Tiffany Cromwell’s off-season: rest, relaxation and running a marathon

Tiffany Cromwell’s off-season: rest, relaxation and running a marathon

The off-season is a time for a bit of R & R, which in Tiffany Cromwell’s case stands for rowing and running a marathon – just two activities in her jam packed autumn

Canyon-Sram Racing Rouleur Classic Tiffany Cromwell

The off-season is a time when professional riders enjoy kicking up their feet and kicking back; lying on a beach or spending time at home to soak up the precious few moments of down time in a hectic year of speed, stress, sacrifice.

So what did Tiffany Cromwell do with her off-season? She ran a marathon, of course, in a pretty decent time of 3:21 and at the beginning of a city break to Budapest.

“Mentally I was recovered from the season quite soon so I needed something to do, then I got the idea to do a marathon. I was like, ‘where do I want to go? Oh yeah Budapest. Do they have one? OK yes, and that gives me a month’s training. That will be enough’,” she says. 

“I flew in the day before the marathon, did that, and then had two days to hobble around. I was broken, for sure, but I could use the city bikes there and be like an elderly woman.” 

Not for her a laid back few weeks of sun, sand and sitting back; Cromwell’s autumn included one of Europe’s biggest mountain bike races, the Roc d’Azur, sessions of boxercise in the gym, a rowing event with the charity Outward Bound, which aims to encourage young people to practise sport, a trip to New York and then the Rouleur Classic in London.

Rouleur Classic day 2

“If I do the same thing over and over, it’s monotonous for me, I need that new challenge,” the Canyon-SRAM rider says.

But even for someone like Cromwell, a fast-talking ball of energy who refuses to sit around and do nothing, the off-season is an essential component of a cyclist’s year. 

From the outside it might look like losing a season’s worth of fitness and training to indulge in several weeks of eating, drinking, lazing about (or running marathons) is a colossal waste.

However that period of physical switching off pays dividends for high-octane bodies that are asked to hit high revs from January through to October, with that period of downtime allowing greater physical peaks during the season.

Then there’s the mental aspect of switching off from a sport that demands utmost commitment and sacrifice; whether they’ve had good seasons or bad seasons riders count down the days until they can come down from their high or put their lows behind them and restart. 

“It’s the mental thing more than anything. You’re on the road all the time, you’ve got the stress of having to train for the right schedule, to do efforts, to hurt yourself. 

“And also this is a time for family, relationships. It’s a time to enjoy them, it’s not like, ‘oh no I can’t go and do something fun because I have to race and I have to recover’.”

Like all good things, however, the off-season has to come to an end and those hedonistic autumnal activities get put back into a box for another 11 months. In Cromwell’s case she’ll wave goodbye to the running shoes and the rowing blades, but perhaps not the boxing gloves. 

“I’d be open to seeing how we can incorporate that into my training because it’s a core and strength session, and high intensity too. Sometimes my coach is like, ‘what planet is she on?’ But stuff like hiking, rowing, running; I certainly won’t be doing that in the season.” 

The post Tiffany Cromwell’s off-season: rest, relaxation and running a marathon appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

Canyon-Sram Racing Rouleur Classic Tiffany Cromwell

READ MORE

‘There’s a lack of support for retired riders’ - Grace Brown on navigating life after racing

‘There’s a lack of support for retired riders’ - Grace Brown on navigating life after racing

While the former Olympic and World champion is relishing new ventures in retirement, she is keen to ensure more support is in place for those...

Read more
Ratings of the Women's WorldTour teams at the Classics

Sprint dominance, cobbled mayhem and Ardennes surprises - rating the women's teams at the Spring Classics

From SD Worx-Protime's continued success to Canyon-SRAM's disappointment, Rouleur takes a look at how each squad performed at the Spring Classics

Read more
Alpecin and UAE delight but Visma and Red bull struggle - rating the teams' performances at the Spring Classics

Alpecin and UAE delight but Visma and Red bull struggle - rating the teams' performances at the Spring Classics

With the curtains closing on the Spring Classics, Rouleur looks back on the winners and losers of this year's campaign 

Read more
Tadej Pogačar in the pink jersey at the 2024 Giro d'Italia

How to watch and live stream the Giro d'Italia 2025

A guide to where you can catch all the Giro d'Italia action from home or on the go

Read more
Writing history: Why Kim Le Court’s Liège-Bastogne-Liège win is so important

Writing history: Why Kim Le Court’s Liège-Bastogne-Liège win is so important

The Mauritian trailblazer took the biggest victory of her career on Sunday after a challenging road to the top of the sport

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE