Who gives you the right to bag my coaching style?
Well, I didn’t bag your coaching style, just a nonsensical post on a website that didn’t explain anything about what you intend to do, just a half hearted plug for your own business.
How about instead of a silly post like that, you write up a good article on how to train, how to avoid the bug bears of overtraining and injury, while at the same time making best use of the limited time that most of the readers of this site have due to family and work commitments.
As for your arrogant, living in my own box write up. I was an elite paddler for 15 years including many at the AIS. I came across a number of single minded coaches as you.
Yes, the wonderful interweb does have a lot left to be desired.
If I come across as arrogant then that is simply the price of posting limited words on an internet forum.
You suffer even more so from inexperience in the art of forum posting.
Living in my own box? Hardly, I am one that did the testing and discovered that things that were being taught in universities and the like were simply wrong.
Not many coaches bothered to invest in their own testing equipment, I did.
What I found simply didn’t add up with what was being taught. I then simply continued down my own path and watched and giggled as the rest of mainstream took 15 years to catch up.
Dick Telford did much the same thing, he purchased a lactate meter and heart rate meters and raised concerns that what was being taught was simply wrong.
He then left the AIS as they wouldn’t buy into what he was trying to explain to the world.
I had a few good conversations with him after he left and we exchanged data and ideas.
It was a very fruitful relationship.
I initially contacted him after I read a brief article of his in a performance coaching journal back almost 20 years ago.
I saw that he too was finding similar things to me and thought something good could come of it.
Something about me, I just finished my coaching degree and we were shown a new way to think about training fast and slow twitch muscle fibres
Now this I am interested in. I always am. New ideas, new data and most importantly, new speculation as to what is really going on inside our best athletes.
I shall check the library, though being a specialized book it may not be available.
Where did you purchase yours?
Not all athletes respond to the way you as suggesting, I know I was one of them. Too many great athletes are burning out or dying too young and some people think its because they keep pushing their body's at the anaerobic threshold level for too many sessions and not allow for recovery.
Now this is where our backgrounds vary.
I have come originally from a distance running background. In running, the main difference is that most races are run very near or at the anaerobic threshold.
Most paddling disciplines are not, apart from open water racing, all events are very short and the pace to complete one of these events, reside far above threshold.
Accordingly a lot of effort in the past has been concentrated on training at those high energies.
This as you know, is very stressfull.
Added to that, the general misuse of heartrates as a guide to pace and many athletes were overtrained.
This also happened a lot in swimming.
Due to the nature of water based sports, it is very hard to accurately identify the true anaerobic threshold.
The wonderful cube effect as you try and go faster, masks the data points unless you can test on an ergonometer or such and get a power reading.
A simple error in 2 or 3 beats will change a workout from optimal, to a dangerous stress.
I was training with a triathlon sqad, and our esteemed coach handed out HR monitors and told the group that we going to learn to pace ourselves properly.
He then went on to say that after warm up, we run three laps on the local block at 175bpm.
This was supposed to teach us to keep our hr under control and not run too fast.
Now my run threshold is 173 bpm.
I went as instructed, knocked off a 3 or 4 km at sub 3min/km pace.
Just above my threshold at that time. ( my fastest 10km is sub 30min )
He then went crazy at me for going too fast, not listening to me that my measured threshold level was 173 and that what he asked was simply too fast for me for the stimulation he was seeking, and that what he was proposing was just not going to work.
My brother also participated in this and that HR meant that he could barely jog and not exceed the mythical 175 limit. His threshold is way over 200bpm.
It was just foolish and uninformed. Nor would he listen to us when we talked to him.
Now this was a highly regarded coach at the time, yet he had no idea.
There is a definite skill to accurately identifying the true threshold, and unfortunately, not many are any good at it.
Small errors lead to disasters.
Too many too fast sessions will quickly stagnate progress and lead to injury and illness as you obviously know.
I have recently seen a cyclist tested at a Brisbane UNI, I checked the data and the info they gave to the athlete on what was his threshold should be and it was simply wrong.
I had ridden with him, new his HR and it just didn’t add up.
This cyclist testing was over 50 watts and 7 bpm in error.
This was determined by lactate/HR testing at our local velodrome.
On the day that the cyclist performed the testing at the UNI he was still suffering from flu like symptoms and this skewed the results.
Even though he informed them of this, they made no allowance.
Possibly because they had no real world experience on how the results would be skewed.
Now, had he continued to train based on these erroneous results, he would have defiantly headed down the short term gain, long term breakdown path.
The gathering of PROPER data is important.
What is done with the data after that may lead to optimal training, or disaster.
That is not the fault of testing unless the testing is poor, it is the result of the training undertaken.
Good data can only help a good coach.
A bad coach will stuff up with or without good data.
Because paddling races have traditionally been very short, sometimes too much effort above threshold may have been prescribed by some coaches, in an effort to stimulate the processes that are at work in racing these events.
Swimmers have suffered the same fate at times, fortunately many of the great swimming coaches are loaners and learnt for themselves how to train properly and rewrote the erroneous rules that pervaded much of the coaching community.
All training needs to be individualized, unfortunately a lot of times it is not, some athletes it works for, many it doesn’t, and they shuffle off elsewhere looking for a better deal.
Now, my criticism of your post is this:
What exactly is this mythical 80%
If it is not defined, then how can it be applied?
I am not criticizing your methods, as you have not given anything about your methods apart from the fact that you are aware of the downside of overtraining.
My criticism, is that you have simply come across as promoting your business with some half thought out, half hearted attempt to explain the way you train.
I have no doubt that I have much I can learn from you.
I am reasonably new to paddling and need to learn good technique in paddling, and coming from 250km inland, I very sorely need to learn to read the ocean and how to make the best of it.
One day we shall have a civilized conversation and compare notes.
Now back to my training, yesterday for me was a solid hour effort 5 beats under threshold. What I call intensive endurance.
Today’s paddle was an hour of not allowed to go over 140 beats, my fat burn aerobic threshold.
My average HR for today was 116bpm and my max 126.
This workout was dedicated to recovery and technique.
And the numbers show me that I achieved that aim.
Just because I advocate training at AT doesn’t mean that I do it any more than once a week.
For me, that session was a few days ago and consisted of 1 km at 158bpm (my AT) followed by 15 sec rest repeated 6 times.
A lactate reading after the last hard KM showed 3.4 mmol, exactly the level I was chasing.
Now had it come in at 3.6-4.0, I would have to seriously question if my HR data in regards to my threshold were correct. But seeing as this is exactly what I was looking for in this session, it probably means that my testing was accurate.
This is a stressful session and is followed by a day of rest and then a short easy day and then the previously mentioned sessions.
Training at AT is still the single most important session for physical adaptation when considering distance training.
Adequate recovery being the next.