Community Races and Clubs

Introduction: Social Dynamics in the Virtual Peloton

Virtual indoor cycling is not just about watt numbers and gradient simulation – it is about people who train together, race against each other and motivate one another. Community races and clubs are the social backbone of every successful e-cycling platform. They transform basement trainer sessions into a digital peloton with tactics, rivalry and camaraderie.

On MyWhoosh, Zwift and alternative platforms such as Rouvy or IndieVelo, hundreds of group rides, club events and community races take place every day. For clubs, training groups and individual riders, these formats offer a structured entry into competition – without entry fees, without travel and often with flexible scheduling. Those who understand the mechanics of clubs, race formats and community rules not only train harder, but stay motivated in the long term.

Important

Community races are not a substitute for UCI esports competitions, but they are the ideal starting point: they teach race tactics, group dynamics and fair performance classification – without the pressure of official qualification races.

What Are Community Races?

Community races are virtual bike races organized by users, clubs or platform operators that take place outside the official UCI esports calendar. They range from relaxed group rides with race elements to highly competitive league formats with point systems and season standings.

Distinction from Official Esports Events

Community races differ from UCI-qualified events in several ways:

  1. Organization – By volunteers, clubs or platform moderators rather than UCI-licensed organizers
  2. Rules – More flexible, often club-specific; anti-cheat standards vary
  3. Performance classification – ELO-, FTP- or category-based, but less formalized
  4. Visibility – Primarily within the platform community, not in UCI rankings

For ambitious riders, community races serve as a training ground and springboard. Those who regularly compete in club leagues gain race experience that is decisive in official qualification races – details can be found in the UCI Cycling Esports Rules and Formats.

Typical Race Formats in the Community

Community events use various formats, often modeled on real cycling disciplines:

  • Scratch races – First across the line wins; classic mass-start format
  • Points races – Points at designated sprint locations; tactically demanding
  • Time trials – Individual starts at intervals; pure performance without drafting
  • Team time trials (TTT) – Teams ride together; strong club cohesion
  • Hill climb challenges – Short, steep climbs; ideal for climbing specialists
  • Grand fondo simulations – Long distances with group formation and breakaway tactics

Community races from registration to finish

1

Check event calendar

2

Choose category

3

Calibrate trainer

4

Complete warm-up

5

Race tactics in the peloton

6

Cool-down and analysis

Virtual Clubs: Structure and Function

Clubs are the organizational unit within an e-cycling platform. They bring together riders with shared goals – whether club teammates, corporate teams, regional groups or international circles of friends.

Club Features on MyWhoosh

MyWhoosh has deliberately positioned clubs as a central feature – comparable to Zwift Clubs, but without a subscription barrier:

  1. Club creation – Every registered user can found a club or join one
  2. Club events – Own group rides and races with invitation link
  3. Leaderboards – Internal rankings by kilometers, elevation or race results
  4. Chat and communication – In-app messages and external channels (Discord, WhatsApp)
  5. Club kit and branding – Visual identification in the peloton through club colors

Since MyWhoosh is free to use, clubs are particularly suitable for cycling clubs with limited budgets. Several club members can train together without each member having to pay a monthly subscription – an advantage over purely subscription-based platforms, as described in detail in the platform comparison.

Club Features on Zwift

Zwift offers the most mature club ecosystem with the largest user base:

  • Zwift Clubs – Official club structure with up to 1,000 members
  • Club Ladder – Seasonal competitions between clubs with a point system
  • ZRL (Zwift Racing League) – Structured league with multiple divisions
  • Community events – Thousands of weekly group rides by pace and performance
  • Discord integration – External communication for tactics and event planning

The Zwift community is particularly active in the evening hours (UTC+1) – group rides at any time of day are practically guaranteed. Those who want to understand the technical basics will find background knowledge in how virtual platforms work.

Clubs on Alternative Platforms

Rouvy, IndieVelo and FulGaz also offer community structures – though with different focuses:

Platform
Club Feature
Community Races
Strength
MyWhoosh
Yes, free
Daily calendar, ELO-based
Free full access, growing esports community
Zwift
Yes, Club Ladder, ZRL
Largest offering worldwide
Largest community, established leagues
IndieVelo
Teams and leagues
Performance-based racing
Fair matchmaking, anti-cheat focus
Rouvy
Groups and challenges
Route challenges
Realistic route preparation
FulGaz
Limited group features
Rare community events
Video realism, solo focus

Club structure in e-cycling

  • Platform (MyWhoosh/Zwift)
  • Club (e.g. "RC Cologne Indoor")
  • Subgroups (A squad, B squad, beginners)
  • Individual riders

ELO Rating and Fair Race Classification

Community races depend on fair performance classification. Nobody wants to ride as a beginner against professional esports athletes – and conversely, strong riders benefit from equally matched competition.

How ELO Works on MyWhoosh

MyWhoosh uses an ELO-based rating system that is adjusted after every race:

  1. Starting value – New riders receive a base ELO after their first FTP test or spin-down
  2. Categories – Races are divided by ELO ranges (e.g. D, C, B, A, Pro)
  3. Matchmaking – The system tries to place riders of similar strength in the same race
  4. Adjustment – Beating stronger opponents increases ELO more than beating weaker ones

Tip

Complete an honest FTP test before your first community race. Overestimated performance values lead to frustrating race experiences and a slow ELO decline – precise calibration is crucial, as described in the article on data transmission and calibration.

Categories and Power Zones on Zwift

Zwift primarily classifies riders by FTP watts per kilogram (W/kg):

  • Category A – Typically from 4.0 W/kg and above; highly competitive races
  • Category B – Approx. 3.2–3.9 W/kg; ambitious hobby riders
  • Category C – Approx. 2.5–3.1 W/kg; broad middle tier of the community
  • Category D – Below 2.5 W/kg; beginners and recreational riders
  • Category E – Special beginner class at some events

In addition, gender-specific categories and age groups exist at many community events. Category compliance is monitored by volunteers and partly automated systems – watt values that are too high lead to discussions and in severe cases to bans.

Community race demand 2020–2025

Growth of weekly community events on Zwift and MyWhoosh with an upward curve; peak values on Tuesday and Thursday evenings (UTC+1).

Community Races for Clubs and Training Groups

Cycling clubs are increasingly discovering virtual clubs as a complement to outdoor training – especially during the winter break or in bad weather.

Benefits for Clubs

  1. Year-round training – Structured sessions regardless of weather and daylight
  2. Low entry costs – MyWhoosh without subscription; shared smart trainer use at the club house possible
  3. Team spirit – Club events strengthen cohesion like joint rides in summer
  4. Talent development – Juniors can practice race tactics without license and travel to UCI races
  5. Data-based coaching – Performance data from community races flows into training planning

Practical Example: Club on MyWhoosh

A mid-sized cycling club from northern Germany founds the club "TSV Musterstadt Indoor" on MyWhoosh:

  • Monday – Structured interval training as a group workout
  • Wednesday – Internal club scratch race, category B/C
  • Saturday – Long group ride with a social character, easy pace
  • Sunday – Optional: participation in open MyWhoosh community races

Result after one season: higher winter training participation, better FTP values in the spring test and stronger group dynamics on the first outdoor rides – a pattern that can be combined with the indoor-outdoor combination in the annual plan.

Race Tactics in Community Events

Community races follow the same tactical fundamentals as real bike races – drafting, breakaways and sprint preparation play a central role.

Drafting and Positioning

In the virtual peloton, it pays to ride close behind the rider in front. Those who constantly roll at the front consume significantly more energy than riders in the draft. In flat community races, positioning often decides victory or defeat – especially in the final phase.

Breakaways and Group Formation

  1. Early breakaway – High risk, but successful with a cooperative group
  2. Late breakaway – Classic tactic in short, explosive races
  3. Sprint preparation – Secure position on the final lap, do not attack too early
  4. Team tactics – Club members can take turns setting pace and wearing down opponents

Warning

Sandbagging – deliberately riding below one's performance category – is considered unfair in the community and leads to exclusion from clubs and leagues. Honest performance declaration protects the race experience for all participants.

Organizational Tips for Club Events

Those who want to organize community races themselves – as a club admin or committed rider – should observe a few basic principles:

Checklist: Successfully Organizing Community Races

  • Choose route – Profile suited to race type (flat for sprint, hilly for climbers)
  • Set category – Clearly communicate ELO-, FTP- or open category
  • Announce start time – At least 48 hours in advance in club chat and Discord
  • Plan warm-up – 10–15 minutes before start as a joint ride
  • Communicate rules – No sandbagging, fair sprint, no intentional crashes
  • Publish results – Share screenshot or platform leaderboard in the club
  • Collect feedback – Brief survey after the event for improvement
  • Create regularity – Fixed weekly dates increase participation

Technical Requirements

For smooth community races, all participants need:

  1. Calibrated smart trainer – Spin-down before the event, stable Bluetooth/ANT+ connection
  2. Current app version – Install updates before race day
  3. Stable internet connection – LAN cable preferred over Wi-Fi
  4. Adequate cooling – Fan and towel against overheating

The technical basis is explained in detail in the article on smart trainer technology.

Event Type
Ideal Duration
Recommended Category
Number of Participants
Club group ride
45–90 minutes
Open or by pace groups
5–30 riders
Scratch race
20–45 minutes
ELO- or FTP-based
10–50 riders
Team time trial
15–30 minutes
Internal to club
4–8 per team
Hill climb
5–15 minutes
Performance class A–D
5–20 riders
Grand fondo simulation
90–180 minutes
Open with pace groups
10–100 riders

From Community Races to Esports

Community races are the natural development path for riders with esports ambitions. Those who regularly finish on the podium in club leagues can try their hand at official qualification races.

Development Stages

  1. Beginner – Open community races, D/E category, focus on fun and technique
  2. Intermediate – Club leagues, regular B/C races, structured training
  3. Ambitious – A category, ZRL or MyWhoosh esports events, periodized training
  4. Esports candidate – UCI qualification races, anti-doping rules, professional setup

Virtual competitions on Zwift and the UCI Cycling Esports World Championships show where this path can lead.

1
Join club
2
10 community races
3
First B/C podium finishes
4
Club league season
5
Esports qualification
6
UCI event

Motivation and Social Bonding

Studies and experience reports from the e-cycling community show: riders with club membership train more frequently on average and stick with it longer than solo users. Social pressure – not letting the group down – is stronger than any app reminder.

Elements That Make Community Races Attractive

  • Recognition – Familiar faces (avatars) in the peloton build trust
  • Friendly competition – Rivalry without hostility
  • Visible progress – ELO improvement, club rankings, personal bests
  • Shared experiences – Successes and defeats are shared in the club chat
  • Seasonal events – Advent race series, summer challenges, year-end TTT

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a smart trainer for community races?

A smart trainer with power measurement is strongly recommended; speed sensors alone are not sufficient for competitive events.

Can I join multiple clubs at the same time?

Yes on MyWhoosh and Zwift; most riders are active in 1–3 clubs.

How do I find the right club?

Through platform search, Discord communities or recommendations from your local cycling club.

What is the difference between community races and ZRL?

ZRL is a structured, seasonal league; community races are more flexible, informal events.

Is MyWhoosh worth it for clubs in Europe?

Yes, the community is growing; however, for maximum participant numbers at peak times, Zwift remains the first choice.

Conclusion: Community as a Success Factor

Community races and clubs are far more than a nice extra – they are the reason why millions of riders sit on their smart trainer at night even though they could train just as effectively alone. MyWhoosh democratizes access through free clubs and events; Zwift offers the largest and most mature ecosystem; alternative platforms serve niches from fair racing to route preparation.

Those who want to invest seriously in e-cycling should join a club early or found their own, regularly participate in community races and transfer the insights into their real training plan. The path from the basement to the digital peloton begins with the first group race – and optionally ends on the stage of the UCI Esports World Championships.

Last updated: July 4, 2026