What are the first symptoms of cirrhosis of the liver?Gus wrote:ranger...the master of hyperbole..."caved in."ranger wrote:
Don't know the cause, other than overtraining, I suppose, but my right side caved in today.
ranger
Bob S.
What are the first symptoms of cirrhosis of the liver?Gus wrote:ranger...the master of hyperbole..."caved in."ranger wrote:
Don't know the cause, other than overtraining, I suppose, but my right side caved in today.
ranger
Uh?ranger wrote:overtraining
Probably a wrist injury incurred while "working with" a photo of Eskildsnowleopard wrote:Uh?ranger wrote:overtraining
How can you overtrain on modest UT2 volume? Furthermore, your fitness is maximal; can't be developed. Your only improvement is through technique. Since training is irrelevant, overtraining is an impossibility.
As I have been explaining, for older folks, the major stress of rowing well, taking good strokes, is skeletal-muscular, not physiological.snowleopard wrote:How can you overtrain on modest UT2 volume?
Since you are overly fond of giving [bad] advice, you should maybe brush up on the definition of 'overtraining'ranger wrote:I strained some muscles.
You said it.ranger wrote:
Getting injured (or sick or stale) are the most dumb-ass things anyone can do in this sport.
You have to be a total stiff about training, and a total novice about rowing more generally, to injure (or otherwise incapacitate) yourself on an erg.
No, _you_ should.snowleopard wrote:Since you are overly fond of giving [bad] advice, you should maybe brush up on the definition of 'overtraining'ranger wrote:I strained some muscles.
You would like it to be but that doesn't make it so. There is no smaller minority than one.ranger wrote:Rowing is primarily skeletal-muscular, not aerobic.
Yes.KevJGK wrote:You said it.ranger wrote:
Getting injured (or sick or stale) are the most dumb-ass things anyone can do in this sport.
You have to be a total stiff about training, and a total novice about rowing more generally, to injure (or otherwise incapacitate) yourself on an erg.
What you consider to be good advice or bad advice depends on who you are.snowleopard wrote:you are overly fond of giving [bad] advice
And bones and muscles, as we all know, have nothing to do with physiology. Jackass.ranger wrote:As I have been explaining, for older folks, the major stress of rowing well, taking good strokes, is skeletal-muscular, not physiological.
High SPI OTW (accepting your dubious definition) means heavy stroke loading, and higher seat velocity, higher speed of initial drive phase... are related to the quest for the .5 seconds of drive time.--snip-- We have discussed some of the key the forces at play (see R&D Note #10) but the key proven factors of rowing rib stress fractures are increased long distance training and heavy stroke loading.
--snip--
There are also some key technique findings with rowers who have suffered stress fractures. These include a higher seat velocity, higher speed of initial drive phase with lower knee-extension to elbow flexion strength ratio (meaning a lot of power is coming from the arms relative to the legs) and a pronounced layback position at the finish.