Road Cycling
Mastering the Long Climb: Pacing Strategies for Sustained Ascents
Learn how to meter your effort on long climbs, from gearing and cadence to breathing and pacing, so you reach the summit strong instead of blowing up.
Road Cycling
Learn how to meter your effort on long climbs, from gearing and cadence to breathing and pacing, so you reach the summit strong instead of blowing up.
Nearly everyone I ride with has a story about the climb that broke them. Mine was a 40-minute col in the Pyrenees where I felt invincible for the first ten minutes and utterly hollow for the last twenty. The mountain didn't beat me that day; my pacing did. The good news is that pacing is a learnable skill, and once you understand a few principles, long climbs stop feeling like a lottery and start feeling like something you can execute on purpose.
A sustained ascent is unforgiving in a way that flat riding never is. On the flat, if you overcook an effort you can freewheel, tuck into a draft, or soft-pedal for a minute and recover. On a steep, relentless gradient there is nowhere to hide. Gravity keeps asking for power every single second, and if you can't produce it, you slow down or stop.
That relentlessness is what turns a small pacing error into a catastrophe. Go 5 percent too hard for the first five minutes of a long climb and you don't just pay back that energy later, you pay it back with interest. You cross into a metabolic state your body can't sustain, and the effort required simply to keep the pedals turning climbs faster than your legs can supply it. Riders call this "blowing up," and it feels exactly like it sounds.
The core insight is this: your average speed up a long climb is almost always higher when you ride it slightly conservatively than when you ride it aggressively and fade. A negative-split climb, where the second half is at least as strong as the first, beats a fast start nearly every time.
The single most useful habit I can teach you is to begin every long climb feeling like you're holding back. When the road tilts up and the adrenaline hits, your instinct is to attack the base while your legs feel fresh. Resist it.
The reason this works is physiological. Your body needs a few minutes to shift its energy systems fully aerobic. Slam the gas at the bottom and you burn through anaerobic reserves you'll desperately want near the top. Ease in, and you preserve them.
I tell newer riders to imagine the climb's true difficulty is hidden from them until halfway up. Ride the first half as though the hard part hasn't started yet, because in terms of accumulated fatigue, it hasn't.
The riders around you are a terrible pacing reference. You have no idea what shape they're in, how far they're going, or whether they too are about to blow up. Racing strangers up a climb is how good rides fall apart.
Instead, anchor to an internal or measured signal.
A power meter is the most honest pacing tool there is because it can't be fooled by adrenaline or ego. If you know your functional threshold power (FTP), a long climb is simply an exercise in holding a sensible percentage of it.
The trap with power is staring at the number and chasing it on every steep pitch. Let it breathe. Aim for a steady average rather than pinning an exact figure second to second.
No power meter? No problem, generations of climbers managed without one. Heart rate lags effort by a minute or two, so use it as a ceiling rather than a target: pick a number you know you can sustain and refuse to exceed it in the first half.
Perceived exertion is even simpler and, once trained, remarkably reliable. On a scale where 10 is all-out, spend the opening of a long climb around a 6 or 7 and only drift toward 8 and 9 as the summit comes into view. Your breathing is a good proxy: if you can't speak a short sentence, you're over your sustainable line early.
Gearing is where a lot of avoidable suffering lives. Grinding a big gear at low cadence loads your muscles heavily and burns through them, especially the moment the road gets steep. Spinning a lower gear shifts some of the cost onto your cardiovascular system, which recovers far better over a long effort.
A few principles that have served me and every rider I've coached:
I've watched strong riders wreck themselves refusing to give up a gear on a wall of a gradient, as if spinning were a confession of weakness. The mountain does not award style points. Turn the pedals smoothly and let the gears do their job.
Long climbs are rarely a constant gradient. They kick and ease, and the steep ramps are where pacing goes to die because your power naturally surges to keep momentum. On a short ramp, let your effort rise a little, that's fine. On a long steep section, resist the urge to hold the same speed you had on the shallow part; drop a gear or two, let your speed fall, and keep your effort roughly constant. Speed should vary with the gradient. Effort should stay steady.
The mental side of a long ascent matters as much as the physical. Staring at a summit 40 minutes away is demoralizing. So don't.
This chunking trick does something powerful: it converts one intimidating effort into a series of manageable ones, and it gives you regular checkpoints to correct your pacing before a small error compounds.
A few details won't make or break your climb, but together they add up over a long effort.
Breathe deliberately. Under load, riders tend toward shallow, panicked breathing. Consciously use your diaphragm, deeper belly breaths rather than quick chest gasps. It steadies your effort and, honestly, calms your head.
Stay mostly seated. Seated climbing is more economical than standing because standing recruits more muscle and raises your heart rate and oxygen cost. Stand to stretch your back, to clear a steep ramp, or to change the load on your muscles, then sit back down. Don't stand out of habit.
Relax everything you're not using. A death grip on the bars, hunched shoulders, and a clenched jaw all waste energy and tighten your breathing. Keep your upper body loose and let the work happen in your legs and lungs.
Fuel and drink before you're desperate. On a climb over half an hour, take a sip and a bite early and regularly. It's hard to fix an energy hole mid-gradient, so don't dig one.
The next time the road points skyward for a long time, ride it like this: ease in far too gently, anchor your effort to power, heart rate, or honest feel rather than the rider next to you, keep a lower gear turning smoothly, break the ascent into checkpoints, and save your matches for the top. The summit will arrive faster than it ever did when you attacked the base.
Pacing a long climb well is genuinely one of the most satisfying things in cycling, that quiet moment near the top when you realize you have more left, not less. Get it right a few times and you'll never want to blow up again. Practice it on your local hills, trust the process on the big days, and let the mountain come to you.
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