Not at all.Fred wrote: it's pretty clear you are deliberately misusing words to create the false impression that you have an ability that in fact you do not possess
Race preparation is not an "ability."
Everyone prepares to race in pretty much the same way and with pretty much the same benefit.
The effects of race preparation are also pretty short-lived.
They come and go.
"Abilities" don't come and go.
At best, they slowly erode if neglected or slowly improve if given close attention.
_Very_ slowly!
It is _very_ difficult to get better at something.
It is a no-brainer to prepare to race.
Race preparation is fail-safe.
Everyone can do it.
Everyone succeeds in doing it, if they try.
Getting better at something is a much more haphazard, difficult, and uncertain enterprise.
Besides me, no male WR-holder, 40-70, has ever gotten any better, much less substantially better.
They have only gotten worse and worse--precipitously.
None of the major training plans for rowing have anything at all to say about how to get better at rowing.
They are all about race preparation, temporary improvements in fitness that come and go with each racing season, leaving you pretty much where you were the season before, or if you are getting older, and therefore in terms of fitness are declining with age, significantly worse.
Ten years ago, at 40, Mike C. pulled 6:18.
Now, at 50, he pulls 6:36.
And where does that leave him?
The WR that he pulled ten years no longer stands, and the time he pulls now for 2K is a dozen seconds off of the WR for his present age and weight.
Clearly, for those who have been maximally fit in the past, the WP is irrelevant, if not substantially detrimental.
It doesn't tell you how to get better, and by concentrating on fitness rather than rowing well, it throws any opportunity you might have to improve (permanently?) away.
ranger