cycling cornering skills

Cycling Cornering Skills to Be Faster, Safer, and More Confident in Turns

Car enthusiasts long derided American muscle cars for being great in a straight line and useless in corners. European performance cars, they argued, were designed for drivers. They had power for speed but also advanced suspension, steering, and weight distribution for superior handling. Well, cyclists can sometimes be thought of in the same way. Having a huge aerobic engine enables you to go fast in a straight line, or indoors. However, the cycling cornering skills make you faster in real-world conditions where there are… you know… corners.

Just as being good at descending isn’t about bombing downhill at dangerous speeds, having good cycling cornering skills isn’t about always pushing the limits of traction and physics. It’s about being proficient and confident, and using good judgment. Whether you’re a beginner who is timid in high-speed turns or a veteran who could use a refresher course, use these tips to be fast, safe, and confident in turns:

Focus on the setup

How you enter a turn plays a huge role in the line you’re going to take and the exit you’re going to have. Ideally, set up wide so you can turn in toward the apex of the turn. This isn’t always an option, however, based on where you are in a group. As a result, it’s important to practice cornering from non-ideal approaches. Brake before the turn so you enter at a speed you could conceivably maintain through the whole corner. Coming in too hot means exiting wider than you anticipated or needing to scrub a lot of valuable speed.

If you’re in a pack, back off the wheel ahead

To minimize the impact of the accordion effect on your momentum (the back of the back compressing into the front as the front brakes for a turn), back off the wheel ahead of you slightly so you have some space to roll into as that rider slows down. It takes practice, but when you get the hang of it you can dramatically reduce your need for hard accelerations out of corners by slowing less going into them. The people around you are braking harder and accelerating harder while you’re using the space between riders to maintain momentum. If you’re in a competitive field, however, be wary of backing too far off the wheel ahead of you, lest you lose that position to someone looking to move up toward the front!

Corner in the drops

Certainly you can get around turns with your hands on the brake hoods, but if you want to go faster and maximize traction, get in the drops. You’re shifting your weight distribution to be more equally split between your wheels, and most important, putting enough weight on your front wheel to avoid sliding out. You’re also slightly lowering your center of gravity, which helps with stability.

Focus your weight on your outside foot and inside hand

Your weight on your outside foot, positioned at the 6:00 position, is your traction control. Pressure on the inside hand (the hand toward the inside of the turn) is your steering. A lot of people talk about countersteering and this whole idea of turning left to go right. It works, but I think there’s a simpler way to think about it and visualize it.

As you’re going into the corner with your weight on the outside foot and you start to lean the bike, push your inside hand forward and down into the corner. If you need to adjust your line to be tighter, push harder/further with the inside hand. If you need to adjust your line wider, ease up on the side hand. Your body leans less than the bike to keep your center of mass closer to the tires’ contact patches on the ground. You’re anchoring your traction with your outside leg and modulating the lean angle of the bike with the pressure applied to the inside arm.

The techniques for flat turns and downhill turns are very similar. Read more about cornering on descents here.

If conditions are wet/slippery, lean less and try to make the arc longer

When roads are wet or you’re on sand/gravel, you have less traction. Cornering aggressively (high speed, lots of lean on the bike, tight line) requires a lot of traction, so when things get slippery you have to corner more gingerly. Slow down more before the turn than you would in dry/clean conditions. Keep the bike more upright. Make the arc of the turn longer/wider so you’re changing direction over a greater distance. Basically, you’re trying to avoid sudden movements like dramatic steering or diving into the apex.


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Look through the turn, not at it

See that hole in the middle of the corner? If you keep your eyes on it that’s exactly where you’re going. Notice where it is as you come into the turn and then look beyond it to where you want to go. It’s the same idea as looking farther ahead in a group or pace line rather than at the wheel ahead of you, or looking at a point far away while trying to walk a straight line.

Relax

Over the years I’ve noticed that riders who are more stressed out (about riding/racing or about lifestyle stresses) are squirrelier in corners. I’ve noticed it about myself at times! When I talk with athletes about it, a common thread often relates to vision or where they’re looking.  Your field of vision and focus tends to be close in when you’re stressed. When you’re relaxed you’re able to extend your focus forward, through the turns, down the trail, past the immediate obstacle.

Coast Less, Pedal More

CTS Coaches work with road, mountain, and gravel cyclists, and one of the lessons we’ve learned from the mountain bike coaches and athletes is that pedaling more can make you faster. The pedaling in mountain biking, and even some gravel racing, is often more intermittent compared to road cycling. By focusing on pedaling more in places you normally coast, you’re likely to go faster overall. For road cyclists the scenario applies more to cornering. Coasting through a corner is often necessary, but if you can pedal longer before you start coasting as you enter a turn (learn to go in with more speed as you get more comfortable cornering at speed) and start pedaling again sooner on the exit, you’ll go faster.

By Jim Rutberg, CTS Pro Coach and co-author “The Time-Crunched Cyclist, 3rd Edition


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Comments 14

  1. Pingback: Cornering Tips for Road Cyclists - Life-Fitness-Bike

  2. Yes, that is a very good idea. Most of the crits I have raced in had body contact of some sort as well as the occasional bar touch with others. Things could go south quick if there’s a panic move.

  3. And, I think practicing touching shoulders, elbows etc. with a trusted riding partner helps avoid panicking in group cornering.

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  11. Tire selection also has a huge affect. I’m currently running Vittoria Corsa G+ 25mm tires at 90psi. Their ability to hold in the corners is amazing. Choose your tire and pressure for the specific event.

    1. Your comment made me chuckle. As written it could be taken two ways.
      1. You forgot prayer I always do = I forget prayer too
      2. You forgot prayer I always do = I always do pray
      Not a slam just found it humorous! I presume #2 and if so I agree 100% on and off the bike – it works!

  12. Thanks for this. I’ve been riding for over a decade here in Texas and this is one area I still feel uncomfortable with. So I’m attending you climbing and decent school in June so hopefully you can build my confidence…

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