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By Coach Brendon
Over the last few years
there has been a vast improvement in the way that people train
for triathlons. Even our elite athletes have made big gains
in this area. I think you'll find that not only are they ensuring
their training is very specific when required, but they are
also rich in the components required to be successful - most
of the time they show their bodies at least some part of an
ITU race every time they step out the door or jump in the
pool.
Getting the most out
of your training programme is a very fine balance between
listening to your body and your training programme. You need
to back off when needed but also get hard and get on with
it at the right times. More on that in our related article
here: http://www.endurancecoach.com/Thinking_on_Your_Feet.htm
Most athletes can train
hard and long. What most athletes don't do is that they don't
train the right bits needed for racing hard. They just train
hard. Consequently they don't get the results they deserve.
I'll give you a specific example; I often hear athletes talking
it up pre race, they have gone to the track and done a set
of intervals and absolutely blasted it, running way faster
than their expected race pace, what then happens is that they
have set the internal pace for them too fast, consequently
they run out too fast at the start of the run leg in their
event. Of course there is a place for speed work that is faster
than race pace, because that's one way to lift your game,
but I'm just saying that you need to ensure you have a balance
here. Some attention to pace judgment and getting the opening
500m right off the bike is a good idea if you are a triathlete.
Same goes for Marathoner, people doing bike TT's and other
endurance events.
On the other side of
the coin, if you can't sustain race pace during a key training
session close to an event, what's the value of grinding it
out at a slower pace? You should consider packing up and going
home - maybe move the session to the next day. That's something
that experienced athletes get good at doing, listening to
their bodies to improve the quality of their training.
Arthur Lydiard was very
keen on this idea. Peter Snell would go to the track and run
400m reps. They wouldn't time them and they wouldn't be concerned
about how many he did. Snell would just go until he felt like
it was time to stop. The programme might have had 7x400m at
mile race pace or something but Lydiard knew that listening
to your body was more important. Now some might say that is
just getting soft but I doubt that there is anyone who would
call Lydiard soft. He is still regarded as THE hard man of
training. Snell is still the best 800m runner New Zealand
has ever produced and given modern shoes and a modern surface
his best times would still be right up there. Listening to
your body is crucial - don't just blindly do a programme.
Making sure that you
show your body EXACTLY what will happen on race day is extremely
important. I'll give you a few of examples of what I mean.
First
example: At the 1998 ITU World Triathlon Champs,
the elite men and women had trouble getting their wetsuits
off after the swim. During the long run up from the water
to the transition, their wetsuits had dried and they were
harder than usual to get off. If the athletes had gone and
done a swim followed by a transition, that was setup as closely
as possible to the race day transition, then they would have
found this out in advance and could have done something about
it. In the cut throat ITU drafting races 10sec saved can be
the difference between the "in contention" front
group and the "thanks for coming don't bother doing the
run" group.
Second
example: If I were training for ITU world cup events
today, my long bike rides would be very different now than
what I did when I was racing. Instead of going out and just
riding say 3 hours, I'd be out riding 3 hours with 4-6 others
lapping it out, I'd go and ride where there are lots of short
rolling hills and lots of corners and roundabouts (new sub
divisions are perfect). There's going to be more benefit in
this type of 3 hour ride than just going out and riding 3
hours.
Final
example: Training for the Ironman swim. There is
a big difference between 50m in a pool with lane ropes, a
line on the bottom and leaving with 5 seconds between swimmers.
In the ocean or lake you have to contend with wind, sun, waves,
often a wetsuit, no line on the bottom, and no turning (you
stay in that hyper extended body position essentially for
the whole swim). If you have ever swum open water and felt
like your arms or pecs have been ripped apart then you need
to consider doing more specific open water training. If you
are one of those swimmers that does better in the pool than
in the open water then you also need to do more open water
swimming. There is only one way to get comfortable swimming
with others around you and that is to do it in training. There
is far more to fast swim times than just fast pool swimming.
Spending some time planning
is one of the most valuable things you can do. Start by looking
at your event and breaking it down into the various parts
and the skills that are then required. If the bike has a steep
hill in it, better make sure that you do some of that before
you race, if you are going to be tucked down on your aerobars
for 180km then do some of that. If you are going to need to
run a very even pace for a long period, like in a Marathon,
you'd better do some extended periods at that pace somewhere.
With good planning, you can ensure you cover all your bases
for your upcoming event - there is always a way to make your
training better.
So why have a programme
then? Why not just listen to your body? Why not just go out
and train all the time on the race course if possible. The
answer revolves around the problem of peaking on a given day.
You need to race well on race day, not one week earlier or
one week later. Plus you have to make sure you cover all the
"show your body the race" components before the
event at the right time. The world is full of athletes that
have left their best performance out training. To avoid that
means doing certain things - like the big mileage at the right
time, starting training at the right time, and doing speed
work for just long enough.
A good programme takes
information from the past and links it with the current situation.
Things like how many races you need to do to get fast and
less hills towards the end of a programme when you are doing
a flat race. A good programme also takes your strengths and
weaknesses into account and works to improve your weaknesses
while maintaining the strengths.
So get your plan out,
look and see what is prescribed, check out how you feel when
you wake up and in your warm-up and do some quality training.
Anything else would be junk.
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