KevJGK wrote:You could have 2 guys with almost identical training. At the final sprint who wins? It's the guy with the most guts. Somebody wins, somebody is second, and somebody else handles down.
Training does not determine racing--absolutely.
The guy who trains hard develops guts.
The guy who doesn't, doesn't.
So training determines racing--absolutely.
No two people have identical training.
In age-group erging, especially, training differs wildly from person to person, in every aspect imaginable--quantity, quality, relation, and manner.
On the average, Mike VB does about a half an hour of training a day.
I do four hours.
In his erging, Mike does almost exclusively sprinting and resting.
I do just the opposite--foundational training (pulling hard at low rates) and distance rowing, with no resting.
I cross-train--extensively, two to three hours a day.
Mike does no cross-training at all, other than a little pilates work on his core and various physical chores associated with daily life.
When I row naturally, I pull around 12 SPI.
Mike pulls around 10 SPI.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)