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As you get older, strength training changes from a “good to do” to a “must do” status. Losing your strength, muscle and power are all realities for the 40+ year old rider and strength training is the best way to slow that process down.


This is the #1 tactic for riders who want to do this for a lifetime - get and stay strong and you’ll avoid age-related physical decline for as long as possible.  


Plus, improving your strength, power and muscle mass can help improve performance and reduce your risk of injury, so it helps now and acts as insurance against future losses. And while a lot of things can help, if you want to maximize your results there are some basic principles that the 40+ year old rider should be observing.


First, almost anything can “work” but it eventually stops working and it may not build the strength and fitness you need for riding. The goal is to follow a training program that will help us on the path towards riding for a lifetime: improving our MTB specific fitness and our overall longevity/ health.


With that in mind, here are some basic guidelines to help you with designing or choosing a training program.


Podcast Notes:


2-4 days a week is plenty and the specific number depends on how much you are riding and your ability to recover.



You want to focus on big, compound movements but doing some isolation exercises won’t make you dysfunctional and can be beneficial in some cases.



You want to use a variety of set and rep schemes, with the bulk of them focusing on the 2-4 sets of 3-8 reps. 



You don’t need to train to failure to see results and IMO it should be avoided as a 40+ year old rider.



Don’t use bodypart training and instead focus on total body or upper body/ lower body splits.



Don’t Overdo Circuit Training



Use Isometrics to help round out your strength and safeguard your health.



Build up the intensity of your workouts over several weeks.



Change your workout every 4-8 weeks, with longer periods with the same workout being better.



Last Piece Of Advice Is Not To Lift For Social Media Or Look To It For New Ideas



What does this look like in real life?



These are the basic parameters I focus on with my own training and the clients I work with who are in the 40+ crowd.  Focusing on doing fewer things but at a higher level of focus and mastery is one of the themes I like to push with these workouts.


You can and should train hard, you just have to be smarter about when and how you push yourself to the limit.


Until next time…


Ride Strong,


James Wilson