aharmer wrote:An old ball coach used to tell us..."The further back you have to go to re-live your glory days, the less relevant you are."
I agree entirely.
That's why my training has been aggressively forward-looking for the last eight years.
I have already demonstrated, a dozen times over, that I can beat everyone if I prepare to race, rowing poorly at max drag.
So I have no interest in that at all.
I have been learning to row well at low drag so that can get faster.
Those who are successful at some level but don't look forward in this way to new challenges just get bored and quit.rowing entirely.
The list is long.
It is clear, though.
Once you are the best, it is _very_ hard to get better.
In fact, in recent times, besides me, no male, 40-70, has done it.
I am now trying to do it again.
For someone who didn't start rowing OTW until they were 52, learning to be fast in a 1x is also quite a challenge.
When I am done with my project on the erg, I will throw all of my energies into that.
This project OTW will be especially fun, given that I won't have to work. I will be retired.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)