Runner's Web
Runner's and Triathlete's Web News
Send To A friend Know someone else who's interested in running and triathlon?
Send this Runner's Web Story's URL to a friend.   Comment on this story.
Visit the FrontPage for the latest news.   |     View in Runner's Web Frame

This article about running is a good example of the advice that can be found every month in Peak Performance. The Peak Performance newsletter keeps you informed of the latest techniques and breakthroughs in training research – and how to use these in your own sports-specific fitness program.
Subscribe to Peak performance Online below:

How To Win:
Free regular
world-class
triathlon training tips.
Enter email here:


Posted: January 21, 2005

Science of Sport: Overtraining Injuries Avoidance

How To Readjust Your Training Programme So It Allows Two Days’ Rest Per Week

Rest and recovery are as important for performance as training. Periods of heavy training need to be followed by rest to allow the body to adapt and grow stronger.

Rest and recovery are also important for preventing injury. Many overuse-type injuries (eg Achilles tendinitis, shin splints, anterior knee pain, tennis elbow, rotator cuff tendinitis, etc.) are caused by too much volume of training or too much intensity. The body is unable to cope with the stresses of the training load and injury results. If the same athlete had trained at a lower volume or intensity and progressed gradually, the injury risks would have been reduced.

For example, I work with one recreational runner who can complete a reasonable 25 miles a week injury-free. In the past, when we attempted to increase the weekly mileage, she suffered from low-back and hip pains.

Now we know that, for her to train continuously, the upper limit on weekly volume is 25 miles, focusing on high intensity workouts. During the last 18 months she has been injury-free and, touch wood, this should continue to be the case.

The three-one-two-one microcycle

Learning your personal limit of training volume is as important in preventing injury as are the strength, flexibility and stability exercises that you do. A practical way to ensure that you incorporate sufficient recovery into your training week is to follow a three-one-two-one microcycle.

The term ‘microcycle’ refers to a week’s training plan. The week’s training is often a repeatable series of training sessions within a larger phase (eg a month). It is common for athletes to train for six days and then rest for one within the weekly cycle.

To increase the recovery time within the week, I suggest readjusting your training programme so it fits a weekly cycle involving three days’ training, one day’s rest, two days’ training, one day’s rest. This allows you to work more intensely on the training days, but gives two days’ recovery instead of one.

Programmes for a rugby player

Here are two weekly programmes for a rugby player in season. There are club games each weekend and the total number of training sessions is the same for each weekly routine.

There are the same total number of training sessions (nine) in each week; however, by training two or three times on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday and shifting the power session to a Monday the athlete is able to rest on Wednesdays and Saturdays instead of just once on the Monday.

1. Six-one weekly cycle
Day AM PM
Sunday Match
Monday
Tuesday Strength training Endurance +Club training
Wednesday Power training
Thursday Strength training Club training
Friday Endurance
Saturday Sprints

2. Three-one-two-one weekly cycle
Day AM PM
Sunday Match
Monday Power training
Tuesday Strength training Endurance + Club training
Wednesday
Thursday Strength training Club training
Friday Endurance Sprints
Saturday

The effect should be to increase the quality of training on the five work days as well as giving the body more recovery periods to heal and grow stronger. Hence the double benefit of improved performance and reduced injury risk.

Everyone has his or her own limit and different athletes can tolerate different training loads. My suggestion here should not be taken as a golden rule, but instead it is an idea worth trying that may help you. It does not matter what sport you are involved in; simply look at the total number of training sessions per week and try to organise them so you can take two rest days.

If you feel that a six-one cycle is fine for you, then so be it. Paula Radcliffe works to a seven-one cycle during hard training phases and can obviously cope with this well (slight understatement!). Each athlete is different, and experimenting to find what works for you best is important. For example, I work with another rugby player who prefers a five-two cycle, giving her two days’ rest before Sunday’s game.

The take-home message is that recovery is vital. You may find that more recovery, rather than more training, leads to improved performance. Less time spent injured means more continuous weeks in training, even if those weeks are slightly lower in volume than you may think is best.

Raphael Brandon

How To Win: free regular running training tips.
Enter email here:


If you would like to comment on this article, please visit the Runner's Web Message Board.
Check out our FrontPage for all the latest running and triathlon news.

Top of News
Runner's Web FrontPage
  Google Search for:   in   Web Site       Translate