
Why MTB Is Objectively Harder for Women (Physics, Not “Excuses”) #51
If you're fed up with men telling women that they're just making excuses, or you think “women just need to try harder”… you’re exactly why this episode exists. 🤓 It is based on physics, physiology, bike geometry and hormones: it's a clear explanation of why the same trail and the same skill can cost women more. If you'd like to see some great examples of mansplaining, then just check the comments below this reel, which ironically addresses this topic with FACTS already: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DF2rxqqsb78/?igsh=cm9nbGZobnUzNWti
This is not a political statement and not “activism.” I’m NOT here to fight culture wars. I’m here for truth, physics, and better coaching — so more women+ ride bikes, stay motivated in the sport, feel seen and progress faster.
In this episode you’ll learn:
- the difference between relative strength vs absolute strength and why mountain biking doesn't care that women can have more "relative lower body strength"
- why cues like “just send it”, "stop making excuses", or “just pull up” are NOT helpful when coaching women
- how power production, fatigue, recovery, and threat response can change the learning curve
- where bike geometry and component sizing can quietly reduce control for many women
- why women often ride closer to their limits on the SAME trail or when performing the SAME move
- why women can't just "make it snappier" as easily as men.
This episode is for women and men. However, it's for genuinely strong men: the kind who can handle facts, respect context, and support women without putting them down to feel superior.
If you’re here to learn (regardless of gender): welcome. If you’re here to “correct” women’s experiences, minimize biology, degrade me or others — that’s not a discussion, and it’s not welcome here. Also: That’s not masculinity. That’s insecurity with a keyboard. 🤓
This space is for respectful, grounded (wo)men+ who value understanding, empathy, and better solutions.
Looking for coaching that’s designed around different biologies and adapts skills training to your age, body, and bike? Sign up for free here:
https://roxybike.podia.com/sign-me-up
Support this ads-free podcast: https://www.patreon.com/c/rideandinspire
Scientific resources & Citations:Strength & Power differences between women and men: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8477683/ and https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37772882/ and https://physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1113/JP284198 and https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7930971/ and https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7930971/
Physiological differences between genders: Women and men gain strength well relatively, but not absolutely: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3529284/ and why testosterone matters: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6391653/
Intimidation and Perception: A 2010 Sacred Rides survey showed that 60% of women believed the perception of mountain biking as "hard-core" was deterring women from participating
Media Representation: Research about inclusivity by Fiona Spotswood, Bristol University: "media continues to anchor male authority and reinforce hypermasculinity, falling short of its transformative potential. Women disengage and can feel disconnected from mountain biking"
Fostering Inclusive Action Sport: "We need a better understanding of the practices that reconstitute, or challenge, the established production of male-dominated content that masculinizes sport."
The eye-opening books for all of you saying women are not underrepresented: "Invisible Women" written by Caroline Criado Perez
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