mikvan52 wrote:What we have is a gifted athlete who is psychologically suited to beating himself to death on a piece of gym equipment to get close to an obscure WR (for his age and weight) times for 2k... That is all. It isn't easy to do.
Gifted athlete?
Nah.
I've done lots of sports (football, baseball, basketball, skating, cross country, track, swimming, canoeing, marathon running, etc.), but have been just average in all of them.
I ran 2:50 for a FM; you ran 2:20.
You're the gifted athlete.
No, my only virtues have been consistency over the years, some of the basic physical abilities needed for rowing, and originality in my training routines for erging.
From these few virtues, this year, I will re-write the lightweight veteran record books on the erg--permanently, forever.
BTW, this is a training forum for indoor rowing.
Yep, indoor rowing is about working hard, both skeletal-muscularly and physiologically, using your whole body, pulling the handle on that piece of gym equipment.
So it goes.
Most the age group WR-holders on the erg are not old foggie scullers like you at all, if they are OTW rowers at all.
Hendershott, Brook, Ripley, Fleming, Caviston, Watt, Castellan, Bailey, etc., have never done anything very distinguished in a 1x.
Many of these folks have never rowed OTW at all.
It is no accident that you haven't come within two seconds per 500m of a WR on the erg--and never will.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)