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TAPER · 2 WEEKS OUT

TOUR OF FLANDERS CYCLO (RONDE VAN VLAANDEREN)2 WEEKS OUT

Sharpness is banked. Now shed fatigue. Built around the 229km / 2,600m profile of the Tour of Flanders in Belgium.

229 km·2,600 m climbing·8-12 hours·April

THE FOCUS RIGHT NOW

SHED FATIGUE.

Two weeks out you're in taper territory. Fitness plateaus or nudges up — you don't lose meaningful fitness in two weeks, but fatigue disappears fast. Short sharp efforts to keep legs awake. Everything else is volume reduction.

THIS WEEK'S ANCHOR SESSION

RACE-PACE OPENERS

60min ride with 3x3min at race pace + 3x1min at VO2. Not training — priming. The efforts remind your legs what fast feels like. Nothing more.

THE WEEK

A TYPICAL WEEK, 2 WEEKS OUT

Monday

REST

Rest is the session.

Tuesday

OPENERS (60MIN)

Short sharp race-pace primers.

Wednesday

45MIN Z1

Coffee spin.

Thursday

60MIN Z2 WITH 2X5MIN AT THRESHOLD

Final sharpening effort.

Friday

REST

Full rest.

Saturday

90MIN Z2 WITH OPENERS

Short, easy, prep the pre-event day.

Sunday

60MIN Z1 OR REST

Total reset.

DON'T DO THIS

The taper-anxiety mistake: riding harder in taper because your legs feel fresh. Fresh legs aren't a problem — they're the whole point. Hold the line.

EVENT INTEL

WHAT THE TOUR OF FLANDERS ACTUALLY DEMANDS

The Ronde van Vlaanderen Cyclo is the amateur Tour of Flanders — ridden the day before the pros, on the same roads, finishing in Oudenaarde. The long route is 229km with around 2,600m of climbing across seventeen hellingen, most of them cobbled, including the Koppenberg, the Oude Kwaremont and the Paterberg. The elevation total undersells the day: this is repeated short, violent climbs on stones, not long Alpine cols.

KEY CHARACTERISTICS

  • Seventeen short bergs — Koppenberg (22% max), Paterberg (20% max), Oude Kwaremont — most under a kilometre but savagely steep
  • Cobbled climbs and cobbled flat sectors that punish anyone who can't hold a wheel or a line
  • Open Flandrian farmland means crosswinds and echelons — positioning matters as much as watts
  • Four distances (75 / 130 / 177 / 229km) — pick the one that matches your spring fitness
  • Early-April weather: cold, wind, frequent rain, and greasy cobbles

COMMON MISTAKES

  • Training for steady power when the day is decided by 30-90 second max efforts on each berg
  • Hitting the Koppenberg in the wrong gear and getting forced to walk in a clipped-out conga line
  • Treating the cobbles as a fitness problem — it's a bike-handling and tyre-pressure problem first

PACING

Flanders isn't paced like a sportive, it's paced like a series of sprints with long recoveries between them. The bergs come in clusters in the back half — Koppenberg, then Taaienberg, then the Oude Kwaremont–Paterberg one-two near the finish. Each is a 30-90 second effort well over threshold. The skill is recovering on the flat, arriving at the base of each climb near the front, in the right gear, carrying momentum onto the stones. Burn your matches surging for position in the first 100km and you'll be walking the Koppenberg with the day still in front of you.

FUELLING

A cold 8-12 hour day burns more than riders expect, and appetite drops in the cold, so you eat on a timer or not at all. Target 60-90g carbs/hour, front-loaded into the first half before the bergs come thick and fast — you cannot eat mid-cobble. Use the feed zones for real food and a warm drink; Flandrian classics culture runs on rice cake and waffle, not just gels. Insulate one bottle enough that you'll actually drink from it in April.

KIT

Tyre choice and pressure decide your day on the cobbles: 28-30mm run softer than you would on tarmac, tubeless if you have it. Compact gearing (34x30 minimum) for the Koppenberg's 22% ramp on wet stone. Pack a rain shell, full-finger gloves and a cap under the helmet — April in Flanders is genuinely cold and wet. Cushioned bar tape, or doubled-up tape, saves your hands across 35km+ of pavé.

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 2 WEEKS OUT

Is 2 weeks enough to train for the Tour of Flanders Cyclo (Ronde van Vlaanderen)?+

2 weeks out your training can't meaningfully change your fitness — you're in taper. Focus on recovery, hydration, familiarisation with your kit + fuelling, and event-day logistics. Don't try to add fitness this close to the event.

What's the hardest part of the Tour of Flanders Cyclo (Ronde van Vlaanderen)?+

Seventeen short bergs — Koppenberg (22% max), Paterberg (20% max), Oude Kwaremont — most under a kilometre but savagely steep. training for steady power when the day is decided by 30-90 second max efforts on each berg — so pacing discipline is the single biggest lever most amateurs miss. Flanders isn't paced like a sportive, it's paced like a series of sprints with long recoveries between them.

How many hours a week should I train at 2 weeks out from the Tour of Flanders Cyclo (Ronde van Vlaanderen)?+

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 Tour of Flanders Cyclo (Ronde van Vlaanderen)?+

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 Tour of Flanders Cyclo (Ronde van Vlaanderen) runs. 7-day free trial, $195/mo.

What gearing should I run for the Tour of Flanders Cyclo (Ronde van Vlaanderen)?+

Tyre choice and pressure decide your day on the cobbles: 28-30mm run softer than you would on tarmac, tubeless if you have it. Compact gearing (34x30 minimum) for the Koppenberg's 22% ramp on wet stone. Pack a rain shell, full-finger gloves and a cap under the helmet — April in Flanders is genuinely cold and wet. Cushioned bar tape, or doubled-up tape, saves your hands across 35km+ of pavé.