I _have_ made up my mind.Micromonkey wrote:Make your mind up!
Your training is imbalanced (in some way).
The exception proves the rule.
ranger
I _have_ made up my mind.Micromonkey wrote:Make your mind up!
Hard to say what supports that.Micromonkey wrote:you're credentials and results certainly don't match the results my coach has produced
so.. why dont you post a result at a ranked distance?ranger wrote:No it isn't, if you are giving advice about rowing on this forum but don't know what you're doing, or are asking me about various things that you have no conception of because of your own level of achievement.whp4 wrote:My performance is completely irrelevant
ranger
No you didn't, when you achieved those records by your own admission you 'didn't know how to row'ranger wrote:Hard to say what supports that.Micromonkey wrote:you're credentials and results certainly don't match the results my coach has produced
Coaching myself, I broke the WR in my age and weight division three times, on three consecutive rows, to a total of four seconds.
So, pretty much, no one has ever gotten any better results that I have.
This isn't the end of it, either.
I am now much better than I was in 2003, even though I am five years older.
I think I will now break the WR in my age and weight division by 20 seconds, and break the heavyweight WR in my division rowing as a lightweight.
No one has come close to doing anything like that before.
ranger
I'm not giving advice about rowing. I'm pointing out that you haven't demonstrated the improvement you claim, and giving you advice about how you might demonstrate such an improvement in a fashion that might give you a shred of credibility (something rather lacking in your statements of the last several years).ranger wrote:No it isn't, if you are giving advice about rowing on this forum but don't know what you're doing, or are asking me about various things that you have no conception of because of your own level of achievement.whp4 wrote:My performance is completely irrelevant
ranger
Interesting. I wonder why I don't see your name when I review the list of world records for any distance? Must be an oversight of some sort, I guess.ranger wrote:Hard to say what supports that.Micromonkey wrote:you're credentials and results certainly don't match the results my coach has produced
Coaching myself, I broke the WR in my age and weight division three times, on three consecutive rows, to a total of four seconds.
So, pretty much, no one has ever gotten any better results that I have.
If by "it" you mean erroneous statements by ranger, I completely agree, there's no reason to believe they will stop.This isn't the end of it, either.
Your technique is possibly better (a low bar) but you have not demonstrated that you are faster. You have made great strides in your ability to do simple things like post snapshots and videos, though you haven't managed to document any number of excuses (who could forget "the tree fell on my thumb"?) or an actual timed piece or even a continuous row of more than a few minutes duration.I am now much better than I was in 2003, even though I am five years older.
Hate to break it to you, but a quick glance at the record book shows that the hwt record for a given age class is not always better than the corresponding lwt record. And your claim about how no WR holder has ever improved? Also bogus. What was the name of that Al Gore movie?I think I will now break the WR in my age and weight division by 20 seconds, and break the heavyweight WR in my division rowing as a lightweight.
No one has come close to doing anything like that before.
Some of the wheels are a bit out of roundchgoss wrote:so.. why dont you post a result at a ranked distance?ranger wrote:No it isn't, if you are giving advice about rowing on this forum but don't know what you're doing, or are asking me about various things that you have no conception of because of your own level of achievement.whp4 wrote:My performance is completely irrelevant
ranger
The way your mind works is beyond me...
That's right, because if there's one thing we've learned in sport it's that only people who can do can also teach. Just ask Jürgen Gröbler, one of the most successful coaches of all time, who was ... well OK, so he wasn't an Olympic standard rower. But what about Vince Lombardi, one of the greatest coaches in any sport, whose skills were founded in his outstanding career with the mighty Wilmington Clippers?ranger wrote:No it isn't, if you are giving advice about rowing on this forum but don't know what you're doing, or are asking me about various things that you have no conception of because of your own level of achievement.whp4 wrote:My performance is completely irrelevant
ranger
Do you even know what 'The exception proves the rule' means? It's from an older meaning of prove, 'to test' (as in a 'proving ground'). So the exception does test the rule, by showing it to be wrong. Just like your rule is.ranger wrote:I_ have_ made up my mind.Micromonkey wrote:Make your mind up!
Your training is imbalanced (in some way).
The exception proves the rule.
ranger
You only coached yourself through a good bout of weight loss, it had nothing to do with improving your performance. (offers were made to help you with that, but you ridiculed and slandered the methods which lead others in your age/weight class to kick your arse.) Just think how much better you could have been with a good program to improve your performance.ranger wrote:Coaching myself, I broke the WR in my age and weight division three times, on three consecutive rows, to a total of four seconds.Micromonkey wrote:you're credentials and results certainly don't match the results my coach has produced
This isn't the end of it, either.
ranger
Micromonkey wrote:No you didn't, when you achieved those records by your own admission you 'didn't know how to row'ranger wrote:Hard to say what supports that.Micromonkey wrote:you're credentials and results certainly don't match the results my coach has produced
Coaching myself, I broke the WR in my age and weight division three times, on three consecutive rows, to a total of four seconds.
So, pretty much, no one has ever gotten any better results that I have.
This isn't the end of it, either.
I am now much better than I was in 2003, even though I am five years older.
I think I will now break the WR in my age and weight division by 20 seconds, and break the heavyweight WR in my division rowing as a lightweight.
No one has come close to doing anything like that before.
ranger
Since coaching yourself and since those records you've either failed to even try when you said you would, failed to turn up with some incredible excuse or another, broke down during the race, or, again with various excuses,failed to produce a result anything like what you claimed you will.
Thats what supports that, just claiming your "so much better now" doesn't prove anything, in the real world you have to actually do it.
Be a little more generous to your competition, Paul.PaulS wrote:You only coached yourself through a good bout of weight loss, it had nothing to do with improving your performance.
The is hilarious, Paul.PaulS wrote:You only coached yourself through a good bout of weight loss, it had nothing to do with improving your performance. (offers were made to help you with that, but you ridiculed and slandered the methods which lead others in your age/weight class to kick your arse.) Just think how much better you could have been with a good program to improve your performance.ranger wrote:Coaching myself, I broke the WR in my age and weight division three times, on three consecutive rows, to a total of four seconds.Micromonkey wrote:you're credentials and results certainly don't match the results my coach has produced
This isn't the end of it, either.
ranger
That is THE END OF IT, oh yes it is.
For you, yes.PaulS wrote:That is THE END OF IT