Creatine for cycling?

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Creatine for cycling?

Postby Man On Bike. » Mon Jun 11, 2007 3:56 pm

Anyone here use creatine for cycling? I know a lot of bodybuilders who use it, and that it increases power / muscle size but not endurance. Have you found it effective for improving sprinting/climbing?
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Postby Dave Noisy » Mon Jun 11, 2007 7:02 pm

I've been considering it (for a few years) for that extra 'kick'.

It'd certainly be helpful if one were a sprinter, but i don't think it'd help much for climbing, unless it were a very short climb, ie, less than 20 seconds to get over...
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Postby fredrikw » Mon Jun 11, 2007 9:12 pm

Dave Noisy wrote:It'd certainly be helpful if one were a sprinter, but i don't think it'd help much for climbing, unless it were a very short climb, ie, less than 20 seconds to get over...

you might argue wether that's just an obstacle and not a climb
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Postby Dave Noisy » Tue Jun 12, 2007 9:25 pm

fredrikw wrote:
Dave Noisy wrote:It'd certainly be helpful if one were a sprinter, but i don't think it'd help much for climbing, unless it were a very short climb, ie, less than 20 seconds to get over...

you might argue wether that's just an obstacle and not a climb

Well, exactly! ;)
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Postby vegcrow » Sun Jun 17, 2007 12:37 am

If I remember correctly MoB you're a messenger. I wouldn't waste the money on creatine for all day riding. Big muscles are just more weight to carry up hills...
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Postby ha » Sun Jun 17, 2007 4:22 am

where does creatine come from?

training and enough rest is the best supplement.
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Postby Man On Bike. » Mon Jun 18, 2007 11:45 am

It comes from my liver.
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Postby Man On Bike. » Mon Jun 18, 2007 11:46 am

ddalavi wrote:If I remember correctly MoB you're a messenger. I wouldn't waste the money on creatine for all day riding. Big muscles are just more weight to carry up hills...
You do indeed remember correctly. But surely having more weight to carry would mean that I put on even more muscle! So it would be an endless positive feedback cycle! I will put on so much muscle that my legs will be the size of tree trunks! YAH!
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Postby xjohanx » Mon Jun 18, 2007 12:31 pm

creatine makes you gain 3-4 kgs water and gives your muscles a better explosive strength. but i don't think cyclist have much to gain from creatine usage. if you want to avoid the weight gaining there's a form of creatine called kre-alkalyn which doesn't make the body store water but still increases the explosive strength.
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Postby the crazyest vegan » Mon Jun 18, 2007 9:11 pm

i just do more sprinting when i'm out, my sprinting has definately increased since i started doing time trials as well, it helps to push yourself occasionally, i didnt even know i could go at that lung busting speed untill i started doing them!
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Postby No other way » Thu Jul 12, 2007 6:44 pm

i think using creatine for cycling would be a bad idea since it dehydrates you and stores the water in your muscles which could cause serious problems for riding all day. i'm friends with a wrestling couch who told me about the dangers of creatine when you aren't fully hydrated which is hard to do riding all day.
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Postby vegcrow » Thu Jul 12, 2007 9:05 pm

so is creatine more for bodybuilders trying to get 'pumped'?
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Postby No other way » Fri Jul 13, 2007 4:47 am

basically
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Re: Creatine for cycling?

Postby Herbsman » Wed Feb 22, 2012 1:59 pm

Sorry to bump this mega-old thread but I read (in The Biochemical Basis of Sports Performance) that creatine is invaluable for repeated bouts of high intensity exercise, e.g. when doing short but extremely hard anaerobic intervals.

I hate taking supplements but if I'm missing out on creatine intake by not eating meat then surely it's a good idea to supplement? I read something like 20g for 5 days and then 2g a day to maintain levels worked really well for vegetarians.
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Re: Creatine for cycling?

Postby Lordmuppet » Wed Feb 22, 2012 4:53 pm

Herbsman wrote:Sorry to bump this mega-old thread but I read (in The Biochemical Basis of Sports Performance) that creatine is invaluable for repeated bouts of high intensity exercise, e.g. when doing short but extremely hard anaerobic intervals.

I hate taking supplements but if I'm missing out on creatine intake by not eating meat then surely it's a good idea to supplement? I read something like 20g for 5 days and then 2g a day to maintain levels worked really well for vegetarians.


Not a cyclist, I'm an (aspiring) powerlifter that supplements with monohydrate creatine.

I follow the precision nutrition guidelines for creatine which are that cycling isn't necessary and to have 3-5 grams a day with a warm drink (i use tea). It's cheap and not a hassle :)

Had my levels of creatinine checked recently (after 2 years of supplementation) actually and they were fine :)
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