Cape Epic Stage Wins Decoded: The Power, Pacing & Pain Behind the Podium
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About this listen
Winning a Cape Epic stage isn't just about fitness — it's about surviving the first 10 minutes, holding position through blind corners on rocky single track, and then having enough left to produce 1,000-watt kicks on grass after 4,000 kilojoules of work.
In this breakdown, performance coach Reece McDonald pulls back the curtain on exactly what it took to win Stage 1 and Stage 6 of Cape Epic 2025. From the opening selection — 18 minutes at 6.1 watts per kilo on a 14.5% gradient — to the tactical patience of the mid-stage settle, to the breakaway on Stage 6 that came down to who could resist fatigue the longest. This is what race-winning durability looks like from the inside.
Whether you're a data-driven cyclist, a coach, or just fascinated by what elite performance demands from the human body — this one will change how you watch mountain bike racing.
🔗 Scicon Sports SA — https://theactivehobo.short.gy/sciconsports-discount
📩 Got questions about training or performance analysis? Drop them in the comments — Reece might just answer yours next.
👉 Subscribe for more stories from the world of endurance sport.
00:00 — A week that kept everyone guessing
00:58 — Stage 1: fresh legs, 35 teams, and the fight for position
02:50 — The first selection: 6.1W/kg on a 14.5% wall
04:30 — The settle: knowing when to save and when to spend
05:38 — Final attacks and the race to the line
06:38 — The sprint: 1,000-watt kicks on grass after 4,000kJ
08:00 — Stage 6: what six days of racing does to your legs
10:00 — The breakaway that broke the field
13:00 — What it actually takes: durability, cadence, and years of training
16:00 — How to get involved and what's next