whp4 wrote:Be that as it may, it speaks mostly to the general lack of competitors in that bracket, not that you are some incredible specimen. You still didn't manage to come anywhere near your PB, break the "soft" WR you keep claiming you'll demolish, make it to a major competition, or fulfill a single prediction you made. Come May 1st, we'll be able to say the same about this season, in all likelihood, and that WR will be forever out of your reach.
This could be, but I don't know why you would want to discourage someone from trying.
General nastiness?
Fear of failure on your part?
Fear that I will succeed?
Fear of everything?
Truth is, only one rower of any weight my age (or older) has ever pulled sub-6:30, Paul Hendershott.
And he pulled 6:23.8.
Paul is, what, 6'4, 230 lbs.?
Given my stroking power now, I have a good chance of rowing faster for 2K than Paul did when he was 60.
So, considering my size (5'11", 165 lbs., when I am race ready), what I am training myself to do is not trivial, I think, or just an accident of lack of competition.
It also isn't easy.
Or done in a minute.
My training for it has taken eight years.
As I sharpen up to race over the next six months, I need to be careful with it if I am going to succeed.
No one has ever done anything like what I am trying to do.
There are no precedents.
As I mentioned a while ago, I think it is reasonable to claim that no 60s lwt has ever pulled a 2K at better than 10 SPI.
I am now pulling 13 SPI.
No 60s lwt has ever pulled better than 6:42.
I think I have I have a chance of pulling 6:16.
Basically, being fast at rowing means having a high stroking power.
If you have a high stroking power, you can send the wheel/boat a long way on each stroke.
For mechanical reasons, everyone the same age and weight races at pretty much the same rate, given some distance.
The one with the higher natural stroking power wins.
I am now a 60s lwt who strokes like a 30s hwt.
Someone like Pete Marston rows at 13 SPI, not Rick Bayko.
13 SPI is perfect rowing for a lightweight of any age.
If he rates 37 spm or so in the center of his 2Ks, going along at 1:30 pace, Henrik Stephansen, the lwt Open WR-holder, pulls 13 SPI.
1:30 @ 37 spm is 13 SPI.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)