Tour of California, Stage 1: It Begins!

Posted by admin On February - 16 - 2009

Stage 1: Davis to Santa Rosa

Second day of the tour, our first day of riding, and, as always, an adventure! With a forecast of rain, wind, more rain, and temps in the low 50′s, we began the day with the squad kitted in full battle gear: gore-tex, layers, and full rain gear. Coach Rich decided to toss Coach Patrick into the scrum on the first day. Welcome to Cali!

The first 20 or so miles were flat-ish, through vineyards, but with gusting head and crosswinds. Coach Patrick took the first sprint points of the tour, with a win in Winters, while Coach Rich managed to get the van stuck in the mud about 7 miles into the day…but a quick call to AAA saved the day!

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Triathlete Volume Strategy III: The Big Triathlon Week

Posted by admin On January - 15 - 2009

Ed Note: This three part series will look at how age group triathletes can build in volume to reap the benefits of going longer without compromising their current training cycles. This is Part 3 of 3.

In Part One of this series, we covered the overall benefits of adding volume to your endurance training regime and how to implement this volume in such a way that would allow you, the age group triathlete, to maintain a work/life/family/training balance, aka a Big Volume Week. In Part Two of the series, we discussed why there should be both Bike and Tri specific overload components to your long-course volume goals as well as why installment #1 should be cycling specific (with a sample week). In this third and final installment we’ll cover the importance of incorporating a Big Triathlon Week in the course of your Iron-distance training along with some basic guidance.

To Recap
The reason why we consider adding big volume weeks to the standard age-group training regime of 10-12 hours is because we can earn significant endurance-related benefits in a short time without incurring the costs typically associated with a high-volume only program (scheduling, sleep/recovery deprivation, over-use injuries, etc.). The given parameter of a “week” is significant enough to put a serious physical and mental training stress load on your body in such a way that is not only manageable, but easily recovered from. IOW, if you know you have to hit a big week on May 11-18, you can prep and plan for that, making sure everything is ready to go.

Examining the Big Triathlon Week
The Big Tri Week (BTW) comes later in your season, after several months of good training as well as after your Big Bike Week. The BTW represents your final push to build endurance fitness before becoming 100% focused on your race…so what does it look like?

1. Anywhere from 5-7 Days Long — Yep, it doesn’t have to be an actual week on your calendar, especially for the newbies. We are just looking for something longer than just a weekend / holiday weekend.

2. Happens in the 10 weeks to 6 weeks to go Range — Any further out and it won’t match up well with your race specific build; too close and you’ll carry the cumulative fatigue into your race day.

3. Still Cycling-Dominant — The riding, as you’ll see below, is still waaaay up there. We simply can’t beat time spent on the bike (your tri bike this time around!) for safe, manageable fitness gains.

4. Race-Quality Terrain (or Harder) — Do yourself a favor and make your week happen in course-like conditions. If that’s not possible, go harder. The mental strength gained from serious time spent on challenging terrain will be very useful on race day.

5. You Need Peeps! — Not the marshmallow kind (although I have seen some folks train with them!), I mean other people to do this with. You don’t need someone to shadow you every day, but just someone to spend part of each day with so you don’t go INSANE would be a good thing. I have done big weeks solo in Arizona, and after about 3 days you start going a little batty.

Sample Big Triathlon Week
In my previous post, I was using my build to Ironman USA / Lake Placid as the season example. After an early season bike push at the Tour of California Camp in late February, I target early June as my last big triathlon push…this is our Lake Placid Camp. The camp runs Tues through Sunday, for 6 total days of training which is more than enough time to get fit. Here’s what it looks like:

Day 1: 5-mile run, then 56-mile bike
Day 2: AM Swim 2.5k, then 100+ mile bike. Optional 30 minute run.
Day 3: AM Swim 2.5k, then 75-90 minute run; Optional short bike in PM
Day 4: AM Swim 4k, then 100+ mile bike, then a 30-60 minute run. The Epic Day
Day 5: Either long ride of 100 miles or Brick of 56 miles + Long Run. The Swing Day

The above schedule allows you to get about 25-30 hours of training into one week!

  • 9k of swimming (2.5 hours)
  • 25 to 40 miles of running (up to 4.5 hours)
  • 300 to 350 miles on the bike (18-24 hours)

Managing Your Week – Top Two Factors
Aside from picking a killer location that has good weather and terrain, and finding folks to play along (at least for a bit), your top two priorities are Equipment and Nutrition.

On the equipment side, you’ll need to have a recently tuned bike with lots of spare tubes, CO2, chamois cream for your bum, etc. On the nutrition side, you’ll want good workout nutrition as well as hearty pre- and post-workout meal options. If you think you eat a lot now, wait until you are in day three of your Big Week!  :)

Also don’t underestimate the value of having a beginning, middle and end to your volume session.  Big volume is really fun to read about, but far less fun to execute. Whether you admire or pity those PRO athletes who do triathlon all day, every day, you have to admit that they a lot of work…A LOT. And while it’s sexy to think about, you probably won’t find it to be that sexy by the end.

Conclusion
There you have it…the reasoning (why) and instructions (how to) on inserting two significant volume pops into your training cycle this year. Hopefully you have the desire and motivation to make this happen. Remember, you don’t have to do 20+ hour weeks…every week…to gain the benefit of volume in your training program. Train smart, be balanced, and get faster for race day!

Join the Team Today — It’s FREE for 30-days!
When you join our triathlon team, we’ll immediately begin coaching you, plugging you into our extremely effective and affordable team coaching solution. Take the coaches, our support, and the team for a free, 30-day spin! Decide at the end of your trial of Endurance Nation is the place for you!

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Endurance Nation Volume Strategy, Part II: The Big Bike Week

Posted by admin On December - 18 - 2008

In Part One of this series, we covered the overall benefits of adding volume to your endurance training regime and how to implement this volume in such a way that would allow you, the age group triathlete, to maintain a work/life/family/training balance, aka a Big Volume Week. In this second installment of the series, we will make the case why there should be two facets to your long-course volume goals as well as cover why the first volume installment should be cycling specific.

To Recap, Why Only A Week?
From our experience, the adaptations to long, aerobic sessions happen relatively quickly and last for a longer period of time than the fast-twitch/high-end fitness work. A quality week is easy to build into your life, easy to focus on, and is adequate time to get a nice bump in your overall fitness. The image below is from Coach Rich’s WKO+ homepage (power file analysis software). The blue line is Rich’s Chronic Training Load (CTL), or the cummulative effects and fitness gains of the training Rich had done over the past six weeks. The purple line is Rich’s Acute Training Load (ATL), the effect of Rich’s training in the last seven days. We’ve highlighted a high volume cycling week during our Tour of California Camp, where we rode over 450 miles in 6 days. Rich piles on the volume (big jump on the purple line, which significantly raises the height of his CTL, the blue line when he exits the camp.  You may also be able to see the volume and resultant fitness spikes from a couple well placed, high volume training weekend, one on the Wildflower course at the end of March and other local camp at the end of May. Our experience with recovering from volume like this is that most of you will “feel it” through about the following Thursday, and may be just a little flat / sub-100% by the following weekend.

From TOC athlete training for IMCDA

From TOC athlete training for IMCDA

Why Two Installments of Volume?
We recommend two separate and distinct volume weeks for your long course season precisely because our seasons are so long. Training for an Ironman or 70.3 event means you’ll be “working” on your fitness for 6 to 9 months prior to the event, if not longer. The benefits from any particular volume pop will only last for about 2 months at the most, so we stack them appropriately to allow us to build off our regular training but also off of each volume session.

As an example, in training for IMUSA, Patrick typically uses a cycling week in February and a triathlon week in early June to prepare. February gets him out of the basement dungeon and onto the roads…he returns to the lab fitter and re-energized…then after a few weeks of outdoor training he was off to Lake Placid for a 5-day triathlon camp where he put the final touches on his volume just 7 weeks prior to the big day. Note that he would gladly show you his PMC chart, but he lost all of his data in a hard drive issue. Semper BackUp!

The Bike Volume First
There are five main reasons why you should consider doing the bike volume pop first, before doing run/bike/swim volume weeks.

  1. Your body is coming off of a down period and some shorter training. Bumping up to big volume will be stressful and the bike is the the easiest of all three disciplines on your body. There will be fatigue and some discomfort, but they are easily overcome.
  2. A big bike week isn’t that hard to build up to or to recover from. In other words, you can ramp up quickly and you can get right back to your regularly scheduled training right away. We’ve learned through through the experience of our Tour of California training camp, where North Eastern Pain Cave Dwellers have gone from a 3-4hr cycling weeks to 20+hours during the tour, with no endurance-related problems.
  3. Doing the bike week early on and a tri week later in the season means two separate opportunities to push the bike volume up. A reasonable goal is to set a mileage benchmark in your bike only week early in the year, and then try to match that later on when you have added running and swimming to the mix…ouch!
  4. Just cycling reduces a lot of the “noise” of training. Sure you might feel more like a triathlete running 60′ after a 4 hour ride early in the season, but that 60′ isn’t an ideal run (you are heavily fatigued) and is really only eating into your ability to recover for the next day’s riding session.
  5. Finally, it’s easy to take this increased fitness back to the lab and work on it again in our daily training cycles. In other words, a week of high volume helps you cement your early season intensity training and now you can go back to pushing up your threshold numbers with no need to continue riding long. But running and swimming gains are much more fleeting, and will disappear more quickly. It’s recommended that you reserve this volume peaking for later in your season when it will have a direct impact on your actual race.

Sample Bike Volume Week
It’s really easy to find a camp that lines up all the riding, support and logistics for you. We recommend you find a camp that actually allows you to ride a lot (think more riding, less wicker baskets), has several years of experience running the camp, and doesn’t try to add swim or run. If you need to do this on your own however, here are guidelines for a 5 day session for an athlete prepping for an Ironman:

  • Day 1: 60-75 miles
  • Day 2: 80-90 miles
  • Day 3: 80-90 miles
  • Day 4: 50 miles
  • Day 5: 90-100 miles

Days 1 and 4 are “easy” just riding around days, this way you don’t nuke your week on day 1 and you can recover mentally and physically for the final push on Day 5.  Days 2, 3 and 5 are all negative split days…out easy, come back just a bit stronger. Any option to use different gear ratios or standing intervals is welcome.

One last note before we move on: you should really consider doing your first big bike volume week of the season on a road bike or roadie set up if possible. Road bikes are more comfy, different than the “I’m going to work” aspect of a tri bike and when all is said and done, the last thing you want to do in sunny CA is spend the whole week looking at everything horizontally! If you plan a big bike week closer to the race, do it on the tri bike so you can accumulate lots of time in the saddle to create race specific fitness, acclimate your body to hours and hours in the aero position, etc.

Join the Team Today — It’s FREE for 30-days!
When you join our triathlon team, we’ll immediately begin coaching you, plugging you into our extremely effective and affordable team coaching solution. Take the coaches, our support, and the team for a free, 30-day spin! Decide at the end of your trial of Endurance Nation is the place for you!

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