Then, how does he know if he has rowed 'well'. If he can't complete a piece in a certain amount of time, then there's no proof of continuity. I can hop on the erg and take five strokes at 1:45, wait, take another 5 at 1:45 and keep doing that, and my total time will not matter (according to Rich), because each stroke is good?chgoss wrote:Well, you have to understand Rich's definition of "racing your training", which is this: "recording the time it took to cover any distance, at any effort level". Rich, as you know, does not report the time it took to cover a distance until the final stage "heavy sharpening".bloomp wrote:So, according to Rich's logic, you cannot train to race by racing your training. Where is the sense in that?
Your race should only be an extension of your training, and it is an extension because you are already knowledgeable of how far you can push yourself (by training to race, properly) and you finally, psychologically, can break any boundaries that you have set up during training. These bounds are broken because of adrenaline, the idea of a team, the impending competition, or the boat you are trying to pass. Without racing within the training (impossible for any real team rower to NOT race their training), you never have any clue as to where you really are.
My proof is this. While attending a Vespoli coaching seminar in Philadelphia last year, the Wisconsin men's coach spoke to us. He has a lightweight (145 pound) rower who for an hour can pull at a 1:45 or so. But across a 2k, he can't really go lower than 1:41. But had he been training as Rich suggests, he would have assumed that he COULD go faster and died out early on in a shorter distance piece. Ergo, with the body type Mr. Cureton has, sure his training may work - but without proof of his times (ACTUAL times, not your GOALS that you never test) - we will never know if he's telling the truth about anything.
Also, Rich, you seem to waver back and forth between "Sharpening" and "distance rowing". You have been claiming to have started sharpening at least a week ago, yet you've reported nothing. Make up your mind as to what you're doing already!
The folks that report the distances/times in their daily training, are racing their training.
Your definition of "racing your training" is a different one. Your definition is "going 100% full out, for a distance (that distance varies, depending on the goal of the session), and recording the time it took for future data collection purposes".
The key difference is recording/reporting the time/distance. Ranger views this as detremental to training.
Said another way, the very act of recording the time taken to cover a distance (any distance, any effort), transforms that training effort from whatever it was before you wrote it down (for example, an easy recovery row) to "racing your training".
I'm not exactly clear on how this act, completed after the fact, has such an impact on the training piece.. suspect it has something to do with quantum physics...
Non sequitur. That's not how to build foundational rowing skills.
Without knowing how well you've done, you don't know your ability and you don't know whether you are doing better.