PaulH wrote:
The bigger problem, I think, is that ranger is confusing correlation with causation. There is a broad correlation between the best times at various distances (though it's sufficiently broad that it just confirms that as people row further they go slower), but that doesn't mean that a particular performance at a longer distance *causes* the performance at a shorter distance. And that goes double for events as widely spread as the FM and 2k.
No, I am not confusing correlation with causation.
Proceeding in distance trials from a FM to 2K is just a commonsensical training strategy, with distance trials as an objective demonstration of success, of goals achieved.
As I have already stated, it just makes sense to develop the effectiveness, efficiency, aerobic capacity, and endurance you need for a 2K of a certain quality before you push into the anaerobic rowing that you need to do for that quality 2K itself.
The IP plan draws on this same commonsensical strategy, moving up the training bands from less intense, longer rows (UT2, UT1) to more intense, shorter rows, at the limit, broken into repeats/intervals (AT, TR, AN).
A FM trial is very close to UT2 rowing. It can only be done at low to middlin' UT1, at best.
A HM and 60min can be done at top-end UT1.
10K and 30min can add a good bit of AT, at least, at the end.
6K and 5K are AT.
No, doing a FM @ 1:48 isn't the _cause_ of a 2K @ 1:34.
A FM @ 1:48 just shows that you now have the effectiveness, efficiency, endurance, and aerobic capacity, once your anaerobic capacities are fully trained up for it, too, with a couple of months of hard sharpening, to do a 2K @ 1:34.
What _causes_ the 2K @ 1:34 is your training, skill, and talent, which in some way or another, produced the effectiveness, efficiency, endurance, and aerobic capacity to get the job done.
I have described and explained in great detail what that training, talent, and skill-building has been in my case.
A full array of distance trials, maintaining "double the d, add 3," from the FM down to 5K, just demonstrates that my training has been a success, given my goals.
Everyone sharpens in just about the same way for just about the same benefit.
So, as long as you do it, sharpening has no effect on how fast you are over 2K.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)