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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: IN PEACE AND QUIET
Posts: 1,260
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Thanks to Palewin and RDO who convinced me I was definitely slacking, starting last week I upped my training. I would like to see if I'm on the right track or have misunderstood things.
First I would like to point out that as the temp is hovering around 0 C / 5 C so far all the work has been done in the gym on the aerobike. They are pretty old bikes so I don't know how accurate they are. Anyway, starting last Tues I did 3 x 10 @150 watts. Wed 3 x 10 @140 W (still tired from Tues) Thurs 2 x 10 @130 plus 1x10 @150 W Frid and Sat off (too busy Sat to train) Sun 37 mins @ 120 W plus 3 minutes @150 W (Too cold to train outside) This week today Tue 1x 10 @ 150W / 1 x 10 @160 W/ 1 x 10 @ 150 W and as a punishment for not working hard enough finished off with 1 minute @ 200 W I should mention this was all done at a HR of 150. Don't really know my max HR, but when I used to do shorter intervals (2 mins) the last 20 secs or so I reached 160/163 with the little old legs going as fast they could. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Ps Hope to improve a lot on the above over the next few weeks/months. Last edited by Sillyoldtwit : 25-01.-2006 at 01:00 AM. |
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#2 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Kansas City, USA
Posts: 3,533
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So, Sunday's the only day you don't do 10-min intervals, and you rode 40 minutes. Is that you're typical weekly routine?
No wonder it's killing you. Hopefully Rapdaddyo can chime in on this. |
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 4,115
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I guess that since I was an instigator for your new regimen, I should chime in. Actually, I would anyway because I strongly encourage any and all "mature" men and women to get on their bikes and get fit. And, I am a big believer in the theory that one can gain (or regain) a very high level of fitness at a more advanced age. Once I level off, I may be a hair slower than I was in my late 20s and early 30s, but if so it's a very thin hair. I'd love to race my old self in a few months. Those with PMs should save your race files. You'll be able to pull them out in 30 years and do just that -- race your old self.
Based on your post, I'm guessing that your functional threshold (FT) is ~130w. I say this because it looks as though you would have difficulty maintaining 140w or higher for an hour. It would be good to determine your FT by riding for an hour at a pace that is difficult (but not impossible) to maintain during the last 15 minutes. You can then key all of your workouts off of that intensity. But, let's assume it's 130w. Based on that, I group your 161 minutes in the last 8 days as follows (using Andy Coggan's schema): Power %FT Level Mins 200w 153% L6 01 160w 123% L5 10 150w 115% L5 63 140w 108% L5 30 130w 100% L4 20 120w 92% L4 37 My reaction to this frequency distribution of training minutes is that it is too heavily weighted in L5. Training involves a continuous tradeoff between intensity and duration. Higher intensity means lower duration, either for a single interval or for an entire ride or for a week or a month. This is not just true for you. It's true for Lance Armstrong as well. His numbers are just scaled up a bit relative to yours. I actually don't think you need to be doing any minutes at L5 or above at this time. You will see huge results over time if you start logging some serious minutes at L4, even at the low end of L4 (91%FT). You just have to give it time. A riding buddy in my club took my advice last October and he has progressed from 225w to 309w without doing a single minute above L4. The main result of riding at a higher intensity is to decrease the minutes you can spend at the training level. And minutes at the training level is what it's all about. I laugh at all of these fancy interval protocols (e.g., 2x20 @ L4 w/5 mins recovery), especially the focus on the recovery time and duration. When I look at such protocols, I pay attention only to the time at level, in this case 40 mins at L4. I'm quite sure there are those who disagree (especially some coaches), but I'm not sure it matters whether you ride 5 mins at a recovery pace or go home and take a nap between intervals. What matters in the above protocol is the 40 mins at L4. And, unless you're riding ~3hrs a day at a high IF, I think all this talk of recovery days is a bunch of rubbish. I have people in my club ask me sometimes if they need a recovery day after a couple of 20 min intervals at L4. My honest reaction is, "Recover from what? That's not a workout, that's a warmup." Of course, I don't say this, but that's what I'm thinking. Anyway, keep it up. In a few mohths you'll be staggered by the results. |
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#4 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
Posts: 299
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Quote:
Judging from discussions of your training in the power forum, RDO, it seems that you are able to handle very, very high acute and chronic training loads, much more so than most folks. For instance, you consider a 1000TSS week routine, whereas a 900TSS week for me constitutes serious overreaching. Optimal training load varies from individual to individual, and more isn't always better. Taking a step back for a moment, RDO, your eagerness to belittle other folks' training loads on this forum worries me a little bit. It worries me because a) you're a very intelligent, persuasive man, so people are likely to take you seriously and b) everything I can gather (your age, your threshold power and VO2max, your training load, etc.) suggests that you're phenomenally talented. It's awesome that day after day of 200TSS with as much time as possible at L4 and above has worked so well for you, but honestly, I suspect anything would work well for you, because you have the genes of a phenomenal endurance athlete. Bannister broke the 4 minute barrier on a ridiculously light (by today's world-class standards) training load, and endurance sport at all levels is full of similar examples of remarkable performances by modestly trained individuals. |
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#5 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,052
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Quote:
You can look at the results (places 1st-5th) from the masters national and world championships for track events and see a fairly linear decline in ability (measured by their race times) for each 5-year age group above 35 years old. The trend is even more obvious when you discard the performances by a few very exceptional people. IOW, if the first place rider is substantially quicker than the 2nd place rider, then look at the results of riders who placed 2nd-4th. I remember a study using power at VO2max that showed a general decline with age among well-trained cyclists. I'm trying to remember the number, I think it was close to 8ml/kg/min for each 10 years. |
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#6 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 4,115
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Quote:
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#7 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Posts: 377
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Quote:
I wouldn't be so hard on RD. It all makes sense to me. Lydiard prescribed runs at best aerobic effort day in day and through a process of trial and error came up with 100mile a week of running. This is a very hard volume of fast runing to aspire to especially when you take into account that Lydiard preferred to find hilly tracks to train. It also makes sense when you consider the training of Pro riders who do a high volume of L4 training then will do another 2-3 hours of L2-L3. Why? Because that's what their racng is all about. I originally thought that RD was advocating doing less power output during efforts than I would aim for but I see he is more concerned about the power one can do. Again makes sense. As I lined up for the racing I would want to know I had trained: a. to be able to handle the ave power for the duration (L3), b. have the threshold power to handle the 20-50% of the race that will be ridden around that level (L4), c. Have the power to make breaks, sprint short hills and to fight for position in crits (L5-L6), and d. Have some power to sprint at the finish or close small gaps (L7). Now I spend most of my time trying to improve the a and b parts of the equation because if you can't get them right there is no point in having the c & d parts sorted as you won't be at the finish to use them. I also find it's far easier to maximise ones L5-L7 power in a far short time frame than one needs to spend L3-L4. Hamish Ferguson Cycling Coach |
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#8 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 4,115
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#9 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,017
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Quote:
tue:2x20+5x5 or 4x20 wed:2-2.5 hrs moderate (probably "sweet spot" if I had a pm, high l3/low l4) thur:4x20, 2x25+2x20, etc. I find this ineresting because wednesday I feel crappy at the start of the ride, and definitely could not do high l4 intervals that day. But despite the fact that my wednesday ride is far from a rest day, I still feel good on thursday. Edit: The whole point of this post was to emphasize how well you can recover without a "recovery day," and why I like the philosphy of backing down the intensity a little to allow for more volume. |
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#10 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 4,115
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#11 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,017
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Quote:
Absolutely. I was mostly trying to bring up the point that recovery does not necessarily mean taking a recovery day. |
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#12 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Kansas City, USA
Posts: 3,533
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Quote:
But that sounds like simply managing your workload.... How do you expect to scare unsuspecting riders about the ever-lurking dangers of over-training and burnout with that kind of advice? ![]() |
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#13 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,017
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Quote:
Well yes. Nothing too earth shattering. I know that I personally made the mistake of resting more than was necessary to be fresh for intervals. Proper management of workload has got me on track (partially thanks to you, actually). Quote:
Disclaimer: Don't try to train like me unless you have my excessive natural talent and mental toughness ![]() |
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#14 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Kansas City, USA
Posts: 3,533
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Quote:
LOL. Now you've got it.... ![]() |
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#15 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Posts: 377
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Quote:
Arthur Lydiard (jeez that name has been coming up quite a bit today) made the point that how could an athlete beat someone who trained 7 days a week if they took 52 days a year off training. Lydiard cycled his training volumes so runners would do 45mins one day and 90mins the next. He would also vary the terrain and training courses. Firstly to prevent staleness but to also vary the training load. All done at best aerobic pace day in day out. Best example of this is riders who finish the Tour de France and keep on racing day in day in the lucrative post tour crits or riders who used to use the Pro road racing as base work for Track Worlds when they were held later in the year. As cyclists we confuse matters by racing so much and therefore often push ourselves into highly anaerobic states which requires greater recovery and perhaps limit ourselves from maximising our aerobic capacity. Something Lydiard warned of and I gave the example of a Swiss Pro whose racing commitments (ie the Boss tells you when you race) curtailed his career. I know that my initial attempts at racing far too soon into my comeback from a five year layoff set me back a week at a time. Two days of training around my threshold (two days of IF >1) have left my legs a mess. That being said after my session of 2 X 20 I started the bunch ride yesterday with sore legs and a bit of cramp but was able to achieve a better workout than the day before. Hamish Ferguson Cycling Coach |
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