(a page from The Book)
Unless you're lucky enough to be in a dedicated sprint  squad with a coach that understands sprint, you're probably almost daily  having to deal with well meaning sabotage.
 We all identify as cyclists, we race bikes.  Our enduro friends go on  long rides all the time, they get out on the road, they drive the  bunch, they roll turns at high power outputs.  They're not happy unless  they've clocked up a gazillion training stress points in their power  meter analysis software, averaged 85% or higher with their heart rate or  some other metric that they care about and will brag about at the  post-ride cafe or on Internet forums, facebook and the like.  They want  you to do it too. Peer pressure will be high, you'll want to pull turns,  not get dropped on the hills, eat the pasta at the club dinners and so  on.
  If we go on road rides, they're mainly for recovery, we should be  riding them easy, REALLY easy!  We do our intensity in bursts so short  that an enduro hasn't even worked out what's going on before we're  sitting down recovering half the time.
  Probably 99 percent of cyclists (racing or otherwise) are enduros and  what they do is wrong for us if we want to be the best sprinters we can  be.  Our clubs have club rides, we're pressured to come on them (but do  the enduros come to our sprint sessions?!).  Our clubs and coaches run  camps, again, we're pressured to go on them, sometimes the pressure is  just to be with our friends, who, most likely, are enduros.  It's  important to keep our friends, but it''s also important that they  realise that we're not aiming for the same goals so our training is very  different to theirs.  So are our dietary requirements.
  Our club racing programs are almost entirely enduro focussed, it's  rare for a club or regional track meeting to have any pure sprint  events.  The organisers probably don't 'get' sprint, they might throw  you a bone every now and then with a short scratch race (10 laps! that's  a sprint, right? NO!) or if you're really lucky a keirin or a sprint  derby.  This is doubly difficult if you're a junior and many well  meaning cycling people will be telling you not to specialise.  In our  opinion, they're wrong; if you want to be a pure sprinter, we suggest  you specialise as early as possible. Especially if you're a girl.
  Even well meaning and experienced club coaches and experienced riders  will apply pressure on you to race road, or longer endurance track  races and to do long, hard road rides, because that's what they did in the old days and it worked for  them.  Current thinking is that road racing and lots of road riding is a  speed killer and we're all about speed.  You're going to need to stick  to your guns and be prepared to be a bit special.  You're a sprinter,  that's par for the course, all sprinters are a bit special.  We're at  the pointy end of the sport and our lives can be a little lonely.
  So what to do?  How do you deal with this pressure to be like the enduros when you're not?
  The most important thing is to accept that you're not the same and to  set limits.  If the club ride happens and you want to go or feel as if  you have to, tell everyone you're not going to pull a turn and that  you're going to either noodle up the hill or wait for them at the  bottom.   The smart ones will respect that.  Stay off the high-carb  stuff they eat after their rides. You, as a sprinter, do not need to  carbo load.  You're not glycogen depleted.  It just doesn't happen to  sprinters.  Be strong, you're a rare breed.  Stick to it, and the next  time your enduro mates ask you to help them move heavy stuff (they will,  you're the strong one!) they will appreciate your differences!