Everyone who rows OTW knows that pulling at 12 spm is _wonderful_ training, especially if you take _huge_ strokes and do it for hours and hours, session after session, day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year.luckylindy wrote:Out of curiosity, I decided to calculate my SPI at "low drag" and low spm.
Results:So, if I could maintain this SPI at 32spm for 2k ...
- 500m: 1:55
spm: 12
DF: 120
Watts: 230
SPI: 19.18Rob Waddell, watch out, that record is mine! Who cares that I would almost need to triple my energy usage (to almost 600 Watts, wow), it's SPI that matters ... right?
- spm: 32
Watts: 612
SPI: 19.13
2k: 5:32
This training is concentrated work on technique and stroking power--quickness, timing, balance, leverage, sequencing, length, relaxation, slide control, preparation, strength, posture, etc.
Sure, to be fast, you have to have a high aerobic capacity and you have to train it to the max.
But that isn't the most important thing in rowing at all.
Rowing is primarily skeletal-muscular and technical--line golf, tennis, baseball, basketball, etc.
In the end, everyone the same age and weight rows a 2K at right about the same rate.
The rower with the best stroke (i.e., the highest SPI, the most most skeletal-motor and technical effectiveness and efficiency) wins.
To complicate things, rowing is just massively aerobic and anaerobic, too.
Oh well.
ranger