6 Stimulating Truths About Coffee

There’s a lot more to know about this popular pick-me-up than where to head on your Sunday coffee ride.


Bicycling Editors |

Consider these six stimulating truths.

1. The Jolt Is Legit

The performance boost you get from caffeine is a result of how it hot-wires your central nervous system, says Dr Matthew Ganio, an exercise physiologist. ‘Caffeine crowds out a calming brain chemical called adenosine,’ he says. You ­become more alert, you react faster, and you don’t feel like you’re working as hard, all of which add up to training or competing at a higher intensity for a longer period of time and being more agile in a pack.

It Will Not Dehydrate You

‘In reasonable doses, caffeine alone won’t lead to more bathroom breaks during a ride or a greater risk of dehydration,’ says Dr Mindy­ Millard-Stafford, former president of the American College of Sports Medicine.The upshot, she says, is that regardless of whether you supplement with caffeine, you don’t need additional fluid to avoid performance-sapping dehydration during a ride. The long-held belief that caffeine can muck with your body’s ability to regulate heat during exercise in hot weather has also been muted by science.

It Affects Everyone Differently

Before downing an espresso on event day, Ganio suggests testing what caffeine does to you during hard training sessions. ‘If you feel jittery, anxious, or notice your heart racing, dial back the amount you take in before a ride,’ says Ganio. ‘If you can’t find a caffeine level that leaves you feeling comfortable, skip it. Side effects can impair performance.’

You Can Develop a Tolerance

Your body eventually adapts to the effects of caffeine, limiting the performance benefit. If you regularly drink more than five daily cups of coffee, Ganio recommends tapering your intake by half a cup a day for several days prior to a big ride, saving higher amounts of caffeine for before and during actual events.

Timing Is Everything

It takes 60 minutes for caffeine to start affecting the body, so imbibe one hour before a ride. ‘For rides lasting two hours or more, take half of your caffeine before and the other half in divided amounts during the ride,’ says Ganio, ‘making sure to consume the remainder when there is more than an hour left in your ride.’ Say you plan to take 200mg of caffeine for a three-hour ride: Aim for 100mg one hour before you get on the bike, and 50mg at the beginning of each hour thereafter.

Training Trumps It

‘While caffeine can boost performance by 3 to 5%, training can bring about improvements by upwards of 50%,’ Ganio says. There’s also the possibility of getting over-amped and going out too hard too soon, leaving you with nothing in the tank well before the ride’s end. Bottom line: No amount of caffeine will turn a donkey into a thoroughbred.

Matthew Kadey, RD. Caffeine alert.
Jonathan Chapman. The Truth About Caffeine

 

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