Navigation Hazard wrote:Competitive Level/ Training Volume (hours per year)
International 800-1200
National 600-800
College or Provincial 500-600
Club or High School 300-500
Recreational 200-300
Divide those ranges by 365 days and you get
Competitive Level/ Training Volume (hours per day)
International 2.2-3.3
National 1.6-2.2
College or Provincial 1.4-1.6
Club or High School 0.8-1.4
Recreational 0.5-0.8
NONE of your "hours per day" figures correctly reflect even the maximum volumes cited by McNeely.
Naw.
What is important (physically, socially, personally, psychologically, etc.) for training is your daily physical routine, when you do it, not your hours of training per year.
The body is habitual.
It likes more of the same, more of the same.
The sum total of your hours of training per year misrepresents this central concern.
Over the course of a year, all kinds of things interrupt training so that little, less, or nothing at all gets done physically--travel days, tapering days, vacation days, rest days, holidays, days dedicated to others (weddings, anniversaries, graduation days, birthdays, parties, etc.), race days, bad weather days, sick days, injury days, etc.
While these days are only occasional, over the year, they are substantial enough to demand quite a bit more training on the other days than a straight division of 365 days into total time training per year might indicate as a daily routine.
Don't tell me _you_ don't understand training, either.
Oh well.
Surprises are everywhere.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)