One of the things I've been doing some research in has been how training for things like ultra marathons (in rowing but also other sports) is studied by sports scientists. I open this discussion to talk about some studies I've seen and want to compare it to the general ideology of rowing in particular.
If you look at things like the Fletcher marathon plan, the longest it has you go for is around 90 minutes but most workouts are within the 60-90m range. Assuming an avg marathon time of 3.5h, consistent training seems to be in the 1 - 1.5h range, so training accounts for around 25% - 50% of the total distance you'll end up racing. According to the ranked workouts on C2 Logbook, the range is about 2:54 - 3:36 (elite to not elite).
I want to play devils advocate for a second and go against popular understanding which suggests that improvement in an endurance sport can be roughly obtained by doing a lot of lower effort work mixed with a comparably small amount of extremely hard work. Specifically, some of what I'm finding suggests that after a certain amount of steady state work (Z2 or Z3), aerobic capacity fails to improve after a certain amount of time, usually around 90 minutes. Maybe that the gains just reach have diminishing returns. Biking seems to be different with higher end endurance work being slated at 4-5 hours, not sure why it's different.
In this video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z82GCNXdLAA), the host talks with a PhD in sports sciences and endurance training for athletes, where he talks about 90 minutes also being about the higher end for what a training session should look like. In his other videos he uses the 4-5h example above, so I'm unsure how that fits into his view. In general he mentions that "longevity is highly related to mitochondrial function and metabolic health" (https://youtu.be/xuqURs4auc8?t=141, different video).
In that last video they have a good discussion about where to incorporate Z5 training into your microcycle, and describe an example of a 5 workout microcycle wherein the fifth workout can either be another Z2 / UT2 workout, or a high intensity session to develop gylcolic capacity in the muscles. He mentions two things:
- Adding sprints to the end of Z2/Z3 training is OK (https://youtu.be/xuqURs4auc8?t=427) and can successfully develop both systems, but the opposite is untrue because the high buildup of lactate changes your metabolism and doesn't train Z2 at all.
- The duration of individual workouts usually caps out around 90 minutes, and if you want to add more time, you should add another session instead of adding more time to a single session.
Here's the quote from an article I found which is the real kicker for this whole thing and one of the reasons I started thinking about this in the first place. https://www.rowperfect.co.uk/wp-content ... rowers.pdf
So I guess I'm interested to hear your take.Many coaches and athletes are convinced that 60-120 minutes of continuous low intensity or steady-state rowing is an important part of developing and maintaining an adequate aerobic base. We have convincing data, including muscle biopsy histochemical and biochemincal indicators, which support that rowing continuously at a low steady state intensity for 60 minutes or longer for any calibre of rower, is not more effective in maintaining aerobic capacity than 30 minutes of rowing at the same work intensity.
Not only do these results apply to a single bout of rowing, but also to 5, 10, 15, and 20 week training responses after the aerobically-trained subjects had completed a total of 20, 40, 60 and 80 training sessions respectively. Furthermore, performing 2 intermittent 30 minute exercise bouts of relatively high aerobic work intensity (10-20 % more average power than for the low intensity work) with a 7-10 minute recovery period between the 30 minute work bouts is a much stronger aerobic training stimulus than lower intensity continuous rowing.
This higher work intensity for continuous rowing could not be tolerated by most subjects for more than 32-36 minutes and still maintain a steady-state. The increased energy expenditure of the intermittent high intensity work not only proved significantly more effective than either 30 or 60 minutes of rowing in the improvement of aerobic capacity, but it was also more neuromuscularly task specific.