PleaseLockIn wrote: ↑June 16th, 2025, 7:23 am
iain wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 10:10 am
I find higher rate lower work is more effective in doing this and avoids the tiring of muscles that will likely limit performance on a session like this. That said, one burst is a good example to establish what you need to deliver.
The warmup needed is significant. I went up to UT1 in 5 min then did 3 bursts of r20 2:00, keeping recovery pace between. I’ll try experimenting with more…
I will limit to two bursts then to warm up and have a good idea of what to perform. Warm up of 10 minutes or more.[/quote]
I think you should do at least 3 bursts, it is just that I would recommend that all but the last are done at lower work per stroke and higher rating. For example in my warm up for my "strength" ergs of 10-12 maximum strokes with 1min rest between at R of 24-30, I use a final extra warm up of 3 x 100m about 1min apart starting at expected pace for the work out then 5S/500m faster for each subsequent one but free rate. So R24 would be about 1:50 pace. So the 100 bursts would be at 1:50, 1:45 and 1:50 and might be at R35, R40 and R50. THis is an extreme example as the "work" is at absolute maximum so requires the greatest warm up. I would typically have done bursts at 2:05, 2:00 and 1:55 race on my normal short interval warm up beforehand.
PleaseLockIn wrote: ↑June 16th, 2025, 7:23 am
As a side note I feel the BPP’s SS is too short, and that there is too little guidance. I also feel as if it was a bit “bare bones” and there should be some versions for 30r20 or 5k. As my coach said I should do UT2 for minimum 1 hour.
This dude is doing 5 hard sessions, 6-7 UT sessions and gym sessions. He is probably doing 13 to 17 sessions a week in the summer. Crazy. This is the standard I need to be able to do by next summer if I get into varsity rowing…
I need to bridge the gap somehow. Any tips? I will be conservative for now, except maybe in intervals.
Agree that BPP is shorter than optimum for SS, but also suggests a higher intensity. The trouble with long SS is that this increases the recovery required and so the intensity needs to be carefully controlled.
13-17 sessions a week is comparable to olympic athletes and seems excessive for me short of the very top crews (so in UK Oxford, Cambridge and the few crews that have a significant number of potential internationals). Olympic athletes do this full time so do little except train, eat and rest for significant portions of their year, this is not consistent with being a full time student. As for 5 hard sessions a week, I would doubt anyone is capable of really going hard that often for long. It is possible that this is maintained for a short period to stimulate super recovery, but longer term it seems like a poor training schedule. That said I know younger people recover quicker and was no athlete at that age so am speculating.
Consensus is that weekly distance should not be increased by more than 10% and that this maximum is assuming that pace is staying constant, if you are increasing intensity as well, this needs to be reduced.
56, lightweight in pace and by gravity. Currently training 3-4 times a week after a break to slowly regain the pitiful fitness I achieved a few years ago. Free Spirit, come join us http://www.freespiritsrowing.com/forum/