Seriously, not kidding around, I find your data point as compelling as the ones in the study. No doctor here either. It took a lot of data to get me to drop my workouts from 150 beats/min to 135-140... and if I don't see results I like in a few months I'll start ignoring the data and go back to what I was doing. But if I do get good results they will be because the data got me to try something I would not have done.Tony Cook wrote: ↑February 3rd, 2021, 6:45 pmI’m not a doctor, or a scientist and my example of taking a sample of 1 subjects could well be bull——Tsnor wrote: ↑February 3rd, 2021, 6:38 pm"Means I can do 4 x sub 7’ 2ks, which I couldn’t do with 2’ rest. " Neat. So your observation is that with the 2 mins rest you would do 7:10 and with 8 min rest you are under 7... a significant difference.Tony Cook wrote: ↑February 3rd, 2021, 2:18 pm
I always rested (active) until my HR got to 2xRHR, which was around 1:30, rarely as long as 2 mins. 2 mins always seems ample. Then I read everything I could find by Mike Caviston and now do my 500 intervals at 5’ starts, 1k at 10’ starts and 2k at 15’ starts. For me that’s 8’ rest between for a 4 x 2k. Means I can do 4 x sub 7’ 2ks, which I couldn’t do with 2’ rest.
Mike’s view makes sense, to me. Whilst I could work hard and slow down to 7:10 or so with shorter rest I prefer the ‘quality’ of sub 7s all the way.
I guess there’s a study to ‘prove’ any number of approaches.
The 12 trained runners in the study run the same pace with 2 mins rest as with 4 mins rest. The runners could not see the rate they were running, but could choose the rate. The study results seem compelling that the additional rest over 2 mins did not let the runners hit a higher effort level. The runners were doing 4 minute intervals.
My main point was that if Mike Caviston says it’s a good thing, then it’s probably a good thing. Then again there are probably people who don’t agree with his methods.
Even if I could do the same times with 2 mins rest the way I see it is at worst I am wasting a few minutes of my life by resting a little longer. It doesn’t appear that I’m losing any training benefit.
Can you give me any pointers to the best things to read by Mike Caviston?