This February 28 to March 1, Rachel Neylan will ride from Sydney to Goulbourn in The Variety Cycle. It’s practically a pedal in the park for Rachel, who also participates in 12-day pro tours, but it’s her mental strength that she credits with winning races, with physical strength coming a close second.
When you’ve had to deal with a broken jaw and pelvis and two knocks from cars, not to mention paving your own way in the tough sport of road cycling, you need to cultivate some serious mental resilience. Rachel shares with us the methods in which she trains her mind before and during race day. So if you’re training for something – be it a half marathon, a triathlon or a 100m sprint to the bus – you’ll definitely want to take this advice on board.
The weeks before a race
“There are a lot of training techniques,” says Rachel. “When you’re racing it’s absolutely paramount. There’s mental rehearsal, which would be visualising yourself accelerating or attacking on certain points of the course. If you can get to know the course in reality that’s a big help with the mental imagery later.
“You also need to be psychologically in a calm frame of mind – calm, relaxed, almost in a state of athletic zen. You need a clear mind and absolute focus so that you trust your body 100%, so meditation and mindfulness is one thing I’ve welcomed into my training program. There’s a lot of noise and distractions to zone out, like emails, dealing with sponsors, fans, family, teams.
“You need mental downtime, because you experience emotional highs and lows. I live out of a suitcase – I have no fixed address in Australia.”
The night before a race
“You’re compartmentalising the noise. You generally have a team meeting so you have to process the rules and instructions. You have to consider what your role is and how that fits in with your perceptions of the race.
“So you should have some quiet time – that’s really important. You need a strong and composed state of mind that isn’t rushing around with thoughts of doubt, negativity or uncertainty. You’ll always get nerves, but that’s good. You need to channel them into positivity.”