I think the strength on the lifts is due to the focus on them, be it for many years prior to getting into rowing, or the renewed focus on it now (I do believe muscle memory is a real thing). This goes back to your point also on your shorter, sharper efforts being ahead of mine - you've stayed disciplined to doing them whereas I have avoided them.Sakly wrote: ↑August 27th, 2024, 1:52 amThe funny thing here is, you are both way stronger than me in the lifts, but that doesn't seem to translate to the erg so much. Probably the intervals gave more benefit than the strength part, I don't know.
In what way did your weight impact your daily life? Would be interesting to know.
I'm far away from a state, that would impact anything in my life, 82-83kg at 177cm isn't big/huge/much weight at all. But I feel the difference to 78kg I had November last year, when I started to shift the focus a bit.
With the weight piece, it's hard to say if it was specifically from the weight and the eating, the training I was doing to get to the strength levels I was at, the lack of cardiovascular work at that time, or a combination of all.
I definitely felt strong just about all of the time but I felt strong in a pretty constricted way if that makes sense. I was able to squat pretty heavy, press ok weights (always been a weakness), and pull very heavy. Outside of that, if I got into positions that were not similar to those basic movement patterns, I didn't feel that strong.
I would still get out on the tennis court from time to time; I seemed to still have the explosive first step that I've always had during my competitive days but I lost a bit of the "lightness on feet" and general footwork. I felt explosive and powerful but not fluid.
I definitely remember having some issues to deal with digestively from the amount of food I was eating to keep my weight up. I did not sleep nearly as well as I am now (well, up until about 2-3 weeks ago). My resting HR was about 12-15 bpm higher at that time than now and my blood pressure was consistently 15-20 mmHg higher than now.
At the time, everything served its purpose and I don't regret pushing the envelope on the strength front the way I did. I do believe if I kept pushing on the strength front, I could have potentially had slightly higher numbers, especially if I took bench press training and upper body training a bit more seriously. However, I do have different goals now. Being strong is still part of the big picture but it's more about relative strength to weight and finding what the "optimal" is for me.