becz wrote:
It's impossible to tell what of your own BS you really believe, but let me throw this out there.
Why do you claim that what I say about what I am doing is BS? I don't see any justification for this at all. Could you explain?
becz wrote:
Has it ever occurred to you that the reason you were able to break the WR in 2003 (which I feel the need to point out you no longer own) is that you have a natural pre-disposition for good performance on the erg?
Sure, I have some talent for rowing; I have a long history of participation in sports; and I got up to doing 6 hours of exercise a day when I was training to break the WR (an hour of jumping rope, an hour of sit ups, two hours on the erg, and two hours on a stepper). All of these contributed to my success, but I don't think that one was more influential than the other. To break a world record in anything, you need a good balance of talent, dedication, and hard work.
becz wrote:
You're the classic example of an individual who takes his personal experience and extrapolates it out to everyone else. "I broke the 2k record, and even though I've not come close to my peak performance again, you all should do like I do." If your training was truly perfect, you'd have improved on your 2003 performance by now (by improved I mean 2k time, not SPI or whatever other meaningless metric you use). This should particularly be the case given the amount of time you claim to train (whether or not you're "sharpened").
I answered this in a previous post, but let me add: I still think I will indeed improve my 2K times from 2003.
becz wrote:
I'm sure that if you trained under a proper coach, you'd have been able to either maintain or improve on that performance. But because you're either too stupid or too egotistical (or both) to admit the realities of your situation, you've never been able to regain the performance you had. The really sad thing here is the wasted opportunity. You truly could have remained the best, but got in your own way.
I am not the best? On what grounds do you say that? Without even preparing for racing, I have had the best 2K times in the 55s lwts for the last two years, this year by six seconds, even though I am 59. No one my age and weight (or older) came within 20 seconds of pulling 6:41. On the other hand, coaches such as Paul Smith, who worked with Rocket Roy, didn't improve his times a whit. Before Paul started working with Roy, Roy pulled 6:38. After Paul worked with Roy, Roy pulled 6:38, and only once. Most of the time he pulled 6:42 or slower. Now, Roy will have a hard time pulling 6:50. I don't find coaching of this sort any better than my own. In fact, I find it much worse.
becz wrote:
I feel more pity for you than anything else. So instead, you're now hoping to just hang in there long enough to turn 60 and start this whole stupid process all over again. "When I broke the 60's lightweight world record in 201X, I wasn't even fully trained". How sad for you, and in some ways sad for the rest of us.
I appreciate your concern, but no, I won't wait until I am 60 to race again. I will be fully trained soon. That should get me 10-20 seconds over 2K, relative to what I can do for 2K when I have not prepared to race. This fall, I will go to BIRC and blow Roy's 55s lwt WR completely away, perhaps by as much as 20 seconds. Then I will continue to train through to WIRC and see if I can get my best performance when I am 60.
becz wrote:
Here lies ranger's 7 years of futile effort. RIP.
I don't think being twenty seconds better than anyone else my age and weight, without even preparing for it, is a futile effort. But think what you want, I guess. When I am fully trained, I may well pull a 2K that is 40 seconds better than anyone else my age and weight. I will be satisfied with that, wouldn't you?
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)