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RACE WEEK · 1 WEEKS OUT

LA MARMOTTE GRANFONDO ALPES1 WEEKS OUT

Don't do anything clever. Eat, sleep, show up. Built around the 174km / 5,000m profile of the Marmotte in France.

174 km·5,000 m climbing·7-12 hours·July

THE FOCUS RIGHT NOW

DON'T DO ANYTHING CLEVER.

Race week is about arriving at the start line fresh, hydrated, and calm. The training is done. Hard sessions now cost you more than they give you. Every hour of good sleep in the final 72 hours does more than any workout could.

THIS WEEK'S ANCHOR SESSION

RACE MORNING OPENERS

20 minutes on the bike, morning of the event or day before, with 3x30sec at race pace. Wakes legs up without draining anything. That's it.

THE WEEK

A TYPICAL WEEK, 1 WEEKS OUT

Monday

45MIN Z1 + OPENERS (3X1MIN RACE PACE)

Legs awake, fatigue low.

Tuesday

REST OR 30MIN EASY

Focus on hydration + sleep.

Wednesday

60MIN WITH 4X30SEC RACE PACE

Final primer — nothing heroic.

Thursday

REST

Start carb-loading today.

Friday

30MIN EASY SPIN + OPENERS

Race check. Kit lay-out. Route review.

Saturday (race day -1)

20-30MIN VERY EASY

Or rest. Whichever calms nerves.

Race Day

EVENT

Pace it. Fuel it. Enjoy it.

DON'T DO THIS

Race-week mistakes are always additive — an extra hard session, extra volume, an unfamiliar food. Do less. The last week cannot make you fitter. It can absolutely make you slower.

EVENT INTEL

WHAT THE MARMOTTE ACTUALLY DEMANDS

La Marmotte is the original European mass-participation Alpine event — 174km from Bourg d'Oisans over the Glandon, Télégraphe, Galibier and finishing on Alpe d'Huez. 5,000m of climbing in one day, four giant cols, and a culture that treats it as the amateur Tour de France stage.

KEY CHARACTERISTICS

  • Four legendary cols: Glandon, Télégraphe, Galibier, Alpe d'Huez
  • Galibier summit at 2,642m — altitude bites the upper third
  • Alpe d'Huez summit finish after 150km already in the legs
  • July heat in the Maurienne valley regularly hits 35°C+
  • Gold/silver/bronze finishing standards — riders chase the time bands

COMMON MISTAKES

  • Racing the Glandon in the opening cool air and arriving at the Galibier hollow
  • Underfuelling because the climbs feel manageable in the first half
  • Choosing 11-28 gearing and meeting Alpe d'Huez at 50rpm

PACING

Pace La Marmotte from the Alpe backwards. Glandon at 70-75% FTP, Télégraphe-Galibier as a paired sub-threshold effort, Alpe d'Huez ridden on a wattage ceiling regardless of heat or crowd. The valley between Galibier descent and the Alpe is the day's hidden test — tailwind, heat, fatigue. Eat through it, do not hammer.

FUELLING

8-10+ hours demands 90-110g carbs/hour minimum, and the gut has to be trained for it. Force-drink on a timer once the valley heat lands — Maurienne in July is brutal. Refill bottles at every feed; the climb to Alpe d'Huez is the worst place on earth to run dry.

KIT

34x32 minimum, 34x34 if you have it. Gilet and arm warmers stashed for the Galibier descent (genuinely cold even on 35°C days). Clear lenses for the descents. Sunscreen reapplied at every feed — Alpine UV plus an 8-hour day is a sunburn waiting to happen.

WANT THIS BUILT AROUND YOUR FTP?

COACHED FOR YOUR EVENT.

The Not Done Yet coaching community runs the coached five-pillar system built around your actual event date. Personalised TrainingPeaks plan, weekly calls, expert masterclasses. 7-day free trial.

$195/month · 7-day free trial · Cancel anytime

FAQ

COMMON QUESTIONS AT 1 WEEKS OUT

Is 1 weeks enough to train for the La Marmotte Granfondo Alpes?+

Race week is about showing up fresh. No new fitness gains possible in a week. Focus on sleep, hydration, carb loading 48-72 hours out, and mental prep. Any hard session this week costs you more than it gives.

What's the hardest part of the La Marmotte Granfondo Alpes?+

Four legendary cols: Glandon, Télégraphe, Galibier, Alpe d'Huez. racing the Glandon in the opening cool air and arriving at the Galibier hollow — so pacing discipline is the single biggest lever most amateurs miss. Pace La Marmotte from the Alpe backwards.

How many hours a week should I train at 1 weeks out from the La Marmotte Granfondo Alpes?+

Drop to 6-8 hours with minimal intensity. The taper protects the fitness you've built rather than growing more. Short, sharp openers to keep legs awake. Nothing aerobically challenging.

Do I need a coach to train for the La Marmotte Granfondo Alpes?+

You don't need a coach to finish. You do need structure. If you're new to sportives, have a target finish time, have a plateau you can't break, or have a history of peaking wrong, a coached plan pays for itself. Inside the Not Done Yet coaching community the plan is built backwards from your event date — base, build, peak, taper timed to the week the La Marmotte Granfondo Alpes runs. 7-day free trial, $195/mo.

What gearing should I run for the La Marmotte Granfondo Alpes?+

34x32 minimum, 34x34 if you have it. Gilet and arm warmers stashed for the Galibier descent (genuinely cold even on 35°C days). Clear lenses for the descents. Sunscreen reapplied at every feed — Alpine UV plus an 8-hour day is a sunburn waiting to happen.