A counterintuitive truth sits inside the peloton: the riders who seem to back off early often arrive sooner. High speed in endurance racing is less about one heroic effort and more about how sparingly the body spends its limited biochemical currency, especially glycogen stored in working muscle.
The brutal mistake is obvious to physiologists: push a huge gear too long and fast-twitch fibers switch on, burning glycogen rapidly and producing lactate that overwhelms clearance. At first the bike surges. Soon, neuromuscular fatigue rises, motor unit recruitment patterns deteriorate, and power output drops even if the rider feels mentally ready to suffer.
Smarter is the apparently softer approach. By choosing a higher cadence at slightly lower torque, elite riders bias work toward slow-twitch fibers and oxidative phosphorylation, which rely more on fat oxidation and spare glycogen for decisive efforts. Oxygen consumption may climb, heart rate may look alarming, yet metabolic stress on the most explosive fibers stays contained.
Race craft then becomes an exercise in restraint. Sitting in the draft, floating over climbs just below the red line, and using brief, surgically timed high-torque bursts lets riders maintain a higher mean power across the event. The paradox holds: those who resist the urge to always push harder often move fastest when the finish line finally forces everyone to spend everything.