It is not the number on the scale. You are not only losing fat, but you are building muscle, which weighs more than fat. Particularly doing the amount of training you have been doing, I am not at all surprised that your weight stayed the same.

Measure yourself. Take a good look in the mirror. You might notice that the places where you used to carry fat are now changed.

You really cannot train and lose weight at the same time. Training as hard as you do, your body really takes those calories and uses every last inch of them. If you BURN far more than you CONSUME, then your body might possibly go into a state where it stalls and prevents further weight loss. I learned yesterday that my 65 mile ride burned around 2000 calories. I rarely eat more than 2000 cals a day. Sure, much of that was water weight (which, by all means needs replacing), but some of that was certainly fat stores. And if you are eating only 1800 - 2000 calories a day, then burning 2000, you've got nothing leftover to "merely" survive on.

To lose weight, cut back on your training, reduce calories.

While training, don't worry so much about weight loss. Eat plenty to fuel your body.