ranger wrote:For endurance sports, rowing is odd, I think, because it is so rhythmic, repetitive, technical (full-body, sequenced, timed, etc.), and non-weight bearing (i.e., free of gravity).mrfit wrote:RangerThe upside down pyramid. I was always curious who did this kind of peaking and why.Moving toward 150min of each by the end of the month.
Usually it's distance that sharpens into speed but I've heard some athletes will take develop their speed first and then push distance. However that's usually in the Ironman world where you are maximizing fat burning efficiency over events lasting 8 hours. For 2k events where you are burning glycogen like a house of fire, I'm interested to see the effect of working on distance as the progression toward a 2k peak.
Because of this, oddly, in rowing, the best marathoner is also the best sprinter, and vice versa.
If your training is balanced, you can read your 2K time right off your FM time (and vice versa).
For many, you can do the same with your 500m time.
500m is usually done at about 2K - 10.
FM is done at 2K + 14.
The 2K is definitional because it combines the two, effectiveness and efficiency.
So, to pull 1:34 at 60 for 2K, I will have to do _both_ 1:24 for 500m and 1:48 pace for a FM.
Piece of cake!
The 60s lwt FM WR is right about 2:00 pace and the 60s lwt WR for 500m is right around 1:30.
The former, then, is 12 seconds per 500m off my target; the latter; six seconds per 500m off my target.
The difference between my targets and the 60s lwt WRs averages around 90 watts.
90 watts is about 2.5 SPI at 36 spm.
The difference between 9.5 SPI at 36 spm and 12 SPI at 36 spm.
6:42 and 6:12?
ranger
Wow!
You will be Killer at 60. Is this season a wash?
AT, FWIW, stands for Anaerobic Threshold. You are free to define it as you wish. It's just the Internet, the garbage scow of real understanding.