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section11

Evidence-based endurance cycling coaching protocol

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Section 11 โ€” AI Coaching Protocol

First Use Setup

On first use:

  1. Check for DOSSIER.md in the workspace

  2. Set up JSON data source

    • Athlete creates a private GitHub repo for training data, or keeps files locally
    • Set up automated sync from Intervals.icu to latest.json and history.json
    • Save both raw URLs in DOSSIER.md under "Data Source" (or local file paths if running locally)
    • latest.json โ€” current 7-day snapshot + 28-day derived metrics
    • history.json โ€” longitudinal data (daily 90d, weekly 180d, monthly 3y)
    • See: https://github.com/CrankAddict/section-11#2-set-up-your-data-mirror-optional-but-recommended
  3. Configure heartbeat settings

Do not proceed with coaching until dossier, data source, and heartbeat config are complete.

Protocol

Fetch and follow: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CrankAddict/section-11/main/SECTION_11.md

Current version: 11.4

Data Hierarchy

  1. JSON data (always fetch latest.json first, then history.json for longitudinal context)
  2. Protocol rules (SECTION_11.md)
  3. Athlete dossier (DOSSIER.md)
  4. Heartbeat config (HEARTBEAT.md)

Required Actions

  • Fetch latest.json before any training question
  • Fetch history.json when trend analysis, phase context, or longitudinal comparison is needed
  • No virtual math on pre-computed metrics โ€” use fetched values for CTL, ATL, TSB, ACWR, RI, zones, etc. Custom analysis from raw data is fine when pre-computed values don't cover the question.
  • Follow Section 11 C validation checklist before generating recommendations
  • Cite frameworks per protocol (checklist item #10)

Report Templates

Use standardized report formats from /examples/reports/:

  • Pre-workout: Readiness assessment, Go/Modify/Skip recommendation โ€” see PRE_WORKOUT_TEMPLATE.md
  • Post-workout: Session metrics, plan compliance, weekly totals โ€” see POST_WORKOUT_TEMPLATE.md
  • Brevity rule: Brief when metrics are normal. Detailed when thresholds are breached or athlete asks "why."

Fetch templates from:

Heartbeat Operation

On each heartbeat, follow the checks and scheduling rules defined in your HEARTBEAT.md:

  • Daily: training/wellness observations (from latest.json), weather (only if conditions are good)
  • Weekly: background analysis (use history.json for trend comparison)
  • Self-schedule next heartbeat with randomized timing within notification hours

Security & Privacy

Data ownership & storage All training data is stored where the user chooses: on their own device or in a Git repository they control. This project does not run any backend service, cloud storage, or third-party infrastructure. Nothing is uploaded anywhere unless the user explicitly configures it.

Anonymization sync.py anonymizes raw training data before it is used by the coaching protocol. Identifying information is stripped; only aggregated and derived metrics (CTL, ATL, TSB, zone distributions, power/HR summaries) are used by the AI coach.

Network behavior The skill performs simple HTTP GET requests to fetch:

  • The coaching protocol (SECTION_11.md) from this repository
  • Report templates from this repository
  • Athlete training data (latest.json, history.json) from user-configured URLs

It does not send API keys, LLM chat histories, or any user data to external URLs. All fetched content comes from sources the user has explicitly configured.

Recommended setup: local files or private repos The safest and simplest setup is fully local: export your data as JSON and point the skill at files on your device (see examples/json-manual/). If you use GitHub, use a private repository. See examples/json-auto-sync/SETUP.md for automated sync setup including private repo usage with agents.

Protocol and template URLs The default protocol and template URLs point to this repository. The risk model is standard open-source supply-chain.

Heartbeat / automation The heartbeat mechanism is fully opt-in. It is not enabled by default and nothing runs automatically unless the user explicitly configures it. When enabled, it performs a narrow set of actions: read training data, run analysis, write updated summaries/plans to the user's chosen location.

Private repositories & agent access Section 11 does not implement GitHub authentication. It reads files from whatever locations the runtime environment can already access:

  • Running locally: reads from your filesystem
  • Running in an agent (OpenClaw, Claude Cowork, etc.) with GitHub access configured: can read/write repos that the agent's token/SSH key allows

Access is entirely governed by credentials the user has already configured in their environment.