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Articles
> Train Less, Train Smarter, Race Faster
Although triathlon is comprised of three traditional sport disciplines,
it is a sport with its own identity rather than simply three individual
disciplines which take place consecutively. Training for triathlon
should recognize this distinction and adapt accordingly.
In the sport's early years, athletes entered the sport primarily
from swimming and running backgrounds. Training methods were anything
but refined, instruction manuals were scarce, and the top athletes
at the time will tell you that they were flying by the seat of their
pants.
Faced with a general lack of knowledge, experience, and the daunting
image of this new be all you can be sport, triathletes were quick
to adopt mega-training routines which added new meaning to the phrase
"not enough hours in a day." Romantic stories of brutally
epic training routines were passed along by word of mouth and in
print and only served to fuel the training craze.
Cross-training became an 80s buzzword as it was introduced to our
sporting lexicon by triathlon pioneers. In its original application,
cross-training meant multiplying one's original sport training routine
by 3, while trying not to leave anything out. The result of this
approach was to produce cadres of stiff, slow, mono-speed athletes
who never could do enough training to break out of their performance
ruts. There are still many practitioners of these training methods,
who each year somehow expect a different result with the same training
methods.
Cross-training version 2002 is now referred to as multisport training,
and recognizes that there is a training carryover effect from one
discipline to another. This means that bike training can help your
running, which can in turn help your swimming, thus reducing the
amount of time that you have to spend training each discipline.
The cross-training carryover effect does not mean that one can
show up a triathlon having not swum, and expect that your biking
and running will propel you through the water. Nor does it mean
that you can skip run training yet ask your chiseled bike legs to
drive you over the run course. There is an absolute need for sport
specificity, meaning swim, bike, and run.
Yet, by viewing your training as a composite, rather than 3 separate
entities, one discovers that optimal performance can be achieved
with miles and training hours that are much less than what one commonly
reads as being necessary. Indeed, it has taken many years of general
overtraining for the romantic image of epic training slugfests to
lose their glow and for more thoughtful training approaches to crystallize
and begin to emerge.
Listed below are guideline principles which support training methods
that I have found to be effective in helping athletes of all abilities,
from Ironman winners to age group All-Americans, to novice triathletes
looking for new challenges.
· Think key workouts
In simple terms, your key workouts are an endurance outing, a tempo
effort of medium distance, and a shorter, more intense workout which
might be hill repeats or a track workout @ 80% intensity. These
workouts should build methodically for several weeks before taking
a week of easy training to assimilate the training and recharge
the battery.
Technique work can be incorporated into warmups and cooldowns of
each of the three disciplines. Running drills and strides, pedaling
efficiency and high cadence spinning on the bike, and swim drills
and stroke count in the pool represent fundamental form work.
I believe that athletes and coaches in single discipline sports
like swimming, biking or running, are guilty of widespread training
excess and could benefit greatly from more attention to the principle
of focusing on key workouts and paring away the excess fat.
· Don't count miles
If you are hitting your key workouts in the three disciplines, miles
become a much less relevant measurement of your training. I have
seen this demonstrated with countless athletes from all backgrounds,
and at all competitive distances.
Triathletes with swimming backgrounds approach their swimming bests
while swimming a fraction of what they did as mono-swimmers. Ditto
for runners. Ironman athletes run strong and fast marathons on 30
miles a week of running.
Cyclists who use tools like Computrainers can realize tremendous
time savings and improved performance with one hour mid-week sessions,
saving road outings for the weekends. My experience is that 1 hour
well spent indoors translates to 3 hours on the road.
· Variety is the spice of life-no two consecutive workouts
the same!
All training obeys the law of diminishing returns. This is to say
that after a certain point, repeating a workout will bring less
and less improvement. Athletes that do not realize this will continue
to train to the point where workouts are not only failing to help
them improve, but in fact are making them slower! Just as the 2nd
hot dog never tastes as good as the first one, so too does the 2nd
same workout produce a less satisfying result.
Variety in your training is essential because of its widespread
positive influence:
· contributes to health by mixing things up and bringing
balance
· keeps things fun and interesting
· respects scientific evidence of the need to have your training
evolve
· Am I getting stronger?
If you can see and feel yourself getting stronger, then you are
on the right track. While this might seem an obvious observation,
I have always been amazed at how people will grind themselves into
a pulp with training that is somehow deemed essential, or will similarly
ignore an injury despite clear signs that they are wearing themselves
out and causing further damage.
Learn to listen to your body.
· Am I having fun?
Here is a simple mental check list:
Are you having fun? Are you excited about your workouts? Would you
describe your pre-race state as "pysched and ready" or
let's get this over with? Do you have outside interests?
If you answer yes to all of these questions, then chances are you
are on a healthy track with your athletic participation.
Future articles will explore these principles and their application
in greater detail. The reader will be pleased to discover that triathlon
and its training can indeed be a vehicle with which to challenge
our limits, yet without consuming all else that we do to maintain
a healthy life balance.
Michael McCormack is a two-time Ironman Canada Overall Champion
and coach to athletes whose abilities range from novice to Ironman
winners. For more information about Michael and his programs, reference
his website, www.triathloncoach.com.
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