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Winter time is a time for most of us to start getting back into shape and
getting our fitness revved up again for the season ahead. It’s very early in
the training cycle and you are months away from your biggest race of the year.
This time of year many athletes plan a schedule that is usually too intense
with too much volume. Instead of getting fit, many athletes end up with
inconsistent weeks and missing many workouts. What they should be doing is
trying to maintain consistent week after week of training.
Let’s look at a typical week of an age group athlete:
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Monday, Wednesday, & Friday – Master’s swim (high intensity)
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Monday, Wednesday, & Friday – weight training (high intensity)
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Tuesday & Thursday – spin class (high intensity)
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Tuesday, Friday, Sunday – running (Tuesday and Friday are plodding sessions b/c
you are dead from your psycho spin class) Sunday is a group run, with a lot of
hard running.
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Saturday is a long spin class or a group ride (you are usually toast after this
ride)
Oh yeah, and by the way, after 3 weeks of this, you have a cold, can’t work out
and all your so-called fitness is gone! Does anyone think this look familiar?
It’s ok to put your hand up and admit it as I can’t see you reading this
article. ;-)
So – how do you change this pattern of self-abuse? There are 2 critical steps in
creating a productive weekly plan:
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Step 1 is the hard/easy concept – after every hard day, an easy day follows
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Step 2 is the repeatability factor- how many days in a row can you repeat what
you are doing?
Step 1: An athlete (or coach) should create a schedule around this
concept. A hard day should be followed by an easy day or an easy thirty six
hours. If an athlete is deeply fatigued they can take two easy days or a
complete day off. Sounds easy enough, but athletes have a tendency to over do
it. Trust me, I have been there!
Step 2: Even though you are training day after day it doesn’t have to be
all low intensity and it shouldn’t be. You can add some upper aerobic workouts,
some faster swims and some strides on the run. It all comes down to what’s
called ‘repeatability’. Could you repeat this workout tomorrow? If you can’t,
then maybe you should back off.
Here’s an example of two different athletes, and how different their training
plans are: John and Bob both attend the same spin class on Thursday. It’s a 90
minute grinder, the teacher is one of those screaming, in your face psycho
instructors who yells at you for not maxing your heart rate.
Bob is all about getting the most out of his 90 minutes. He hammers himself into
the ground and just crushes himself. His HR is through the roof, and that night
he is still sore and he can’t even sleep. As a matter of fact, he can’t get his
workout in on Friday or Saturday he is so wiped. He goes out to run on Sunday
but it’s a slow plod and he thinks “Wow, I really pushed myself on Thursday, I
am getting more fit.”
John on the other hand, knows he has to recover for Friday night’s Master’s swim
and he is still has the group ride on Saturday too. His training plan has
purpose and he knows what needs to be done. He is going to cap his heart rate
at 5 beats over the top of Zone 2. John goes high into his aerobic zone and
even bumps his heart rate into Zone 3 on some of the climbs, but he quickly
recovers. After the spin session he is still ready to face his other workouts
later in the week.
If this scenario took place over 6 weeks, with John hitting most if not all of
his workouts and Bob missing 3 workouts a week, who is going to be more fit
after 6 weeks? Bob, who blows himself up whenever he can workout, or John who
rarely misses a workout and just keeps grinding the workouts out, week after
week, month after the month? My money is John. Here’s why:
John’s consistency over time will keep his aerobic base and fitness level
growing. When it comes time to add in some race specific workouts, his body
will be ready to absorb those harder type efforts because he has built the
foundation to do so. His ability to be smart enough to know how hard he can go
each day, week in and week out, will allow him to keep repeating his training
cycle without any major hiccups. Bob on the other hand is pretty much hosed and
his improvement has stagnated for another season. Of course he will wonder why.
After all, he pushes himself very hard in that spin class and he can get his
heart rate very high. He just can’t seem to put any consistent weeks of
training in. If you see Bob, make sure he reads this article.
Finally here’s what a typical week of an age group could look like:
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Monday, Wednesday, & Friday – Master’s swim (Monday hard, Wednesday is
easy, Friday is pacing)
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Monday & Friday – weight training (high reps, low weight)
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Tuesday & Thursday – spin class (Tuesday work on cadence and form.
Thursday: work on big gear strength, low cadence but still, keep the HR down!).
Saturday is a long spin class or a group ride (keep the HR down, well below the
top of Zone 2)
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Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Sunday – running (Tuesday easy run for 30’.
Wednesday is your long day; keep the HR in Zone 2, not above! Friday is another
easy aerobic day, keep is easy! Saturday can be a run after your bike, 30-60’)
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Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
Saturday |
Sunday |
| Swim |
Swim Fast! |
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Form |
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Pacing |
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Off |
| Bike |
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Form |
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Strength |
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Long |
Off |
| Run |
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Easy w/strides
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Long |
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Easy |
Brick |
Off |
| Weights/ Core |
X |
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X |
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Off |
To wrap it up, Monday would be a hard day with a lifting session and Tuesday is
an easier day. Wednesday would be easy swim with a long run. Thursday has only
one workout and it’s hard, but Friday is an easy day. Saturday is a longer day,
and Sunday is your time off to spend with family. This is just an example, not
a reccomendation. But it does look similar to my weekly routine which is here:
My Training Week
In the end, you have to train at the intensity that is appropriate for you and
you only! And of course train consistently week after week. Those are the keys
to getting to that next level
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