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“Limiter Season”
Guidance
Now is often the time
of year when athletes begin planning
their training time in preparation for next season’s goals.
Motivation levels may be running low, with many athletes
experiencing mental fatigue after a long season of focused
training. Or motivation may be high, as athletes have seen a
glimpse of what can be possible next season. However, shortened
daylight hours, cold weather, indoor training, holiday family
commitments and simply the need to regenerate mental strength
demand a reduction in available training hours. These elements
require an increased efficiency in our training.
By focusing on
your limiters during the off-season you can accrue your highest
rate of return for training time invested and set yourself up well
for next season. The following are my tips and guidance for
setting up your off-season:
Primary Goal: Regenerate Your Attitude and Conserve Mental
Strength for the Next Season, ie HAVE FUN!!
In September
and October my phone starts ringing with people seaking
coaching for races nine to thirteen months away. The first thing I
do is to find out where the athlete's head is. In December, will
he put his feet on the floor at 5:30am and say "I am training for
an Ironman in September of next year"?
Folks, that is a very
dangerous place to be. If that's where your head is, you're at
high risk of being in a bell tower by June. All of the tips below
are focused on tricking you into thinking you are NOT training for
the race you're actually training for. My method is very simple,
fun, and it works:
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Insert Cool Events
(CE's) on the calendar.
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CE's should come in
two flavors: what you love to do and what you need to do.
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Train for these cool
events.
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Move from CE to CE
throughout the year.
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Wake up 8-12 weeks out
from your goal race, realize that you're in pretty damn good
shape, physically and mentally.
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Apply that fitness and
fresh head to focused training for your goal race for a relatively
short period of time.
Schedule a Professional Bike Fit
Find a good
local bike shop with triathlon-specific bike fit knowledge and
schedule a fit with them for the month of March. Use this
appointment as a goal for to increase your flexibility during the
limiter season. Increased flexibility can increase range of motion
and comfort on the run. But it can also allow you to assume a more
aerodynamic AND comfortable position on the bike, which translates
into free speed. Consider pre-paying for the appointment, just as you would a race.
Create Good Eating
Habits
In my opinion, the quickest path to improved fitness is
through improved body composition. Why focus so much time and
energy on building a big engine if you're going to put that
engine in a truck instead of a sports car? Improving body
composition is largely a function of creating good eating habits
and applying these habits consistently over months and months.
This gradual process allows you to lose body fat in a healthy
manner, rather than trying to "make race weight" a few weeks
before your goal race. Create good eating habits in October and
November, and use them to limit the holiday damage, then carry
them forward into next season.
Please read my training article,
Paleo Diet,
Modified for Endurance Athletes
Schedule Some
Personal Time with Your Local Swim Coach
Improving your swim technique probably offers the greatest
return on your training dollar. You may also be a little burned
out from a season of Masters swimming and long yardage. Rather than
continue to play wall tag with your Masters group, hire that coach
to spend a little quality, one-on-one time with you. Have him
critique your form and ask him to write up a schedule of technique
focused workouts for you do between personal swim coaching
appointments. Then perform these workouts as recovery sessions
between your more demanding bike and run sessions. Strong swimmers
may consider not swimming at all, or only for recovery purposes.
Seek to Add a
Social Component to Your Training
In my opinion, the two most valuable training events you can
create are a three hour long bike and an hour and a half long run
that you execute every week, from now until the end of time.
Adding a social component encourages you to make that regular
Saturday ride with your buds simply "what you do," month after
month, year after year. I look forward to my weekend workouts the
way I used to anticipate $3.25 pitchers at Moe's and Joe's in
Atlanta. So join a local tri club and meet new people. Train with
old friends who've been on a different training schedule all year.
Check out that running club that meets downtown on Wednesday
nights for a run and pizza.
Train Like a Half
Marathon Runner
That hour and a half long run is perfect for every flavor of
triathlete. If you race Olympics, it will help you build a very
solid base for next season. If you're a Halfer, it's just at or
below your peak long run during the season, enabling you to
solidify the base you already have. It's also short enough to
accommodate some half marathon flavor intensity. If you're an
Ironman athlete, it's long enough to help you keep your base while
short enough to accommodate the tempo running your Ironman
training couldn't support during the season
For all of these
athletes, half marathons are the perfect goal races to help you
guide your training. The distance is just long that everyone,
Olympic to Ironman, will take it seriously. You're more likely to
get out the door for that hour and a half run with you have a half
marathon coming up in two weeks. And it's short enough that you
can race one or two per month and use them as excellent training
events. Schedule 5 and 10k's as training events for your goal half
marathons and pretty soon you have a full race calendar of fun
training events (and affordable, for a change).
Train Like a 40k
Time Trialist
I see a lot of athletes, especially northern, trainer-bound folks,
get themselves into trouble during the winter by either trying to
hold on to the endurance they built during the season or by trying
to get a head start on building the endurance required for their
races next season. Go back to my advice to make it fun. Remember
that warm weather is a loonnng way away. Recall my advice to
conserve your mental energy for later in the season. Accept all
this and realize that you just can't hold on to or build that long
bike endurance without placing your mental strength at risk.
However, what you can
do is build the cycling component that makes you a stronger,
faster cyclist at all intensities: power at lactate threshold.
Take a look at the roadies who blow by you on your Saturday ride.
Those dudes in the front can crank it, hard, for several minutes
at a time yet their longest "long" rides are often 50-60 miles,
pedestrian by Ironman standards. How do they do it? They ride
FAST, often.
Its very simple, if
you want to ride fast you have to ride fast. Don't worry about
fast + far for now. Plenty of time for building far when it warms
up in the spring.
Note: immediately
after writing this guidance I had a conversation with a new
client, where I repeated this emphasis on high intensity cycling
during the off-season. She noted this was counter to the more
common guidance to work on "base" during the winter.
My comments:
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Raising your watts at
lactate threshold raises your watts at all intensities. "A rising
tide floats all boats."
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Base building training
and lactate threshold training are not mutually exclusive. They
exist along the same range of ways to invest your training time,
with LT on the short end and base training on the longer, higher
volume end. In a perfect world we would be able to put in large
aerobic volume during the off-season. However, REALITY is winter,
indoors, family, holidays, and an upcoming 6-9 month training
season. Reality dictates that you adopt a training method that is
extremely time efficient and does make you faster. Interval
training at or near lactate threshold fulfills these requirements.
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If you live in a good
climate and have the personal schedule to support it, go ahead and
keep up that long ride schedule. But I encourage you to do the fun
stuff that you were too torqued about during the season to do.
My "Get Faster on the
Bike Keys:"
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If you want to ride
fast, you have to ride fast.
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It's ok to ride too
hard. It's ok to ride too far. It's ok to ride to hard and too
far, as long as you recover afterwards.
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You can't start riding
hard and fast too soon. Don't worry, your body will catch up and
you have plenty of time later in the year to do more volume. For
now, ride like a kid and enjoy going fast!
Your Limiter Season
Plan
Let's gather all of these ideas into "Big Picture" and weekly
guidance:
Big Picture
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Go to Active.com and
do searches for 5, 10k's and half marathons in Oct-March in your
area. Register for an A priority half marathon, preferably in
March. Register for B priority halfs in January and February.
Register for C priority 5 and 10k's to use as training races for
these B and A events.
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Look into your local
cycling resources. Is there a local time trial series that runs
through the early winter? A regular group ride that meets on
Saturdays or Sundays? Can you yourself offer to lead or create
cool rides for your local tri club? Register for a February or
March road race or organized century/half century and use this
event as motivation through the winter.
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Explore your local
swimming resources? Is there a well-respected local coach you can
meet with? Is this coach offering a group swim clinic?
Weekly
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Swim: 2-3
sessions per week, as drills/recovery. Stronger swimmers may
consider not swimming at all.
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Bike: 3 rides
per week, as 2 x Functional Theshold (FT, focused on increasing
watts at lactate threshold) + 1 x 3-4hr weekend ride. I prefer
group rides and to mix up the terrain, keeping it fresh and fun.
My rule is "the shorter I go, the harder I ride." Very simple.
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Run: 4-6
sessions per week as 1 x Long (1:30-2hrs, hilly), 1 x Hilly, 1-2 x
Strides/Aerobic. The key is to schedule a run week you can execute
consistently, week after week. Let volume be a result of
relatively high frequency.
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Stretching and Core work:
3-4 x core/wk, stretch
nightly. Just make it a habit, dropping to the floor in the
evening.
In Summary
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Adopt this Cool Event
(CE) perspective on your off-season training and racing.
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Pick CE's that you
love to do and need to do.
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Schedule fun,
time efficient training that leads you from CE to CE.
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Address longer term
goals through the creation of good habits and by adding a strong
social component to your training.
Limiter Season Training Plans
16 weeks for $79-99
I've taken these
concepts and applied them to affordable training plans, for
athletes training with or without a powermeter. The plans
incorporate the guidance above and are designed to peak you for an
early spring half marathon and a cycling test.
Each training plan includes the Swim Clinic
e-Book, the "Uber
Doc," and continued support via a closed forum. The power
training plans include the Training with Power e-Book, over
seventeen pages capturing four years of triathlon-specific power
training, racing and coaching experience.
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