Tsnor wrote: ↑March 20th, 2023, 12:54 pm
What training would you have him do to gain the extra 12 watts?... I don't understand the squinting needed to see the training needed is additional aerobic base, but would be very excited to learn what it is.
I have a hard time taking you seriously at this point. I've made my approach very clear during several previous exchanges, and there is plenty of additional explanation on this forum which you can find with your precious Google or simply use the forum's own search function. Build a program around a couple of high-intensity interval sessions (and most people don't execute their interval training as effectively as they could, but that's a different topic), gradually adding as much LSD-style training as time and motivation permit. But despite your claims that top endurance athletes spend 90% of their training at "very, very low effort" or "rediculously easy" paces; "low HR steady state" (or any guidelines based on HR) isn't the answer. The endurance sessions need to be more challenging and robust.
Of course you need to be able to recover from them, but training can and should be challenging enough to require effort and determination and still allow recovery. Warm up properly, put in the work, cool down, eat a good meal, get some sleep. Repeat.
I personally would rather row at 85% than 70% for my long pieces. But that approach failed hard when I tried it.
I would've gone from 70 to 71% rather than jump all the way to 85%. Well, I wouldn't look at % (of HR, I presume) at all, but my increases are very gradual and incremental. Baby steps. For long pieces, start with something manageable (10K?) at a pace that is challenging but not exhausting. Each week, add 250m
or go faster by .1 sec/500m; be patient and resist the urge to build more rapidly when things are going smoothly in the early stages. Later, when gains seem harder, don't increase for a week or two or even drop back a week or two if necessary until the load seems manageable again. With this slow, steady rate of improvement you can make substantial progress in six months. People seem to confuse "work hard" with "go all-out". I see the advice "don't go chasing PRs". I never chased PRs, I slowly walked up to them and overtook them without drama. Years ago in my prime I did one or two 60-minute sessions and a 25-30K piece every week. In any given season, following my methodical schedule, at some point each workout would be a new PR by default. Next season I'd start the new schedule at paces slower than PR, but faster than starting paces from the previous season. Eventually, new PRs. (The same approach for interval sessions.)