snowleopard wrote:Just what is going on in your head when you say: a) I now move the boat/row as well as Mike; and b) I only have fitness things to work on?
High achievement in rowing is a product of technique and fitness.
It is not a product of just one or the other.
My fitness is great but my rowing is wretched.
Mike VB's rowing is great but his fitness is wretched.
Fitness and technique each contribute as much as fifteen seconds per 500m to the paces of a fit, able rower, given some rate over some distance, vis-a-vis the paces of an unfit, unable rower.
Mike VB's technique is just as good as younger rowers' , but he is right around fifteen seconds per 500m slower than they are, across the board.
That means that his fitness is pretty much nil.
He has lost it entirely.
His maxHR is 163 bpm, down from 230 bpm when he was younger.
I don't know about his full-body strength, but my guess is that he has lost a lot there, too.
According to _Rowing Faster_, by the time they are 60, on the average, men have lost 50% of their youthful full-body power.
In rowing, that's a disaster.
If you have no fitness, you can't rate up; and you can't take advantage of your good technique as you might in order to move the boat.
Vis-a-vis MIke VB, young rowers rate up right around 10 spm.
Mike VB does a 2K @ 28 spm.
Younger rowers do a 2K @ 38 spm.
Younger rowers do as well as 9 SPI moving the boat.
Mike VB has been doing as badly as 6 SPI in some of his recent workouts.
Younger rowers move their boats half again as well as Mike.
Mike can indeed row well (9 SPI, etc.), but he has a hard time sustaining it.
His fitness lets him down.
Sure, my technique is bad now, but it will continue to improve, and probably much more rapidly now that I am spending more time OTW.
It is also easier to work out the details of something once much of the task is done.
I don't know how long it will take, but I don't see any reason why I can't be an excellent sculler, just like anyone who masters the sport.
Then, when I put that technical mastery together with my my fitness, given my age, I will _really_ have something.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)