hjs wrote: ↑July 30th, 2021, 4:26 am
Can’t say much, only that some people are sooner fully grown. And, important, sport is very much about talent, no training can compensate talent. 2 people can work just as hard, but get very different results.
While I do agree with the body composition argument for natural plateaus in sport and fitness, I disagree that two athletes with similar motivations cannot achieve similar outcomes if training can be broken down specific to those athletes.
For instance, if athlete A is composed of more fast-twitch muscle fiber and athlete B is slow twitch, their training programs must not be the same. Athlete B will respond much better to steady state with a faster pace goal for weekly capstones, whereas athlete A will be able to sprint out of the gate, but will struggle with longer sessions.
Olympic athletes are a rare breed. There are 330,000,000 people in the USA. There are probably 2000 total Olympic caliber rowing athletes among those, and only 10% of those are actually chosen to row in the olympics... Many Olympic caliber rowing athletes do not know they have this potential because their natural gifts have already been discovered and have been vectored towards sports with a higher degree of individual achievement and fame.
@DuncanE, please post your erg scores for the past few months (if you have them), or the most recent ones you can think of. Please also indicate what your current diet looks like. I know at 16, 17, you're worried about looking a certain way to conform to societal expectations. If that is more important to you than improving your rowing, that's fine. But we can assist you in gaining speed where it counts.
Since you're an on the water rower, how is your technique? That plays a huge role also. How tall is the next tallest girl in your program? Do you have any boys roughly 5'7-5'10 who are at or below 160lb?? If so, I recommend getting in a pair with them asap, especially if you have only rowed big boats.