Archive for January, 2010

How To: Adding A Last Minute Ironman to Your Season

Posted by admin On January - 30 - 2010
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We get really good questions every week from you, our loyal audience. Some are really personal, others are really crazy, but most are applicable to the greater tri space. Instead of emailing just you back, in true EN spirit we’ll be sharing some of our responses so the at-large triathlon community can benefit. After all, together we are much smarter than any single one of us could ever be. So without further delay…

After IMAZ last year I was a little burned out and thought about taking a year away from IM. I was already signed up for CA 70.3 but nothing after that. Thought about focusing on a marathon, but once your in Tri training it’s hard to get jazzed up about that.

I’m now on your 70.3 plan and, after only 4 weeks, it really has got my juices flowing again. So… I started thinking: Can I leverage that into a full IM in IMCDA 13 weeks later? Then I won’t have to lose the fitness as I did last year while having to wait till fall for IMAZ. And if I want to run a marathon I can do it early in the fall.

I haven’t seen your 12 week full IM plan. Would it work right after your 12 week 70.3 and a week of down time after Oceanside? Given the EN philosophy, I imagine I don’t need to worry about not having put in longer volume before that 12 weeks kicks in and the 12 week IM would start.” — Marc F.

While logistically one can’t often do a last-minute Ironman, the strategy you have outlined above is spot-on. In the EN world, the difference between a HIM and IM is only a few weeks of volume-specific work. We really care more about your power and pace at threshold than we do about your ability to handle volume, as adding volume is the easy part. Yes, the 12-week Ironman plan would work, although depending on how much work you have done for the 70.3, I’d probably:

  • Take 1 very light week, following the transition guidance in the EN Manual.
  • Take 1 week light with a big volume weekend (or just day) for Fri/Sat. Not hard, just two big days, Sunday OFF. Here’s some additional guidance.
  • Monday pick up plan with Week 11.

You can find the plans in the store tab of the Endurance Nation site, remember that our annual sale ends on 1/31/10 at midnight!

Popularity: 13% [?]

Triathlon Training Plan Give-Away

Posted by admin On January - 25 - 2010

Endurance Nation wants to give you a FREE Gold-Level training plan for your 2010 Ironman or Half Ironman…and you have an entire week to win!

To close out our annual training plan sale, Endurance Nation will be giving away a training plan a day, Monday through Friday, for the week of January 25th, 2010. That’s a $249 combined value: 20week plan plus our eBooks and podcast resources…an incredible deal!

There are two different ways to win, so pick the one that’s right for you:

Option 1
Follow EN on twitter @teamen and retweet the following post (click here to do so automagically):

I want to win a free training plan from @TeamEN, $249 value! Learn how you can win here: http://su.pr/2DiZnJ #workworks

That’s it! A winner will be randomly selected on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from the re-tweet lists. As a bonus, the 100th ReTweet will receive a free Four Keys DVD!

Option 2

  1. Fan Endurance Nation on Facebook.
  2. Share this link on your wall: http://su.pr/2DiZnJ
  3. Send an email to admin [at] endurancenation [dot] us with the subject “EN Fan”. A winner will be picked on Tuesday and Thursday from the Facebook pool.

Thanks again and have a great 2010 season!

- The EN Team

Popularity: 37% [?]

Meet Team Endurance Nation — Dan Gilliat

Posted by admin On January - 20 - 2010

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Meet The Team: Dan Gilliat

Coach Patrick talks to Dan, a member of the middle of Tha Nation, about the ridiculous winter, his crazy work schedule, and what’s on tap for his 2010 season. Dan’s a great guy and one to watch this year!

Click Here to Download the File

Popularity: 13% [?]

Five Keys of Long Course Training, Part II: Lactate Threshold

Posted by admin On January - 18 - 2010

In Part I we introduced you to our Five Keys and discussed one through four. To review, the Five Keys are:

  1. Real World Volume
  2. Maximize Return on Time Invested
  3. Fitness = Ability to Perform More Work
  4. Intensity = Most Flexible Tool to Manipulate Training Load
  5. The Best Predictor of Performance is Pace/Watts at Functional/Lactate Threshold.

In this article we’ll discuss why pace/speed/watts at Functional or Lactate Threshold, not training volume, is the best predictor of performance at all race distances.

Let’s begin with a quick review of Key #3: Fitness as the Ability to Perform more Work. As we discussed, the functional expression of your fitness is the ability to pedal your bike, run or swim at given speed — to perform the physics of moving the mass of your body through space. In order to force your body to adapt, you need to make it perform more work. But let’s talk about what happens inside your body as you ask it to perform more work — to ride, run or swim faster.

Your body begins by recruiting slowtwitch muscle fibers. These fibers:

  • Are good at performing relatively low force contractions…but
  • They can go and go and go for a long time. They are fatigue resistant.
  • They recover quickly.
  • Primarily burn fat for fuel. At ~3600 calories per one pound of fat, even then leanest triathlete has a nearly endless fatty gas tank.
  • Muscles fibers only adapt when you recruit them and make them do more work than they are accustomed to. The more often you recruit your slowtwitch fibers, ie, the more exercise you do, the better they become at doing slowtwitch stuff: they adapt to produce more force, go longer, and become more fuel efficient. Remember that your body is lazy and will only adapt itself to meet the load you place upon it. The more stress you place on this system, the more it is forced to adapt.

As the workload increases (you go faster and faster) your body recruits a more and more slowtwitch fibers to chip in. At some work rate (speed), you begin to run out of slowtwitch fibers to recruit and your body begins to call in fast twitch fibers to do the work. Fast twitch fibers:

  • Perform high force contractions, but…
  • Tire easily and take a long time to recover. One and done, or need to rest a good bit before being put back to work again.
  • Burn glycogen for fuel. The well-trained, well-rested endurance athlete only has about 1800-2000 calories of glycogen stored in the muscles and in the liver, much more limited than our fat reserves.
  • Same adaptive jazz as above: the more often you recruit fast twitch fibers, ie, force them to work, the better they become at doing fast twitch stuff. Better still, some of them can begin to take on the characteristics of slow twitch fibers, increasing the number of fat-burning (unlimited energy source) fibers you have available to swim, bike, or run.
  • Produce lactate as a byproduct.

Which brings us to Lactate Threshold, a term you may have heard of. This is an exercise intensity at which lactate levels in the blood rise above a certain level, as more and more fast twitch fibers (produce lactate) are called upon to work. It’s called a “threshold,” because we can exercise for a long time at or just under this intensity. However, above this intensity, lactate levels increase, we rapidly fatigue and are eventually forced to slow down. At lactate threshold intensity we can say we have recruited most or all of our slowtwitch fibers, and a good bit of our fast twitch fibers, forcing them to adapt and become better at their respective roles. Finally, we can sit here for a long time, exposing our fibers to this work load and forcing them to adapt to meet it.

We summarize all of the above by saying that “Fitness is in the muscles.” That is, a workout is nothing more than an opportunity to recruit a high percentage of muscle fibers, forcing these fibers to adapt and become better at what they do. As they become better muscles, they can do more work, the expression of which is “I go faster.”

Let’s now talk about the real-world training implications of all of this:

  • Training Zones determined relative to Lactate Threshold (LT): Because Lactate Threshold is such a powerful place, we want to define our training intensities relative to LT. No big secret here, there are many systems for doing this, but hopefully our explanation above sheds more light on just why this is so powerful.
  • Zones 1 and 2 = Limited Adaptation: If all you do is exercise at Zone 1 and 2, you have entire squads of slowtwitch and fast twitch fibers that are never recruited, never forced to adapt. In other words, you’ll get very, very good at riding and running very slowly!
  • Zone 4 (Lactate Threshold) = Maximum exposure of all fibers to a training load forcing them to adapt. At Zone 4, ALL of my slowtwitch fibers are recruited and being forced to adapt, MANY of my fast twitch fibers are doing the same. This is a very efficient place to spend spend your training time at, because I get so many go-longer and go-faster adaptions. And not much time is required. For example, in our experience, as little as forty minutes of LT work per week spread across your cycling can dramatically increase your speed on the bike.
  • Fitness adaptions occur within a range of intensities: The either/or of Aerobic/Anaerobic exercise described by triathlon culture is simply not correct.

The summary of all of this is the Fifth Key: Pace/Power/Speed at Lactate Threshold is the Best Predictor of Performance.

That is, if we can improve your 5k, 10k, or half marathon time, we can make you a faster Half or full Ironman runner once we then put some endurance and durability under those faster running legs. If we can improve the speed at which you can ride for an hour from 19mph to 22mph, that similar speed increase will be expressed at 56 and 112 miles, assuming we put some endurance under it. In other words, “a rising tide lifts all boats.” We target, test, and track the “tide” of our athletes, as we know from that experience that fast at short is fast at long, once we put “far” under that “fast.”

Join us next week for Part III, where we will contrast the ideas and experiences we have shared with you in this series with commonly held endurance training myths.

FREE Virtual Seminar: Long Course Training

Interested in learning more? We’ve created a free virtual seminar learning opportunity for you. Participants will receive practical tools for planning and managing their training, as well as opportunities to win free training plans and copies of our Four Keys of Ironman Execution DVD. Go here to learn more and register today!

Popularity: 29% [?]

Meet The Team — Beth Schwindt

Posted by admin On January - 11 - 2010

Meet_The_Team

Meet The Team: Beth Schwindt

Coach Patrick talks to Beth about the EN “chica” vibe, her biggest challenges heading into the 2010 season, and why she has one of the best jobs ever. If you will be in Madison for IM Moo 2010 you’ll see the fruits of her labor!

Click Here to Download the File

Popularity: 19% [?]