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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 211
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If possible, I would like a little input regarding the fesibilty of 'all day' pace.
Is it really obtainable, day-in, day-out to literally ride at 56%-75% threshold power? I mean could I person ride in this powerband for 2 hours, 365 days per year without overtraining? From *my* experience it seems extremely tough to do such, however, I would like to hear from anyone who is able to achieve this. Thanks. |
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#2 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 933
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Quote:
Now I don't think anyone ever seriously suggested that one train the same way seven days a week, 52 weeks a year ... but wrt. to the core issue of whether one could train seven days a week with 2hrs at say mid-range L2 IF=0.65 I'm sure I could train that way. TSS/dy=200*0.65^2= 84 pts/dy or ~590 pts/wk or ~30,000 pts/yr. The last three years I've accumulated 30-35,000 TSS pts/yr and that includes reduced training volume by plan and due to injury/illness/work constraints. I was targetting ~40,000 this year but recent injuries have thrown me behind schedule. I would not want to train as monotonically as you suggest but feel one could definitely sustain such a program. I'm a 40+ Masters cyclist, full-time job, etc. etc. rmur |
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#3 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 162
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Quote:
I ride more than 2 hours per day on average. Pro's ride way more than 2 hours per day on average. If you ride 2 hours per day at your 'all day pace' you will become extremely efficient at riding 2 hours per day at your 'all day pace.' This does not sound like optimal training to me. |
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