anthonysemone wrote:so let me get this straight, while doing the marathon, you're gonna hop off the course, hop on a C2 and row a bit? I've completed over 20 marathons and have had a go at 8 ultras w/ a PB at the 50 mile distance, flat course in 7 hours 40 min plus, 28 years ago and 3 attempts at the Old Dominion 100 mile (50, 50 and 60 miles respectively).
Marathoning is sport specific, that's item #1. Item #2 is that so-called aerobic capacity is nothing that can be developed independently of muscular-skeletal activity. You want to do a marathon at better pace than what you're doing now or have done? Train with less volume, higher intensity and longer rest periods between efforts. e.g., take a look at
http://www.furman.edu.first Don't succumb to the idiotic notion that more is better. Moreover, unless you're gonna create a new sport in which one runs and then C2's and then runs and then C2's, bag the crappy notion that "cross-training" is at all useful, Cross-Fit crap notwithstanding (BTW check out their forum, and go to the section on injuries - it'll blow your mind),
OTOH, whatever floats your boat
tony
"Idiotic notion" that more is better. Well then I guess all the world class marathoners have and are doing it all wrong then?
According to you, they would all be better served by doing nothing but intervals and forget about the 125-150 mile weeks.
Maybe you should call up a couple of them and offer your services, then maybe "finally" one of them will actually be fast or as fast as you in a marathon. So give Brian Sell a call, tell him to forget about his 150 mile weeks because he can go faster if he just runs a few intervals and a tempo run a week. Maybe with your help he can finally beat the east Africans.
So now that that is over. Time to get real. If you want to be a competetive marathoner then you need to #1 Put in the miles, #2 follow a training program that not only puts in A LOT of miles but also the speed work. But number one is and always will be volume.
As for cross training, your off base yet again. It's clear and proven that cross training can and does help the majority. Even the elites encoporate some type of cross training.
Aerobic exercise is aerobic exercise is aerobic exercise..... Whether I spend 30 minutes on my rower at 150bpm or running for 30 minutes at 150bpm my heart and lungs can't tell the difference and it all adds up to the same affect.
Some, maybe a lot, of us just don't have the bodies that allow for the volume of training on our feet that is NEEDED to improve marathon times.
So therefore additional aerobic or anerobic training from cross training is beneficial.
Gene