Graeme Obree, who twice held the Hour record in the 1990s, says Jack Bobridge should get back on his bike this week and have another crack at it, despite failing to break it yesterday.
Bobridge, aged 25, rode 51.300 kilometres at the DISC Velodrome in Melbourne, falling three laps short of breaking the record of 51.852 kilometres set by Austrian rider Matthias Brändle last October.
Speaking to Shane Stokes of Cycling Tips, Obree, who first took the record in 1993 just 24 hours after an unsuccessful attempt at it, said Bobridge should give it another try to avoid having regrets in later life.
“I watched Bobridge’s attempt and I felt sorry for him,” said Obree. “There is no tactics or hiding place, it is awful. I think he should consider trying again, because where he is now is an awful place to be in.
“He has to fast forward 10 or 20 years from now and think of it as him looking back to now. He will be saying, ‘my goodness, I should have put another effort in.’
“He has got the physical ability, so if he doesn’t try again he will regret it in 20 years’ time.”
Obree believes that when Sir Bradley Wiggins undertakes his own attempt on the record later this year, he will set a benchmark others will find hard to beat, meaning time is of the essence for Bobridge.
“When Bradley [Wiggins] steps up it will be out of his reach and he will never have got it,” he explained. “He will be like, ‘I should have stepped up like others did.’ Otherwise it will be, ‘I never got it’ and that’s not the place to be.”
Bobridge went out too quickly yesterday and although he was still just on course to take the record at the halfway point, he began to fall behind schedule and was unable to claw back the lost distance late on.
But Obree says that the ride by Francesco Moser to set the record that he himself beat in 1993 demonstrated why Bobridge should have another go.
The Italian’s distance of 51.151 kilometres, set in Mexico City in 1984, came four days after Moser had broken Eddy Merckx’s 1972 record by riding 50.808 kilometres.
“Moser stepped up in Mexico City, he went back after three or four days and went quicker,” Obree pointed out.
“So the precedent is that if he waits three or four days and goes again – actually, maybe four or five days would be better – then it’s possible. He just needs turns his legs over in that time, recovering, then try again.
“He just has to do 52 kilometres and get his name up there. He has to redeem that if he can.”
Whether Bobridge himself will be up for another attempt is another question entirely. The Australian said after yesterday’s ride that it was “by far the hardest thing I’ve ever done, I think, and the hardest thing I will ever do.”
But Obree said: “It certainly it is not a great situation as things are right now. I saw him lying there. With the silence of the crowd, it was like somebody died.
“You can’t leave it like that,” he added.
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7 comments
I know it's not really comparable but my best ever marathon time was just a week after a mediocre race. On the second occasion it just felt really good.
I think it is comparable, how many times do we really struggle on a ride only to fly a couple of days later.
He needs to step up again (sponsors willing) and have another crack, nobody can doubt he gave it everything, so having another attempt makes sense. Nothing to lose
, only further resect to gain. Obree is right though wiggins will put it out of reach for a few years.
When Laurent Fignon won his Milan-San Remos it was on the back of monumental training sessions. The thinking was to completely empty the body of glycogen. In the recovery period (48-72 hrs) the body 'supercompensates' the previous effort by putting more glycogen back in that it actually needs. At the end of this period the theory is that you should be buzzing.
Now it does sound kinda quack science to me but it worked for Fignon twice, 1988 and 89, so maybe there's something to it.
A technique advocated by many, including Bettini, who would deliberately bonk just prior to Worlds or Lombardy.
Obree is likely right, but Bobridge psyche seems stuffed. The body won't say yes, if the minds says NEVER AGAIN!
For all his mental health problems Obree had periods of intense mental strength. Maybe his mania was 'useful'.
Second time lucky makes so much sense. Graeme has some experience with this!
Agreed.
Based on his initial speed yesterday, if he holds 52kmph for the first half then he will have enough in the tank to go faster in the second half and could even go 53km