The pace line was threading its way along the beach route. Our morning ritual had six bikes one behind the other holding 22 mph into a stiff headwind. I was second in line behind my favorite draft. As our speed climbed to 23, I shifted forward, watching my rpms move to 101.
Second on the paceline carries responsibility. While the lead certainly has more visibility for road hazards (cars, potholes, water), second position is the backup. The lead sometimes gets head down doing the work into the wind and fails to focus forward. Often, second position is relied upon to catch road hazards missed by the lead. Sometimes, it’s just a wake-up call to the front.
Head down doing the work can be dangerous. That’s why it takes a team. Take a look at your team. How often do things get overlooked? How often does the big picture fade away because everyone has their head down doing the work?
Sometimes, you have to look up. If you are the lead, that’s you. Make sure your second is looking, too. It takes all eyes. -TF