Generally, the way I understand it is if you're working on speed/power, you want more rest and fully recovered. Don't forget that the PP is for the 2K. The assumption about the PP is that you've been doing a large volume of base building before you undertake it. As middle aged want-to-be athletes (like me), when most of us started the PP, that wasn't the case. Instead, the PP was the largest volume of meters we'd ever done! So the PP is meant to build on the endurance you are supposed to already have when you start the PP and the longer rests are so that you maximize gains in strength and speed. Most believe that speed is the easiest and quickest aspect to train in rowing. Yeah and no. We're not going to get as strong as some of these guys overnight (or ever!). But you can improve speed pretty quickly.barrec wrote:@nhopkins - good on you to do the workout and finish! That is what matters. I'm curious, where are you located? I'm just outside Portland, OR and have also been affected by smoke from wild fires. No babies, though
Has anyone here done the PP5k? Or have ideas about pacing? I looked through the workouts and cycles and am thrown by 1' rest on the shorter distances...
The shorter the rest, the more you're working on your aerobic capacity, much more important in a 5K than in a 2K. So you don't want to recover fully. You don't need to be fast to do a great 5K. Some that excel at the 5K have horrible 500m times and the best 500m sprinters are horrible at 5Ks for the most part. Working opposite ends. The 2K is kind of a balancing act between power and endurance. 5K not so much.