Competitive road cyclists doing cycling interval training from the Fast Talk Labs Cycling Interval Training Pathway

Fast Talk Labs - Cycling Interval Training Pathway BadgeCycling Interval Training Pathway

Welcome to the Cycling Interval Training Pathway.

Intervals are a fundamental part of any training program. In theory, they sound relatively easy: pick a length, pick an intensity, grab the bike and head out the door. In practice, however, there are many nuances to properly executing intervals.

Here you will learn exactly what an interval is, why you should do certain intervals given the goals you have, and how you can execute different interval workouts to perfection. You’ll also learn more about how to analyze different workouts.

This Pathway contains content from many of our experts, including Sebastian Weber, Neal Henderson, Trevor Connor, Dr. Stephen Cheung, and Head Coach Ryan Kohler, to name a few. Follow this Pathway to start with the basics of interval workouts and progress to specific workouts and Workshops to improve how you execute and analyze your performances.

Intervals 101

Intervals are a critical training component for any athlete looking to generate adaptations and improve fitness and performance. In contrast to training races, for example, intervals allow an athlete to add intensity in a controlled manner, to target specific energy systems, and allow for an understanding of what is really going on inside. Coaches Trevor and Ryan break down why intervals are so important. Click below to watch this video.

intervals 101 with Ryan Kohler and Trevor Connor

Intervals 101

Intervals are a fundamental component of training. They enable athletes to add intensity in a controlled manner, and target specific energy systems.

“This is an interval.”

“This is a football.” American football coach Vince Lombardi was famous for starting team talks with that line. The message was simple: Never forget the basics. So, let’s start with the fundamentals and define what we mean by intervals.

We have two ways of producing energy. The aerobic energy system requires oxygen, and doesn’t fatigue easily. The anaerobic energy system is used to produce fast and strong efforts, doesn’t require oxygen, and doesn’t last long.

Dive in with Coach Trevor and other leading experts, including exercise physiologist Robert Pickels, as they review the basics. Their lessons will help you create your best interval sessions. For example, you’ll learn about some of the key concepts of aerobic intervals, including the importance of rest periods and how to maintain consistency. For anaerobic intervals, learn how much time you need between intervals and how to improve your late-race fitness. Read this article below.

Fast Talk interval Chris Case

This Is an Interval

Trevor Connor revisits the fundamentals of aerobic versus anaerobic pathways, and helps us understand more advanced principles of interval training.

Your guide to HIT

Coach Trevor Connor takes a deep dive into high-intensity training (HIT), using the science of bioenergetics to illustrate the benefits and limits of this critical training method. Click below to read this article.

Lone cyclist training on empty road

Your Guide to High-Intensity Training

HIT has many proven benefits and several big limitations. Trevor Connor explores how HIT works, its effects, and the most effective high-intensity interval workouts you can choose for specific gains.

How much HIT is appropriate?

In this podcast, Coach Trevor Connor and Chris Case, with the help of a star-studded lineup of coaches and physiologists, explore the science of high-intensity training, including the many myths and misconceptions and its limits. They also recommend the most effective intervals to perform and how to get the most out of their execution. Click below to listen to this podcast.

cyclists racing

How Much High-Intensity Training Do You Need?

High-intensity training offers many benefits. It also has limitations. We explore just how much HIT work you need to perform at your best.
Cycling Coach Ryan Kohler Fast Talk Podcast

How to Use HIIT As a Time-Crunched Athlete 

If you consider yourself a time-crunched athlete, how do you make the most of that time and incorporate HIIT into the plan?

A deep dive on intervals

From threshold to HIIT intervals, and the many types in between, this is your starting point to learn how and why you should select certain intervals, how to integrate them into your training plan, when to do them, and how to properly execute them. Click below to watch this video.

All About Interval Execution

A Deep Dive on Interval Execution

Learn how and why you should select certain intervals, how to integrate them into your training plan, when to do them, and how to properly execute them.

Proper Execution

Don’t over-think it

Here’s your workout for today: Give me 20 seconds at high anaerobic capacity. Now do a 10-second recovery at 65 percent. Then give me one minute at mid-VO2max holding at 100 RPM. Now rest one minute. Alright, now give me a series of 10 one-minute efforts at 102 percent of FTP with increasing cadence. But be careful: If you do these at 99 percent of FTP, you’re working the wrong system.

-Many Coaches, Everywhere

If this is starting to sound like your own intervals or the intervals from a canned training plan, read on. Interval progressions do not have to be this complex. In this series of podcasts, you will first learn three main points:

  • Human physiology is complex.
  • Properly executing intervals is difficult.
  • Interval prescription should be simple.

Click below to listen.

cycling interval training

Properly Executing Intervals Is Hard; Keep Your Training Plan Simple

Complex training prescriptions are becoming increasingly popular. Does it really need to be that complex? What do you gain from this complexity?

Rest periods change everything

Listen to Sebastian Weber take a seemingly mundane topic of rest periods and turn it into a deep dive into the metabolic environment we create with interval training. Learn the “why” behind the rest period prescriptions and turn your interval workouts into sessions that work for your physiology. Click below to listen.

Fast Talk Podcast Q&A

The Duration and Intensity of Rest Periods Is As Critical As Your Intervals, with Sebastian Weber

Why do we have rest periods at all? In this episode we dig into the details of this question, along with examining different interval types and the appropriate rest for each.

Put it in the big gear

Elite coach Neal Henderson joins Chris Case and Trevor Connor to discuss an interval session you’ve probably heard about, and may have incorporated into your training over the years. You’ll also hear from Sebastian Weber of INSCYD, Jim Miller of USA Cycling, and pro cyclist Petr Vakoc as they discuss the nuances of “big gear” training. Learn how these experts use this type of training to improve performance and how you can integrate this into your routine. Click below to listen.

Put It in the Big Gear—We Explore Low-Cadence, High-Torque Training with Neal Henderson

We take a close look at big gear work. What does the literature say about performance gains? What have elite coaches discovered through practice?

Not all intervals are created equal

In this Workshop, Dr. Stephen Cheung discusses a study comparing steady-state versus fast-start intervals, then uses Xert software to model how a fast-start interval can be a lot more intense to build your fatigue over the course of an interval.

The research suggests that the design of intervals can determine how much benefit or training stimulus you receive, particularly when it comes to how steady they are—or conversely, how fast you start before tapering to a desired level. These factors can help to give you a greater training load and reduce monotony of training while building in specificity for your race needs. Click below for this Workshop.

Fast Start vs. Steady State Intervals Intensity

Intensity Changes Between Fast-Start and Steady Intervals, with Dr. Stephen Cheung

Dr. Stephen Cheung discusses a study comparing steady-state versus fast-start intervals, then uses Xert software to model how a fast-start interval can be much more intense.

Power isn’t everything

Let’s take a popular interval session: 4×8 minutes. Have you been wondering what percentage of threshold or FTP to target with this interval session? Guess what? Power is the least important number. Yes, you heard that right!

In this Q&A session we review the need for RPE and heart rate to guide an interval session like this. Learn why power is not the critical number and what metrics to follow to ensure you are executing this workout properly. Click below for this Q&A session.

Ryan Kohler training camp time-crunched athlete

Q&A on Executing 4×8 Intervals, Using Scooters in Training, Recovery Walks, and Micro Training Camps

Head Coach Ryan Kohler, Coach Trevor Connor, and Chris Case field questions on how to best execute 4×8-minute intervals, tips on creating micro training camps, and much more.

Dr. Seiler’s short stacks

Dr. Stephen Seiler is known for his work on the polarized training model, in which the distribution of low-intensity to high-intensity work is skewed in favor of those easier rides. However, the high-intensity interval sessions are critical for adaptation. In his three-part series, Dr. Seiler analyzes how shorter, Tabata-style efforts fit into his model, discusses best practices for integrating these efforts into a training plan, and compares the impacts of short and long intervals. Hear from Dr. Seiler below in his three-part series.

runner staircase high intensity intervals

Dr. Seiler: Short Interval Stacks, Part 1

Interval training sessions with repeats of 30:30s, 40:20s, and 30:15s have become very popular. How does the (endurance-trained) body respond to this type of high-intensity interval prescription?
Chris Case Flagstaff Road Fast Talk Podcast

Dr. Seiler: Short Interval Stacks, Part 2

Dr. Stephen Seiler walks through some real-life short interval workout data to reveal some rules of thumb for how you can integrate these into your own training.
cycling hill climb repeats Kristen Legan

Dr. Seiler: Short Interval Stacks, Part 3

In this final video of his “short stack”, three-part series, Dr. Stephen Seiler discusses some research studies that compare short interval and long interval training and how they impact endurance capacity in already well-trained athletes.

The classic 4×8

Coach Trevor Connor takes a deep dive into an interval workout that you’ve heard us discuss many times on the Fast Talk podcast—4×8-minute intervals—and one that has been popularized by Dr. Stephen Seiler.

4x8 Cycling Interval Workout Execution

How to Do Dr. Stephen Seiler’s 4×8-Minute Interval Workout

Coach Connor details the best practices for 4×8-minute intervals, from their physiological benefits to how and why you should do them. INCLUDES downloadable workout files.

Workouts

Learn by doing

Connect your trainer and hop on your bike as we take you through a list of typical interval sessions. We guide you through a series of full workouts, starting with neuromuscular sessions to build strength and power, and then moving to threshold and supra-threshold efforts to improve different areas of your fitness profile. We finish off this series with a pre-race warm-up that you can take and adapt to your needs. Click below for interval workouts. Each post contains custom workout files to help you execute them with precision.

tempo intervals

Aerobic Conditioning: Low-Cadence Tempo Intervals

These low-cadence tempo intervals allow us to work on technique, focus on force production at the pedals, and improve muscular endurance.
physiology lab testing

Neuromuscular Workout: Big Gear Standing Starts

This workout focuses on acceleration, good form, and a strong leg drive to help build muscle strength and power.
sweet spot bursts

Aerobic Conditioning: Sweet Spot Bursts

Control heart rate and manage your effort with a focus on breathing and cadence. This workout builds on the previous weeks of tempo and lower cadence riding.
over/under intervals with cadence focus

Structured Workout: Over/Under Intervals with Cadence Focus

This over/under interval workout will build aerobic capacity while improving movement economy through changes in cadence.
Batman intervals

Structured Workout: Batman Intervals

Batman Intervals will help you get better at riding comfortably at variable intensities, paces, and lactate levels.
4x4 intervals

Structured Workout: 4×4 Intervals

One of Coach Ryan’s favorites, these four-minute intervals at 90-95% maximum HR with three minutes rest are simple yet effective.
40/20 "on/off" intervals

Structured Workout: 40/20 “On/Off” Intervals

These “on/off” style intervals will help you push top-end power and cardiovascular adaptations.
warm-up and seated stomps

Neuromuscular Workout: Muscle Activation Warm-up & Seated Stomps

Try out some muscle recruitment techniques to improve your neuromuscular development.

How to Analyze Intervals

Assess your execution

You did the work; now, determine if your execution was good or bad.

Starting with Trevor’s classic 5×5 threshold intervals, we walk you through the analysis of this key training session. Why is the rest period only one minute? What are the benefits of this type of workout? How can I maximize the gains from this session? Coaches Trevor and Ryan analyze the power and heart rate responses to show you how to do the same for your threshold workouts.

What if you are completing threshold efforts outdoors? How do we pace ourselves when we move from the trainer to the real world? Learn how to ride a steady pace and deal with terrain changes by tuning into your leg sensations, gearing, and breathing. Watch the below videos.

5x5 Interval Analysis

How to Analyze 5×5 Intervals in TrainingPeaks

Coach Trevor Connor and Coach Ryan Kohler walk through their process for interpreting 5×5-minute interval workout sessions in TrainingPeaks.
Hill Variations

Coach’s Corner: Power and Cadence Analysis of Climbing Intervals

Coach Ryan Kohler and Trevor Connor analyze climbing intervals at threshold, focusing on the importance of cadence and pace.

Join the conversation

Do you have additional questions or workout examples that you would like to share with our endurance community? Head over to the Forum and post there to collaborate, find additional answers and insights (like this post) on intervals like Dr. Seiler’s Short Stack intervals, and contribute your favorite interval session in the Workout Lab!

STILL NEED HELP?

As we said at the start of this Pathway, intervals are harder to execute properly than many people think. If you still need help, schedule a free consultation with us and we will develop a path forward that is individualized for you.

Or you can schedule time with our coaches to get personalized guidance in a private, guided interval workout session.