Training Intensity in the 'Race-Prep' Phase
Ahhh, the smell of fresh ink on
your skin at the body-marking tent in the morning. It MUST be Spring…………………and time to race!!
This is the time of year when athletes begin
to group together at tracks & group rides to get some race-like intensity
in before the next big event. So there's no question that there is a need to go
harder (ie: higher heart-rate, faster pace, etc…)
than one has been training in the Base-phase.
The question is, however, "How hard?"…….."and for how long?"
Good questions,
actually.
We'll begin to
address them by going back to the concept of 'specificity'……….just a
fancy term that says that our training time/energy is best spent doing things
that most replicate the event we're training for
…………..ie: specific training.
As races approach, do
you get on a rower to prepare for a triathlon? Of
course not. It's not specific. But that same person, (by that same
measure), would run 800m
intervals at a pace that they could never touch in a 5k at the end of a
sprint-triathlon. This is an example of non-specific INTENSITY.
Would you run 2hr
long runs on the weekends to prepare for sprint and Olympic distance races?……………non-specific DURATION.
So what IS specific training? Well, take a look at
your upcoming events. If a series of sprint events are on the horizon, you'll
not need to exceed a one hour run at any given time. If you're registered for a half-ironman, the
But let's talk about
heart-rate, here. When we write programs for athletes, never do we specify a session to be done at a
heart-rate above one's Lactate Threshold……….(the point
at which someone is accumulating more lactic acid in the muscle than they can
get rid of).
Why? Well, a triathlete needs to be
able to sustain a high output for several minutes to hours at a time. Before we
can even begin to improve one's efficiency at race-pace……..they MUST be efficient at lower, AEROBIC heart-rates. Your
"aerobic-engine" is/was developed in the base phase with a lot of,
(what I call) "middle-ground" heart-rate hours………….more
scientifically called "MAF"…….maximum
aerobic function. (We even
monitor this efficiency w/ periodic 'maf-assessments'.)
As we get closer to
the races, though, we need to get away from the middle-ground in our 'break-through' sessions. Our hard days must get harder……..more
race-like.
But to achieve this,
[and DO NOT miss this point]
……………...our ez days must get easier!!
Performing intervals
at a heart-rate above this Lactate Threshold is very ''old-school''. You
know, more pain = more gain, mentality. The problem is that such sessions yield
only marginal results over sessions done at just under one's LT. Yet, the cost (with regard to recovery
and your weekly sequence) is much too high.
You require too much
recovery time (in the following days)
by going too hard!
You can reap huge
benefits by reducing the intensity a bit and extending the duration of a single session…………or even the number of these sessions in a given week because you didn't dig
yourself into a 'recovery-hole' on any ONE workout.
Long intervals that
are at, (or
just below), one's lactate
threshold develop the ability to sustain race-like output (ie: pace, power,
heart-rate) in the actual
races.
Short,
'above-threshold' intervals will make you too tired to spend a sufficient
amount of time, each week, to produce a positive training response.
NOW…….does this mean
that we never prescribe anyone to go REALLY fast? Nope, we have some
KILLER speed-oriented track sessions……….but the longest of these intervals is
400m! By the time the heart-rate gets up to that 'point-of-no-return', the
interval is over. So if we're going to
train the body to go fast (for leg-speed),
we're going to do it in an interval where the speed can be sustained…… from 100
to 400m, because this is primarily 'neuromuscular-conditioning' in nature.
If, on the other
hand, our workout goal is to push back one's lactate-threshold (thereby making them more efficient at race-pace), our aim is to create a race-like interval that's specific
in terms of the target-race's intensity in a workout that’s duration-specific
to that target-event.
This is the single
biggest reason we get the feedback, "Coach, I don't feel like I'm
working-out as hard……..yet I'm getting alot
faster!"………………..Bingo!
For
more information on coaching, clinics, or one-on-one sessions, visit www.TRImyCoach.com
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