The major problem with the Wolverine Plan, I think, is that it subordinates your attempts to overcome your inability to row well to your inability to row a fast 2K because of your inability to row row well.
IMO, for all rowers of a certain weight and gender, rowing well is a constant (13 SPI for male lightweights; 16 SPI for heavyweights). It doesn't have anything to do with your present 2K.
Rowing well comes from developing good quickness, length, timing, sequencing, footwork, leverage, balance, rhythmicity, preparation, etc.
This doesn't have anything to do with physiological things, such as your aerobic capacity, anaerobic capacity, etc., which are so crucial to your 2K score.
Adjusting your work on technique to your 2K score is a bit like working on free throws in basketball by training with a rim that is four feet wide.
Since you usually miss the basket by a couple of feet each time you shoot, it gives you more confidence when you are training if you just expand the rim so that you make more shots, even if you still can't shoot worth a damn.
Adjusting your work on technique to your 2K score is like social promotion in education.
If you are _really_ bad to begin with, you should get a 'A' even if you are bad in the end.
Hey!
You tried.
That's all anyone can ask.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)