Strategic Intuition
The last time in giro (around) I wrote about how we all need to share the burden of leadership while on our rides with friends old and new, but it is hard to lead if you are a bit on edge. Have you ever been at the tail end of a ride feeling a bit overwhelmed?
The level of ride doesn’t matter much if you feel like you’re underwater and can’t catch your breath. A sense of where you are doesn’t happen overnight. A sense of where you are means you are comfortable in your situation and in control of your place in that situation. Much easier said than done.
One of my favorite books is A Sense of Where You Areby John McPhee. McPhee’s subject is Bill Bradley and grew out of a New Yorker profile he wrote about young Bill while he was a student at Princeton in the early 1960’s rewriting basketball records and leading the Tigers to the Final Four NCAA tournament in 1965 before heading off to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, a 10 year pro career for the Knicks and being a US Senator (not too bad Bill…). In explaining how he can make a reverse layup tossing the ball over his shoulder and into the hoop without looking at the basket Bill says that it comes from having a sense of where you are which is a result of years of working at - practicing the moves and playing the game with passion over a long time, but not recklessly.
Meanwhile back underwater the group is riding away and the light is changing. We all know that the right safe thing to do is stop at the light, but getting dropped is the last thing that we want to happen.
I just finished reading Blink by Malcolm Gladwell. In Blink, Gladwell explores intuition in many ways and cites a study of what happens to us at certain heart rates. What Gladwell reports is that between 115 and 150 beats per minute most people experience a heightened sense of awareness and that above that our decision-making ability is impaired. The specific range mentioned isn’t really that important – some of us max out at 150 some at 200, but the point is that we need to be excited - sensitized to perform at a peak level. Call it being in the zone or in this case, having a sense of where you are. Gladwell illustrates what can happen when we are out of this zone with some very painful examples including the shooting of Amadou Diallo
When do you make good decisions? Is it when you are calm and collected or when you are panicked? When we are panicked our heart rate is way up and it occurred to me when I read this bit in Blink that it’s something I’ve seen on many rides at every level from beginner rides to days at the races. People panic about being dropped and people at the front push the speed up beyond the agreed/posted level.
It’s easy to say don’t go crashing through that light because you are being dropped, but how can we acquire a sense of where we are that could save us from a very bad decision that could prove deadly? One way is to keep riding with your head up and not over your head. A pretty good cyclist, Eddy Merckx, who won everything multiple times from one classic races to world titles and the grand tours, said something along the lines of if you want to become a better cyclist then you need to ride. And it is perfectly ok to be dropped – showing up for a ride that is above your ability, and out of shape is not what Eddy was talking about. That is a crummy recipe. Take your time and work you way up to that level, if you aspire to be there, and in the meantime enjoy the ride. We don't need a goal for every ride, but if you have a bit of a plan running in the background it will help if things (the group & your cool) seem to be slipping away from you. I like to think every ride I do is social. It could be that I'm maxed out and going to be dropped or I could be leading a ride or coaching one of the great folks I get to help train, but I keep trying to observe what is happening and thinking about what I can take away.
And here is Monsieur Eddy Merckx with my son Massimo: We were privileged to attend a 50th anniversary party for Bicycling Magazine the other night and hear Eddy talk about his career. He might look less than thrilled, but you might too if you had been posing for fans for the last 40 or so years.


