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Zwift Academy 2024 Finals, Episode 3

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Zwift Academy 2024 Finals, Episode 3

The finals for Zwift Academy 2024 have finished, and Zwift partnered with GCN to bring you a series of four episodes documenting the process at pre-season training camps. Who will come out on top and earn a pro contract?

The first and second episodes were released in previous weeks. Today is episode three, and the final episode will be released next Saturday.

In episode 3, the riders are tested in a sprint lead-out, including racing against the pros. Coaches also watch them support the pros in a second challenge, behaving as a team. How will they do? And will they be able to set aside their personal ambitions?

Watch Episode 3:

(As a reminder, there are 8 finalists this year. To learn a bit about each rider, see this post.)

Up Next

Watch this space for the final episode, premiering March 8 at 5pm UTC/12pm ET/9am PT.

Questions or Comments?

Share below!


Woman Racer Spotlight: Megan Onweller

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Woman Racer Spotlight: Megan Onweller

Name: Megan Onweller

Hometown: Lino Lakes, MN (born and raised Michigander)

How did you get into cycling? I started on a exercise e-bike, wanted MORE and started doing research. My sister was an avid cyclist and told me to get a bike and trainer. Which was SOOOOO complicated and foreign to me at the time. I often remind new riders that it’s OK to feel overwhelmed we all did at some point. 

How many years have you been racing on Zwift? 4 years I think, I started right around 2021 for the social impact of a team environment. I also ride with the Hugo Gravel Team in MN, and I was on Season 3 of From the Ground Up on YouTube

Are you part of a Virtual team? I am a part of the Drafting Dinos, I took a break but came back. Once a dino always a dino, LOL…

What do you love most about racing? Surprising myself on what I can do, and how I can improve. 

What is your favourite style of race (e.g. points, scratch, iTT, TTT, Chase, duathlon)?  I love TTT, it’s special in its own way. The teamwork and communication, the dedication of the overall team, it’s so refreshing. BUT I do love me a points race, getting to utilize the strategy of it all. The recon, the notes, and the joy of lining up to see what you can obtain for the team. It’s so damn fun! I have a 10 year old, too, and he loves to cheer me on. 

What is your favourite Zwift women’s race series? ZRL is always fun, Fearless also puts on a great women’s race. 

What is your most memorable racing experience, inside or outside or BOTH? I raced Unbound gravel last year and my favorite was pushing hard for my personal record. I ended up pulling a large group of men for about ½ of the course. There are some pretty awesome pics from it, but overall after feeling inferior to men on the bike it was very empowering. I felt like such a badass. It made all the training time on Zwift and outside so worth it. It was a great memory. My sister Paige Onweller was also in a pretty iconic women’s sprint finish at that race so it was a great race for memories! 

I think indoor was my first group ride with the Dinos an “easy” ride up the Alpe, haha. They were so encouraging, and I knew if I could have fun suffering up that beast I was in good company. The rest was history. 

What is your favourite food to eat post-race? I am a sucker for a chicken basket and fries after a long ride. I love me an horchata recovery shake as well from Scratch, it’s a 12 out of 10. 

What advice would you give to a woman entering her first Zwift race? Have fun! Don’t stress and never feel stupid for asking others for help, we all started out the same way. Also, if you are a mom it is NOT selfish to spend time on a bike. You are showing them important things like work ethic and we can do hard things. Time is time, we make up for it elsewhere. Mom guilt is real, but being happy and healthy is worth more than the time you will spend on the bike. 

Any upcoming race you are looking forward to? I am looking forward to some local gravel races and Iceman in Michigan. My whole family basically races it. This past year my partner, my dad, my son, and I all raced. My sister also did the pro race! It was quite a weekend. 

Where can people follow your racing adventures?


Notable Zwift Events for the Weekend of March 1-2

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No races featured this weekend… just a bunch of amazing group rides! We’ve got a few charity events, two banded badge hunt rides, an epic 4-hour endurance event, and a series kickoff with Shimano. See all the details below.

✅ Good Cause  ✅ Popular  ✅ Special Guests  ✅ Kit Unlock

The Tour de 4 is an initiative launched by Sir Chris Hoy to change the perception of people living with stage 4 cancer and to raise vital funds for cancer charities across the UK.

Read all about Tour de 4 series >

Rides are held weekly on Saturdays, and this week’s ride will be 45 minutes long, on the Greater London Flat route.

Saturday, March 1 @ 10am UTC/5am ET/2am PT
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/4817884

✅ Popular  ✅ Endurance Challenge  ✅ Kit Unlock

The Vätternrundan group ride series ends this weekend, and the final ride has lots of signups despite being really long! Riders are on Watopia Big Flat 8 this weekend for 4 hours of 1.8-2.2 w/kg riding.

Sunday, March 2 @ 7am UTC/2am ET/Saturday 11pm PT
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/4654689

✅ Route Badge  ✅ Banded  ✅ Good Cause

Bike MS is a group of passionate cyclists looking to raise funds and awareness for those living with multiple sclerosis. Join the squad on a banded badge hunt ride across an open-paced lap of the rarely-used Yorkshire Double Loops route (29.7km, 547m).

Sunday, March 2 @ 2:05pm UTC/9:05am ET/6:05am PT
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/4846882

✅ Route Badge  ✅ Popular  ✅ Guest Leader  ✅ Kit Unlock

Join the kickoff ride to a new series from Shimano! These open-paced group rides feature newer Zwift routes, a #SuperCyclingSunday kit unlock, special guest riders, and more! This week’s ride is an open-paced event on Watopia’s Danger Noodle (32.3km, 414m).

Read all about the Shimano Super Cycling Sunday series >

Sunday, March 2 @ 3pm UTC/10am EDT/7am PDT
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/4868267

✅ Banded Ride  ✅ Beginner-Friendly  ✅ Route Badge

The friendly Bikealicious crew is leading a banded group ride on the epic and brand-new ZG25 Queen route (44.8km, 894m). Grab this route badge if you haven’t done so yet, which comes with extra XP.

Saturday, March 1 @ 8pm UTC/3pm ET/12pm PT
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/4861009

How We Make Our Picks

We choose each weekend’s Notable Events based on a variety of factors including:

  • Is the event unique/innovative in some way?
  • Are celebrities (pro riders, etc) attending/leading?
  • Are signup counts already high, meaning the event is extra-popular?
  • Does the ride include desirable unlocks or prizes?
  • Does the event appeal to ladies on Zwift? (We like to support this under-represented group!)
  • Is it for a good cause?
  • Is it just plain crazy (extra long races, world record attempts, etc)?
  • Is it a long-running, popular weekly event with a dedicated leader who deserves a shout out?

In the end, we want to call attention to events that are extra-special and therefore extra-appealing to Zwifters. If you think your event qualifies, comment below with a link/details and we may just include it in an upcoming post!

44,100 Everests: Digging Into Tour de Zwift 2025 Data

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44,100 Everests: Digging Into Tour de Zwift 2025 Data

Tour de Zwift 2025 just wrapped up last week. Held during “Peak Zwift” time, TdZ is Zwift’s marquee annual group ride/run event – and it showed! Participation numbers seemed especially strong this year, with hundreds showing up to every ride I saw.

But it’s hard to gauge just how big TdZ is overall, without access to Zwift’s backend data analytics. So I reached out to Zwift with a request for some numbers, and they took the time to gather those stats so I could share them here. Let’s dive in!

Zwifter Counts

  • Total registered for TdZ: 342k
    Zwifters could register via the web, signing up in game, or by completing a TdZ event. So this figure doubtless includes some folks who clicked to register, but never actually rode a TdZ event.
  • Total who finished all 6 stages:
    • Cycling: 85,958
    • Running: 1,798

The Ultimate Challenge

Did riders finish the Ultimate Challenge because of the kit unlock? Doubtful. It’s more likely we completed the challenge simply because it existed!

Arguably the biggest “new feature” at this year’s TdZ was “The Ultimate Challenge.” This was for riders only, and required you to complete all 18 routes featured in this year’s Tour. (Routes could be completed in events, or as on-demand efforts.)

It was a bit of an “under the radar” challenge, but Zwift did help things along by creating a temporary personal dashboard at zwift.com (which has since been taken down) where you could monitor which routes you still needed to check off. I used it to determine I still had three routes left heading into make-up week!

So how many Zwifters finished the Ultimate Challenge? Here are some stats:

  • Total Ultimate Challenge finishers: 11,427
  • Total who completed at least half of the Ultimate Challenge (9 separate TdZ routes): 40,263
  • Total who completed all rides AND runs (the Ultimate Ultimate Challenge?): 346
    Zwift’s own Jon Mayfield and Leah Thorvilson are in this group.

Totals

It’s always amazing to look at the accumulated totals from all Zwifters in big events like Tour de Zwift. Check it out…

  • Total distance covered in TdZ 2025 events: 37,316,561 kilometers
    Or around the Earth 931 times. Or to the Moon and back… 48 times!
  • Total elevation climbed in TdZ 2025 events: 390,238,173 meters
    That’s 44,100 Everests!
  • Total time accumulated between all TdZ 2025 activities: 1,206,646 hours
    That’s 50,276+ days of continuous riding… or 137+ years!
  • Total Ride Ons given and/or received during TdZ 2025 events: 27.6 million
    That’s an average of 23 Ride Ons per rider-hour, meaning riders gave or received, on average, 23 Ride Ons per hour while in TdZ events.
  • Total TdZ 2025 event completions:
    • Rides: 1,119,338
    • Runs: 27,510
  • Most popular cycling route in this year’s TdZ events: Petite Douleur
    This “Little Pain” of a route began its life as a Rebel Route I created back in August of 2020, so it’s fun to see its popularity in TdZ!
  • Most popular running route in this year’s TdZ events: Park to Peak

Previous Year Comparison

Zwift was happy to share that this year’s TdZ stats were up from last year’s TdZ, across the board.

The most notable change was the total number of graduates (~86k this year, up from 69k last year), although this was admittedly helped along by the reduction in total stages from 8 to 6.

Questions or Comments?

I had a great time in this year’s TdZ events, whether I was racing the group ride or just spinning away in zone 2 to knock out the route as part of the Ultimate Challenge.

What about you? How was your TdZ experience? Any ideas for improvement you want to share? I’m sure Zwift HQ will be watching the comments on this post, so please share your feedback below…


Tiny Race Series – March 1 Routes and Last Week’s Results

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Tiny Race Series – March 1 Routes and Last Week’s Results

See zwiftinsider.com/tiny for current Tiny Race details.


Shimano Super Cycling Sunday Series Announced

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Shimano Super Cycling Sunday Series Announced

Give yourself that Monday smile that only comes from Sunday miles! Shimano’s Super Cycling Sunday campaign has come to Zwift with a series of weekly rides scheduled from March 2 through the end of the year.

These open-paced group rides feature newer Zwift routes, a #SuperCyclingSunday kit unlock, special guest riders, and more! Read on for details…

Kit Unlock

Complete any of the rides to unlock the exclusive Shimano Super Cycling Sunday kit in game!

March + April Route Schedule

Routes will be decided two months in advance. These are full routes so riders earn route badges for completing the event.

Events take place every Sunday at 3pm UTC/10am ET/7am PT or 4pm UTC/11am ET/8am PT.

DateRoute
03/02/2025Danger Noodle
03/09/2025Sugar Cookie
03/16/2025Libby Hill After Party
03/23/2025Yorkshire Double Loops
03/30/2025The Magnificent 8
04/06/2025Tair Dringfa Fechan
04/13/2025Wandering Flats
04/20/2025Douce France
04/27/2025Greater London 8

Sign up at zwift.com/events/tag/shimanosupercyclingsunday

Ambassadors

The first #SuperCyclingSunday ride of each month will be hosted by a special guest rider who will be announced a few days before each ride. The March 2 kickoff event features Khory, a Shimano ambassador who knows what the brand and Super Cycling Sunday are all about:

I’m content creator with a long running passion for photography and videography, a recently turned 40 year old dad of two and a self confessed cycling geek! If I’m not on the bike, I’m creating content around bikes or at very least in the pub talking about them. Zwift has been a game changer when it comes to year round riding being based in the UK with our long winters and short days putting the comfort and convenience back into winter miles for the summer smiles!

Find Khory on Insta @khoryzfmedia

Questions, Comments… Free Socks?

Learn more on Shimano’s Super Cycling Sunday homepage, including IRL events and a chance to get some free socks if you’re an EU resident!

Got questions or comments? Share below!


Introducing Pedal Games: Custom Info Panels and Mini Games for Indoor Cycling

Introducing Pedal Games: Custom Info Panels and Mini Games for Indoor Cycling

A few months back, Jesper from ZwiftHacks and Jonathon from ZwiftHype announced the release of Pedal Games, “a collection of mini games and info panels to users of all kinds of virtual cycling platforms.”

Read Jesper’s post >

In some ways, you can think of Pedal Games as similar to Sauce for Zwift, in that it provides game overlays that let you customize your indoor cycling experience. But Pedal Games also offers lots of fun stuff that Sauce does not, and it’s a free app!

So today, I want to run through a quick intro to what Jesper and Jonathon have built, because it really is quite an amazing Zwift community project. Let’s go!

Getting Set Up

Prerequisites

Pedal Games is a Windows application that requires Windows 10 or 11 to run.

You’ll also need indoor cycling software (such as Zwift), since Pedal Games is just an add-on to whatever cycling software you use. Pedal Games works particularly well with Zwift and TrainingPeaks Virtual, but supports getting data via ANT+, MQTT, WebSocket, HTTP, and UDP, which means in theory it can be combined with just about any platform.

Signup

To get started, head to pedalgames.online and click to Sign Up. You’ll need to create an account, download the app, then sign into it to get started.

Setup

Once you’ve signed in, you’ll need to set up your basic user info (FTP, Max HR, and weight) on the homescreen. You can then set the power source to Zwift and start up Zwift.

When you see “You’re ready” at the bottom, you’re ready to go! Start up your Zwift session…

Mini Games

Let’s begin by looking at some of the mini games, since these are what’s most new and different about Pedal Games vs Sauce for Zwift.

The app includes a pile of mini games, which you access by clicking “Games” from the main home screen.

See full list of games on the Pedal Games website >

The games are created to encourage you to hold a particular target power, cadence, or heart rate – and various combinations of those. Each game includes a HUD element you can drag and drop to wherever you’d like on your screen.

Let’s start with a simple example, great for recovery days:

Underwatter

So at its simplest, a game will have you try to stay above or below a particular target. As you hit the target, time accumulates. Your goal is to accumulate as much as possible in the target zone.

Underwatter has you stay under a particular power target. “The Band” has you try to keep your power in a particular range:

The Band

“Spin” is a similar idea, but the target is cadence-based, not power-based. With spin, you’re trying to keep your cadence at or above the target:

Spin

Things get more interesting when you mix and match power, target, and/or cadence targets. “Under The Radar”, for example, has you work on your efficiency by requiring you to stay above a certain power threshold while keeping your heart rate below a certain target.

Unstructured Training

The big idea with these mini games is “unstructured training.” Instead of a structured ERG workout that requires you to hold particular power numbers for precise time intervals, these games push you to accumulate time at target power in a more flexible way.

What’s the value of unstructured vs structured training? Jonathon Levie explains it very well:

I’m pretty good at 1 minute power. I had a series of coached training sessions to improve that. The workout was 20s on (700w?), 40s off, for about 10 minutes. Rest, then another set.

First week’s session was impossible. I get it, it’s the coach’s guess and he’s going off what I should be able to do based on my 1 minute power. We dropped the power for next week. The intervals felt okay, but the rest felt like it ended sooner and sooner. I completed the first set, but had nothing for the second set and didn’t even try.

We lowered the power for the next week. I felt slightly better during the first set, and attempted to start the second set, and quit. Was I improving? I was making it farther each week, as we lowered the power. Was I motivated? Nope, I wanted to quit cycling. If I can’t complete a session to improve the one thing I’m great at after 3 weeks, then feels hopeless.

When I first livestreamed Pedal Games a few years back, I had set the game’s target power to 700w. To score, just ride higher than that. I expected short efforts with long recoveries. I found that as soon as my HR was ready I was sprinting again. Recoveries felt perfect, I was in control. It was all self selected intervals and recoveries.

Looking at the power data after, I was sprinting for about 20s at 700w, then took around 40s to recover before going again, all while laughing and riding the keyboard.

That was the workout I couldn’t do coached. Why?

Because the coached workouts are written backward. You are going to do #w for #s and recover for #s. But that recipe may not be what you’re capable of, or capable of that day. Riding to score over #w means the workout is being written to fit the rider’s legs that day. Slightly shorter attack, or slightly longer recovery, and suddenly the athlete is capable of doing much more than their coach thought was possible. Rather than feeling like a failure, I rode this feeling like I was winning a race the whole time and in control!

Later, a coach showed me their own impossible workout through PG and was in disbelief…

These mini games are, in many ways, similar to XERT’s XSS Buckets idea. Instead of super structured intervals, just work to accumulate time at a particular power level. Fill the buckets.

I think the world of cycling training is only beginning to dip its toe into this “unstructured training” idea, and I really hope Zwift jumps into that fray in some way soon.

Custom HUD Panels

Pedal Games also includes a pile of “info panels” that you can use to customize your Zwift HUD, sort of like what Sauce for Zwift offers. There are lots of panels available, including:

  • Standard Zwift HUD data like power, cadence, HR, speed, gradient, etc
  • Various Lap Data Trackers (a much-requested Zwift feature)
  • ETA for Zwift Routes (how long until I finish this route? Handy in races…)
  • Draft Info (some really interesting stuff here…)
  • Efficiency Score (Weighted Average Power, divided by the Average Heart Rate)
  • Calories/min
  • Ride On Counter
  • And many, many more

See full list of info panels on Pedal Games website >

Here’s a quick video showing how you can start using these info panels in Zwift:

Right-clicking any of the panels gives you access to a pile of customization options like transparency, size, etc.

Here’s another video showing how to use the draft-related panels in Pedal Games:

Wrapping It Up

There’s a lot more to Pedal Games than what I’ve summarized above, but I hope this post gave you a good idea of what the app offers and how to start using it. Jesper and Jonathon have been working on this app for years, so it’s been fun to finally start using it and seeing what two of the greatest minds in the Zwiftiverse have come up with. Well done, guys!

Questions or Comments?

Share below!


Announcing Team Velos Monument Races: The Classics Competition 

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Announcing Team Velos Monument Races: The Classics Competition 

Intro To Team Velos

Team Velos is a long-established Zwift club with an active racing team encompassing all levels of riders and a women’s team. Velos prides itself on helping riders improve and holds nine group rides weekly including beginner-friendly events, sprint and climb training rides, monthly route badge challenges, and our flagship Poursuite de la Lanterne Rouge with its three challenges, including a chase of the red beacon.

See upcoming Team Velos rides at zwift.com/events/tag/velos

The Classics Competition

Team Velos also hosts three weekly races: an individual time trial (Race of Truth), a “handicap” chase race, and our Monument Races on Fridays. Beginning 28 February, Velos will host a series of special events under our Monument series: The Classics Competition.

Spring is Classics season, and our goal with The Classics Competition is to present something instantly recognizable every week to cycling fans, who, for many, follow the one-day classics with as much enthusiasm as three-week grand tours. 

Team member and Classics country resident Vincent Van Gestel devised our Classics Competition, which comprises 12 weeks of races on Fridays (including the five cycling Monuments), with our events corresponding to the weekends each pro event is held (liberty taken with Il Lombardia, which is held in autumn).

In addition to the 5 Monuments, seven other famous one-day classics have been selected to complete the 12-week Classics Competition. Each week, a Zwift course has been chosen to be most representative of the pro races, but every route has also been chosen to be enjoyable and competitive for D Cat to reflect the team’s ethos of helping riders at every level achieve their goals.

Schedule and Route Details

Classics Competition races happen each Friday at 7:15pm UTC/2:15pm ET/11:15am PT.

The five events marked with * count toward the Monuments Series general classification.

See upcoming Classics Competition events at zwift.com/events/tag/velosmonument

Race Results

Results for all races (including cumulative scoring for the 5-race Monuments series) will be published on a dedicated race page. For details and updates, go to: velosmonuments.co.uk

Questions or Comments?

To learn more about Team Velos, go to: teamvelos.co.uk. Got questions? Share below!


Top 5 Zwift Videos: Zwift Academy Finals, Live Zwift Events, and Rocker Plates

The annual Zwift Academy Finals broadcast is back! Zwift has partnered with GCN to produce a four-episode series covering all the action, so this week’s top video is the first episode of the series.

We’ve also selected a video about a live Zwift event, a rocker plate review, a review of the TrainerRoad + Zwift integration, and a review of the CaveWorks Rivet Indoor Cycling Frame.

The Zwift Academy finals are back! Join GCN as the finalists battle it out for the professional contract.
Cranks and Sprints Chronicles covers his recent experience at the Wahoo x Crank it Up live event.
After receiving a rocker plate a few months ago, Ryan has ridden quite a few hours with it. In his latest video, he provides a review of the rocker plate.
Everything is Photogenic covers the TrainerRoad and Zwift Integration and shares whether she thinks this is a useful integration.
Ben from The Ride with Ben Delaney provides a review of the CaveWorks Rivet indoor cycling frame and compares it to the Zwift RIDE.

Got a Great Zwift Video?

Share the link below and we may feature it in an upcoming post!