Transfer of rowing to running
Posted: March 14th, 2015, 4:52 am
Gday all,
The past few weeks I have really gotten into my rowing and have been posting a little bit on this forum. I was curious about transfer of aerobic capacity to running. I am in a combat unit in the military and we have a number of fitness tests centered around running and other things that most people know about. In my observations I have seen 4 types of fitness stereotypes in our unit.
1. the Gazelles, these are 65-75kg guys who run, run and run some more. There idea of strength training is bodyweight squats, jumping lunges and push ups. They typically crush runs like the 2.4km cleanskin run but struggle with pack marching or the heavier 3.2km webbing run that is used for SF selection and other entry tests.
2. The gorillas, These guys are 90kg+ and hit the gym at every chance, they typically are at the back of the clean skin runs, OR if they came form the rugby background or similar tend to sit middle of the pack after the first 400m. They often do well at pack marching due to being quite strong and if they have any amount of aerobic capacity do well at the 3.2km webbing run due to being able to handle the additional 15kg plus rifle weight carried during the run.
3. The seeners. These guys are your run of the mill bloke, they get seen at the gym and seen going for runs but never push themselves to hard and for whatever reason don't care to much about getting noticed during PT or have future aspirations to join SF or other specialist units.
4. The lingers. These guys are the Malingers. They feign injury more often than not to avoid anything strenuous. There is nothing else to say about them.
Im closest to number 2. I like lifting weights in big compound movements like snatches, cleans, squats, deadlifts etc. But once upon a time when I was leaner and younger I was capable of running a sub 19 minute 5k and a sub 40min 10km. A few years of powerlifting competitions and eating indiscriminately sure as hell fixed that as I packed on weight and stopped running. These days I sit more in the middle. I run ONLY when I have to, and pretty much row every day I get the chance, following (albeit loosely) a version of the beginners pete plan not from week to week but form workout to workout when able to due to work commitments. lift weights 3-4 times a week still doing back squats, front squats, Olympic lifts, deadlifts etc for lower body and weighted dips, presses and push press for upper body. Strength conditioning includes (heavy) tyre flips and sled/prowler intervals or if that isn't available we just take off the hand brake on mine or a mates car and push it up and down the street for 150-200m intervals. But as far as programming any running goes.. I don't do any.. zilch, nada. Unless we are made to do it in unit PT (which surprisingly is ofen less than once a fortnight) I simply never run.
Now Im not a horrible runner and can finish any running test we do well under the time cap. However the short time I have been rowing nearly daily I have noticed a huge improvement in my running, and almost cut an entire minute off of my 2.4km time from 9min 17 down to 8 min 28. That equates to a 1km pace of 3:30min which while it isn't lightning fast its pretty alright for a meathead who thinks cardio is a set of 20 heavy back squats. When I went to read up about it everything I found pretty much said there is little to no transfer except for a crossfit forum that dribble all the same pseudo-science mumbo dribbled by (generally speaking) people who had no legitimate experience in strength and conditioning.
So I wanted to see if anyone else has had similar experiences than me both for short distance stuff or the longer distance stuff? Or for different training modalities etc
Cheers
The past few weeks I have really gotten into my rowing and have been posting a little bit on this forum. I was curious about transfer of aerobic capacity to running. I am in a combat unit in the military and we have a number of fitness tests centered around running and other things that most people know about. In my observations I have seen 4 types of fitness stereotypes in our unit.
1. the Gazelles, these are 65-75kg guys who run, run and run some more. There idea of strength training is bodyweight squats, jumping lunges and push ups. They typically crush runs like the 2.4km cleanskin run but struggle with pack marching or the heavier 3.2km webbing run that is used for SF selection and other entry tests.
2. The gorillas, These guys are 90kg+ and hit the gym at every chance, they typically are at the back of the clean skin runs, OR if they came form the rugby background or similar tend to sit middle of the pack after the first 400m. They often do well at pack marching due to being quite strong and if they have any amount of aerobic capacity do well at the 3.2km webbing run due to being able to handle the additional 15kg plus rifle weight carried during the run.
3. The seeners. These guys are your run of the mill bloke, they get seen at the gym and seen going for runs but never push themselves to hard and for whatever reason don't care to much about getting noticed during PT or have future aspirations to join SF or other specialist units.
4. The lingers. These guys are the Malingers. They feign injury more often than not to avoid anything strenuous. There is nothing else to say about them.
Im closest to number 2. I like lifting weights in big compound movements like snatches, cleans, squats, deadlifts etc. But once upon a time when I was leaner and younger I was capable of running a sub 19 minute 5k and a sub 40min 10km. A few years of powerlifting competitions and eating indiscriminately sure as hell fixed that as I packed on weight and stopped running. These days I sit more in the middle. I run ONLY when I have to, and pretty much row every day I get the chance, following (albeit loosely) a version of the beginners pete plan not from week to week but form workout to workout when able to due to work commitments. lift weights 3-4 times a week still doing back squats, front squats, Olympic lifts, deadlifts etc for lower body and weighted dips, presses and push press for upper body. Strength conditioning includes (heavy) tyre flips and sled/prowler intervals or if that isn't available we just take off the hand brake on mine or a mates car and push it up and down the street for 150-200m intervals. But as far as programming any running goes.. I don't do any.. zilch, nada. Unless we are made to do it in unit PT (which surprisingly is ofen less than once a fortnight) I simply never run.
Now Im not a horrible runner and can finish any running test we do well under the time cap. However the short time I have been rowing nearly daily I have noticed a huge improvement in my running, and almost cut an entire minute off of my 2.4km time from 9min 17 down to 8 min 28. That equates to a 1km pace of 3:30min which while it isn't lightning fast its pretty alright for a meathead who thinks cardio is a set of 20 heavy back squats. When I went to read up about it everything I found pretty much said there is little to no transfer except for a crossfit forum that dribble all the same pseudo-science mumbo dribbled by (generally speaking) people who had no legitimate experience in strength and conditioning.
So I wanted to see if anyone else has had similar experiences than me both for short distance stuff or the longer distance stuff? Or for different training modalities etc
Cheers