The mistake most athletes make with knee pain is two things: not being consistent, and not addressing little things early. Knee pain is almost always a product of a lot of minor things that accumulated. A little exercise here, a little stretch there, done regularly — that pays dividends down the road. Skip it for long enough and there's eventually a breaking point. In cycling, it almost always ends up being the knee.
Single-leg work is what I was missing. Knee raises, step ups, step downs, eccentric calf raises — these are the exercises that build the coordination foundation most cyclists never touch. They're also the exercises that translate directly to power output. Step ups specifically strengthen the glutes, hamstrings, and quads — the three muscles that matter most for maintaining strength in the knee and producing force through the pedal stroke. Doing those exercises consistently does translate to faster speeds. If you can produce more power in a seated position, you're at a better likelihood of winning a race. That's not a recovery argument. That's a performance argument.
Before the LadderPod, I was using a bench or a box at home. The limitation is always the same — you're stuck at one height, and every exercise has a different optimal height. If you're starting box jumps, you can't start at the highest height. To do the full range you end up needing multiple pieces of kit, which takes up a lot of space. I've lived in apartments where storing a bench was just not possible. The LadderPod's 12 adjustable heights solve that. I can drop it low for eccentric calf raises, bring it right up for jumps. It fits in a closet. I also use it pre-ride for activation — that's something my team was always big on. It helps with injury prevention but it also just improves performance from the start of the session.
If I only have five to ten minutes, I'm doing eccentric calf raises, step ups, step downs. And probably some box jumps — as I'm getting older, I'm finding that explosivity is the first thing to deteriorate. The plyometric work makes a real difference to that.
You finish a seven-hour ride and you have maybe an hour before school pickup. That's the reality. Going to see an osteo or a physio — getting in the car, driving, waiting, driving back — that's not an option. It has to happen at home, on the couch, in the time you actually have.
So that's the window: fifteen minutes. The IT band is always first. More stiffness accumulates there than almost anywhere else as a cyclist — it's one of the direct causes of knee issues, and after a long day in the saddle it's obvious. Scraping through the IT band and around the quad, you feel the release. Then the Achilles and calf if I've been running. And one that surprises people — the hands. In a grand tour, the thing that can hurt the most is actually your hands. The bars are a constant contact point. I've broken several bones in my hand. Getting into the palm, loosening up the wrist — it genuinely matters.
The kids actually changed how I think about all of this. Before, I thought recovery had to be a full programme — two hours, properly structured — or it wasn't worth doing. And then I'd be defeated by that and do nothing. Having an hour between a ride and school pickup forces you to figure out what actually moves the needle in fifteen minutes. Turns out that's enough. Consistency with a short routine is worth more than occasional two-hour sessions. That took me a long time to learn.