Just so long as nobody asks those pesky questions about why you are so much slower if you are quite a bit better!ranger wrote: Even though I am seven years older, I am quite a bit _better_ now than I was in 2003

Over the last five years, I haven't been training to race, I have been training to get better.whp4 wrote:Just so long as nobody asks those pesky questions about why you are so much slower if you are quite a bit better!ranger wrote: Even though I am seven years older, I am quite a bit _better_ now than I was in 2003
The only facts you've demonstrated are that you are slower, and can't reliably prepare for, get to, start, or finish a race. You have only your coach to blame for the misguided training, and the idiot who chose him.ranger wrote:Over the last five years, I haven't been training to race, I have been training to get better.whp4 wrote:Just so long as nobody asks those pesky questions about why you are so much slower if you are quite a bit better!ranger wrote: Even though I am seven years older, I am quite a bit _better_ now than I was in 2003
It is a demonstrated fact:
True.whp4 wrote:The only facts you've demonstrated are that you are slower, and can't reliably prepare for, get to, start, or finish a race.
Indeed you willranger wrote:True.whp4 wrote:The only facts you've demonstrated are that you are slower, and can't reliably prepare for, get to, start, or finish a race.
I will just get worse (by about two seconds per year).
The prediction is that I, if I manage to race and get to lightweight, will pull 6:43 next year, two seconds slower than the 6:41 I did last year.
ranger
Indeed we do, as Mike C., Rocket Roy, Dennis Hastings, Paul Siebach, and Mike VB's 2K times, among many others, demonstrate.hjs wrote:If we are older rowers and follow traditional training plans, which overvalue aerobic capacity, when it is inevitably declining, slowly but inevitable we get slower
yep you are rightranger wrote:Indeed we do, as Mike C., Rocket Roy, Dennis Hastings, Paul Siebach, and Mike VB's, mine and yours 2K times, among many others, demonstrate.hjs wrote:If we are older rowers and follow traditional training plans, which overvalue aerobic capacity, when it is inevitably declining, slowly but inevitable we get slower
ranger
still no answer ..........hjs wrote:?ranger wrote:At the moment, the average decline in times among senior and veteran rowers is two seconds per year over 2K.bloomp wrote:Rowing like you suggest is an easy path to burning out, getting frustrated and not actually getting faster. Rowing per your definition of 'good' is an excellent way to isolate yourself from the practical methods that actually work.
That's success, getting faster, doing something that works?
Odd use of words.
With that rate of decline, if you pull 6:18 (like Mike C.) at 40, you pull 6:58 at 60.
ranger
what did you pull last year?
what is your pb.
how much did you slow down ?
True.hjs wrote:still no answer ..........
But by definition, ranger will not be fully trained until he reaches his goal of 6:16. So as long as he thinks it can happen it is a possibility. At what point does he say - "well, I gave it my best shot"? Not until he is fully trained!ranger wrote: True.
The answer is my racing when I am fully trained.
No, I will be fully trained with I have done distance trials and a couple of months of hard sharpening--whatever the result of that might be.rjw wrote:But by definition, ranger will not be fully trained until he reaches his goal of 6:16
No, scientists have now determined that the minimal decline with age in rowing performance due to the inevitable decline with age in aerobic capacity is .3 seconds a year over 2K.rjw wrote:And by his own admission, each year you wait, after 50, adds another 1.3 seconds.
The former is social, directed at another; the latter is personal, and therefore not directed at another, but used for your own good/bad purposes.rjw wrote:What is the difference between nay saying and being realistic?
rjw wrote:
What is the difference between nay saying and being realistic?