rest break was a black hole of training. This space I’m referring to is between the end of a great race season - highlighted with three stage race wins - and my startling return to training with wonder boy Joe Dombrowski.

 

Don’t get me wrong, I really appreciate the chance to unload from training and get some rest. I recently enjoyed a few days with my family at the beach, where I didn’t record anything in my training log other than the amount of beer we drank and the fish we caught. It was great! Though I wasn’t completely inactive. I went for a jog down the beach and explored some sand roads on my mountain bike. But as far as my power output, it could be expressed in beer calories.

 

It became evident that not training has a dramatic and rapid effect on my fitness. How much? My LT power was a decent 375+ before pulling the plug to rest. Twelve days later I had a 40-watt drop in LT power. Yep, if there were a detraining curve for me it would look like a sliding board at a water park. Gradual for the first 5 days then WHOA!!! That’s steep.

 

A fun part of coaching is being able to ride with different athletes with a variety of training goals. Joe Dombrowski is training hard for the upcoming cyclocross season. So, when I got back on the bike, I joined in on a big weekend of training I had planned for him. We kicked things off on Friday with LT intervals and motor pacing. Saturday, we hit a local cyclocross race. And on Sunday, we tackled a 4-hour mountainous ride that turned into a 6-hour death-march epic when cold rains set in.

 

I couldn’t believe how much that cross race hurt. The ride Sunday was a lesson too; the combination of hard riding with the brutally cold rain and stiff pace made me respect the power of training - and what happens when you don’t train.

 

I’m confident the big training weekend was just what I needed to power up. I rebooted very quickly, and now I can’t wait to hit some classic fall ‘cross races with enough form to enjoy them.

 

Thanks for reading,
Jeremiah Bishop
Cannondale Factory Racing and CycleOps Powered Athlete

more
December 29, 2009
Jeremiah Bishop by CycleOps Powered Athlete Jeremiah Bishop

After competing in Costa Rica’s La Ruta de Los Conquistadores—my last major race of the 2009 season—I took a 10-day break from riding. I enjoyed restful time at home, a bit of trail running and a Thanksgiving road trip with my wife, Erin, and our 9-month-old, Conrad, to visit friends and family.

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January 13, 2009

Jeremiah Bishop USA National Champion of Short Track Cross Country and Marathon Mountain Bike, Jeremiah Bishop has the experience to take power-based training and turn it into race winning performances. Working alongside his coach Hunter Allen, Jeremiah has used power-based training to prepare for and win Olympic-distance cross country, short track, marathon mountain bike, 100-mile, multi-day stage races, road racing and cyclocross events.


more