PaulH wrote:betwelcher wrote:My reference was to the erg, and basically to Roy, who is both the hammer and WR-holder.
So you've set your immediate competition as a guy who is training hard for a different sport? Way to set yourself a challenge.
Well, what a WR-holder chooses to do is up to him.
Roy could defend his WR, if he thought he could.
It is hard to see how pulling 6:44, or perhaps a couple of seconds slower, given that he is a year older, will do this in some better way that the 6:38 he pulled four years ago back in 2006.
A WR-holder is always at an erg race in spirit, even if he is not there is the flesh.
The WR is the standard in the age and weight division.
There are no such things as erg race tactics.
The conditions are always perfect.
An erg race is just a race against the clock.
It can be done anywhere, at any time.
Doesn't matter who is in the race.
You just hold t he pace you have trained yourself to hold--and that's that.
Roy's challenge is not how to show up at a race and pull some time he has never trained himself to pull.
His challenge is to learn to row well, to train himself to row faster.
Since he set his WR, he hasn't done that.
In fact, in all of his work with PaulS, he didn't get a whit better.
Before he started working with Paul, he pulled 6:38 in competition.
The best he pulled in competition working with Paul was just that, 6:38.
While working with Paul, he just lost weight so he could row as a lightweight and learned how to prepare for races more consistently.
All of Roy's present pbs predict a 2K in the middle 6:40s.
He needs to move the whole edifice if he wants to better in his 2K racing.
To do this, he can't just prepare to race, as Paul taught him to do,
He needs to work on his weaknesses and get better.
The only way to do this, really, is to return to foundational rowing.
He needs to train himself to pull 12 SPI in a 2K, too, rather than 9.5 SPI.
He is entirely capable of such training, given his leg strength and aerobic capacity.
He just needs to do it.
The training would only take five years or so, not long at all.
It _is_ a lot of work and commitment, though.
It isn't easy.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)