hjs wrote:But strangely enough
No, not strange at all.
Training for short-term gains can indeed give you short-term gains.
And training for long-term gains can give you long-term gains.
Duh.
I get about a dozen seconds over 2K from hard distance rowing and about another dozen seconds from hard sharpening.
So do most people, I think.
But neither of these improves my foundational rowing--or theirs.
You get better by overcoming your weaknesses, not by racing, over and over, emphasizing your strengths and ignoring your weaknesses.
My weaknesses were foundational.
I have argued that, in this, most other veteran lightweights are similar.
Veteran heavyweights are usually just bad at everything.
ranger
P.S. Rocket Roy is on track to pull 6:46 this year. It will be interesting to see what happens. Unless he does something about his foundational rowing, his 2K will continue to fall off by two seconds per year. I am on track to row 6:16, 30 seconds faster. Back in 2003, our times were about 10 seconds apart. I pulled 6:28; Roy pulled 6:38.
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)