Saturday, April 27, 2024

A Visit to Friends in Girona, and some Motorpacing

-

HomeJournalsAstellas Pro Matt GreenA Visit to Friends in Girona, and some Motorpacing
Girona
Matt explains his two interval sessions.

When I count up all the brilliant places I get to visit, or live in, or pass through, they’re in their hundreds.

When I try and recount whether or not I have made the most of all the places I’ve been in, the answer is a resounding no. I decided that was about to change.

For the last three years I have spent the winter on the South-East coast of Spain in my apartment down here.

I haven’t left Andalucia, the Southern most province of Spain. I have two ex-teammates in Girona, a 10 hour drive northwards.

Different roads and my friends were the biggest attractions. However, the stars must align…

My job description is to make sure on any given day I am able to race to the best of my ability to best serve the desired result of my team.

That means in December I am thinking about racing in June and how to arrive with the form too best complete my job on that specific race day.

You have to consider how the trip will affect training you’ve done, training you will do, and the training surrounding the days which you travel. I had two conveniently placed rest-days for both the outbound and return trip.

[vsw id=”Sl6Mse_zlz8″ source=”youtube” width=”615″ height=”348″ autoplay=”no”]

I was team-mates with Edward Greene on Marco Polo in 2012. We did a four hour ride together and a two hour ride with 2 x 15 minute intervals.

I hadn’t cracked three hours 30 minutes since my crash so I was blowing up on the four hour ride.

Girona
Intervals with Edward. Photo©Matt Green

With Stephen Hyde (my teammate on Astellas in 2014/15), we did 5 x 5 minute efforts up Rocacorba – one of the famous climbs here.

Stephen dropped me.

Matt Green
Stephen Hyde and Sarah. Photo©Matt Green

I had to take a mental note each time to make sure I reminded myself I am still recovering and what I am doing now will come to fruition in July.

The lesson learned was to make the most of my current lifestyle while seamlessly fitting my training and recovery around each opportunity as well as don’t forget to look around whilst training… my Garmin isn’t too interesting anymore after eight years!

Girona
A slight detour to take in Barcelona. Photo©Matt Green

Related Articles

Starting Again; Training on Sanibel Island, Florida

Florida would be a great place for time-trialling. Its pan flat. The only elevation you find are bridges. It’s flatter than both Holland and Belgium which is saying something. It’s rarely windy which means as soon as you’re out riding holding 20mph (32kph) is child’s-play. That makes riding really quite fun. Endurance rides are around 35kph and you really get the miles clocked up. Sometimes it feels like you’re in a race you’re going so fast.

Jonny Bellis – Healthy, Fit, and Targeting the Commonwealth Games

For 2014 Jonny Bellis is with Denmark’s Christina Watches Continental team which this year has a big British involvement with Planet X supplying the Viner (pronounced, ‘veenir’) bikes and the team clothing – and two of the squad. Jonathan is joined by Jake Tanner – son of British legend, John Tanner – at Christina, and we talked to Jonathan recently at his new home near Pisa.

Introducing Two of my Astellas Teammates

Two of my Astellas teammates are Ryan Aitcheson, 25, from Kitchener, Ontario (Canada) and Olly Moors, 19, from West Sussex (England). Ryan is one of the best criterium racers in North America. He is also my longest standing teammate. Olly has only been on club teams up until this point. He’s now a professional and he and I are teammates; Ryan and I passed Olly on the way home from our ride and he told us about a racing memory, because I asked.

At Random

Gent-Gent & Kuurne Brussels Kuurne 2009 – Day 1

We're at Gent-Gent. His long torso arches, like that of a tiger about to pounce on it's prey; elbows out, the black Specialized with it's hugely over-sized down tube - necessary to absorb the mega wattages this beast produces - surges forward.

Le Tour de France 2014 – Stage 11; Besançon – Oyonnax, 186 km. Tony Gallopin Encore.

VeloVeritas owes an apology to the Frenchman who rides for that most Belgian of teams, Lotto’s Tony Gallopin; we thought he’d had his ‘day in the sun,’ wearing le maillot jaune on Bastille Day. And if we may digress for a moment; since World war Two the jersey has been worn on Bastille Day by a French rider on 17 occasions, including Anquetil on five, Hinault three times with Bobet and Tommy Voeckler both achieving this feat twice – as well as Monsieur Gallopin, this year.

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 14; Montélimar – Villars-les-Dombes Parc des Oiseaux. Cavendish’s Fourth Stage Win!

Another criminally boring stage saved by a beautiful finale with Cav making it 30 stage wins – there are few superlatives left for the Manxman. Good to see Kristoff in second spot; the remarkable Sagan was right there in third spot and very nice to see John Degenkolb up there in fourth spot. Kittel got it wrong today and Greipel was again off the pace. And, erm that’s about it...

Gary Wiggins – “Nobody messed with The Doc”

The tall, rawboned rider ambled across to the barrier; Gary Wiggins was broad and square across the shoulders, big-thighed and walked with a loose-limbed gait. His long legs made easy work of straddling the steel fence which separated the riders' enclosure from the paying public at the Gent six, back in the early 80's.