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Brick
Sessions for Performance
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by
Coach Brendon
Triathlon and Duathlon are consecutive events
that result in your legs feeling like bricks when you come
to run. This fact flies in the face of the way most people
train for triathlon. Clearly bike to run workouts (known as
bricks because that is what your legs feel like when running
after cycling) are important. Swim before work. Run after
work. Cycle the next day etc. This pattern of training results
in athletes that are good at individual events with some recovery
between. Seems fairly obvious that you need to simulate bike
to run. But how many 'Brick' workouts do you need to to and
what should these consist of?
Ironman Bricks
There are two key bricks for Ironman. Long
Bike to short run. Typically, this brick is 120 to 180km bike
ride followed by 20-30min run. This is designed to get your
legs familiar with the feeling of running with cycling fatigue.
This session should include lots of hills, pushing big gears
and from 8 weeks out increasing sections at projected race
pace (10-120km). To get the most out of this session you should
also be eating, drinking and using your race position more
and more as you approach the race.
The other key session for Ironman is a slightly shorter bike
ride (70-120km) followed by a 45-90min run. Obviously, you
need to think very carefully about how you place this session
in your week relative to the long bike workouts and also,
how you will also fit a long run in. Not easy! For many athletes
who don't have the time to fit in these three workouts I will
recommend that they look to alternate long runs with this
second brick session. I think that as long as you have run
close to 30km on two occasions that these bricks are of more
value than say 3 hour runs.
Most people will do a 1/2 Ironman as part of their training
for Ironman. This is a double edged sword, go too hard in
a 1/2 Ironman and you will end up cooked before you get to
the Ironman, this often happens when athletes are fatigued
going into the 1/2 Ironman (not tapering because they are
worried about loosing fitness for Ironman) and then go too
hard during the bike and grovel in the run. The best advice
I can give you is to be conservative and treat the 1/2 as
training. If you are faster than your projected Ironman pace
then you are getting what you need out of it. So if you are
aiming for a 10 hour Ironman and you go 4:45 for the 1/2 but
are not trashed then that is fine.
1/2
Ironman Bricks
Similar to Ironman but obviously shorter. Brick
one is a 60-90km bike followed by 6-12km run. As with the
Ironman bricks, this session should also include hills, muscle
endurance and time trials at projected race pace. One way
to do this session is combine a longish club bike race (a
good distance is 60km) to a 30km easy ride and then run off
the bike - this should leave you with a decent effort. Just
watch your effort in the race by asking if you are above 1/2
Ironman race pace at all times or use a Heart Rate Monitor
with zones.
Another option is to use an Olympic Distance race and do this
at projected 1/2 Ironman Pace. Takes a lot of control but
if you can you will get MORE benefit than if you were to go
harder and then have to spend a week recovering. I am not
saying that you shouldn't race Olympic distance races leading
into a 1/2 but when a 1/2 is your key event consider how these
races best suit your needs.
Olympic Distance Racing
There are three distinct bricks that I recommend
for Olympic Distance:
Long Brick: 90-150min Bike followed
by 30-60min run. The aim of this brick is to make the racing
distance feel very comfortable. I think this is a far better
use of a Sunday than a 3 hour plus bike ride for athletes
training for Olympic distance.
Bike Race to Race Pace Run Brick: This is THE most
important workout for Olympic distance triathletes. The aim
should be 30-40 minutes at projected race pace on the bike
followed by 1-4km at projected race pace running and a run
warm down followed by a 30min easy cycle. This is the type
of key workout that I had Jill Savege undertaking before her
6th place at the 2001 ITU Worlds. To increase the value for
triathlon consider swimming first, open water using a wetsuit
and cycling directly to the bike race.
Strength Brick session: Because you can recover from
the shorter sessions when training for Olympic distance triathlon
and duathlon you can add a third brick session where the emphasis
is on muscle endurance. Typically, this would be hills or
moderate tempo efforts in large gears on the bike followed
by hill reps running. Nothing like it for making your legs
strong for running off the bike.
I think that there is some value in adding a short run to
the end of all cycles if you are weak off the bike. These
runs only need to be 10min. One athlete that used this to
great effect was Australian Brad Bevan.
How many bricks and when?
Below is a guide to the number of brick sessions
per week in any particular part of your preparation for your
key races.
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Event
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4
months out
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2-3
months out
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Last
month
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Ironman
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1
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2
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3
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1/2
Ironman
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1
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2
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3-4
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Olympic
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2
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3
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3-5
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