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Posted: June 26, 2006 Triathlon: 4 Ironman Training Rules From: Jason Gootman, MS, CSCS & Will Kirousis, BS, CSCS
[This article was published in the June 2006 issue of New England Sports Magazine] You’ve watched the award-winning telecasts of the race for the past several winters. Your friends have gone off and raced at Lake Placid, Wisconsin, or Florida and come home changed people. You’ve felt compelled, you couldn’t resist—you signed up for an Ironman this year! Congratulations, you have an exciting road ahead of you. It’s a road that you will need to pave with a lot of hard work! But success will not come from hard work alone—smart training is critical in such a challenging endeavor. To make the most of your efforts, follow these four Ironman training rules. Rule #1: Rest as diligently as you workout. When you workout, you break your body down. On the level of cells and tissues, and on a cumulative level, your body is damaged when you workout. In order for you to improve, you must allow your body to sufficiently repair itself. Working out hard, without adequate rest, will bring short-term improvements, but guaranteed long-term problems (i.e., overtraining syndrome, injuries, burnout, poor performance). Ample rest on the other hand, will allow you to steadily improve. So what constitutes rest? Rest is time spent doing activities that are low-key, physically and mentally. Rest is your chance to be “off” in a world that wants you to constantly be “on”. You are resting when you are watching a movie, reading a book for pleasure, listening to music, socializing with family and friends, or doing similar activities. During this time, your body can sufficiently dedicate itself to repairing itself. When you are working out, working, commuting, or doing chores you are doing, not resting. Rest does not come easy to many triathletes. Many are busy bodies who must always be doing something and who feel that rest is a waste of time. Learning to rest and making it a priority will help you tremendously. You’re thinking we’re crazy. Working out is a “good” breakdown of your body, right? True, working out is one of the healthiest things you can do, but in the absence of sufficient rest, it becomes unhealthy. Think of resting as giving your body the chance to heal itself so when it comes time for your next workout, you are fully ready to give it your all. Think of rest not as “doing nothing”, but as an important part of the training process. Rest as diligently as you workout. Here are some guidelines on rest:
Rest Days
Rest Weeks
I can swim on my rest days, right? Or lift weights? Absolutely not. Doing so misses the point of resting. Just because swimming is easy on your legs and just because strength/power training is not part of your sport does not mean that you are resting when you are doing them. Only rest is rest. Anything else is cheating yourself out of your best performance and cheating yourself out of optimal health. >Rule#2: Practice your race nutrition to the letter. Consult with a good triathlon coach or sports nutritionist who has experience working with triathletes and create a plan for your race nutrition. Have your plan set about three months prior to your race. Then, in all of your long rides and/or long bricks, practice your race nutrition to the letter. You cannot expect to do your long workouts using one approach and save your race nutrition approach for your race only. You need to experiment with your approach, work out any kinks, make adjustments, and try again. You want your race nutrition to be dialed in by the time you get to your race. You want it to be automatic. You want to know that it will work for you, not hope that it will work for you. From a sports nutrition perspective, treat each long ride or long brick as a race. Practice your pre-race, during-race, and post-race nutrition as you plan to execute it on race day. Here are some guidelines on race nutrition: Pre-Race Nutrition
During-Race Nutrition
Post-Race Nutrition
Rule #3: Lift weights like a champion athlete. High-quality strength/power training prevents injuries and improves performance for triathletes. To get maximum benefits, you must prevent bodybuilding tenants or fitness fads from shaping your workouts. To lift weights like a champion athlete: 1. Keep your workout to an hour, give or take.
Rule #4: Include interval training (anaerobic workouts). Interval training is one of the most effective ways of developing your endurance. To maximize your endurance improvements, include interval training workouts in your swim, bike, and run training. To interval train effectively: 1. Try the parceled out effort (POE) approach to intervals. For POE intervals, go as fast as you can sustain with successive intervals. For example, you may do 15 X 100 yards POE, rest interval = 15 seconds as set of swim intervals. To do this set of intervals well, view it as a 1,500-yard race, broken up by short rest intervals where you rest at the wall. Done properly, your pace for each 100 will remain the same, or get slightly faster, as you progress through the set of intervals. If your pace slows with successive intervals, you are going to fast. Go as fast as you can sustain throughout the whole set of intervals.
Following these four rules will help you make your Ironman a success! Enjoy the process! To learn more about Jason, Will, and Tri-Hard Endurance Sports Coaching, or to contact them, visit www.tri-hard.com. |
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