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Smart athletes work on both aspects in their training, although we do know that most people can only hope to improve their V02 max about 20-40 percent over an entire athletic career. In other words, there are more significant genetic restraints on V02 max than there are on improving lactate threshold. It should be obvious by now that an athlete with a lower V02 max, but a higher lactate threshold can have a better endurance performance than a peer with a higher V02 max but a lower lactate threshold. Let’s examine a hypothetical comparison for the purposes of illustration:
* Measured as milliliters of oxygen per kilogram of bodyweight per minute (mls/kg/min). As you can see, Jenna, who may have significant genetic limitations on V02max, has still managed to develop a superior endurance performance capacity compared to Marilyn by raising her lactate threshold.
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| Week | Mon | Wed | Fri |
| 1 |
Cycle, 20mins | Swim, 25mins | Run, 30mins |
| 2 |
Rowing, 25mins | Stairclimbing, 30mins | Cycle, 35mins |
| 3 |
Swim, 30mins | Run, 35mins | Rowing, 40mins |
| 4 |
Stairclimbing, 35mins | Cycle, 40mins | Swim, 45mins |
| 5 |
Run, 40mins | Rowing, 45mins | Stairclimbing, 50min |
| 6 |
Cycle, 45mins | Swim, 50mins | Run, 55mins |
| 7 |
Rowing, 50mins | Stairclimbing, 55mins | Cycle, 60mins |
| 8 | Swim, 55mins | Run, 60mins | Rowing, 65mins |
Aerobic-interval
method:
(Note: rest intervals are always 1/2 the duration of the
work intervals being performed that day)
| Week | Mon | Wed | Fri |
| 1 | Cycle, 2x10mins | Swim, 5x5mins | Run, 3x10mins |
| 2 | Rowing, 5x5mins | Stairclimbing, 3x10mins | Cycle, 7x5mins |
| 3 |
Swim, 3x10mins | Run, 7x5mins | Rowing, 4x10mins |
| 4 |
Stairclimbing, 7x5mins | Cycle, 4x10mins | Swim, 9x5mins |
| 5 |
Run, 4x10mins | Rowing, 9x5mins | Stairclimbing,5x10mins |
| 6 |
Cycle, 9x5mins | Swim, 5x10mins | Run, 11x5mins |
| 7 |
Rowing, 5x10mins | Stairclimbing, 11x5mins | Cycle, 6x10mins |
| 8 | Swim, 11x5mins | Run, 6x10mins | Rowing, 13x5mins |
Once you’ve developed the highest amount of aerobic efficiency possible within the confines of your training cycle, it’s time to throttle back a bit on your training volume to make way for anaerobic interval training for the purpose of raising your lactate threshold. The aerobic base that you have just established will now be down-shifted to "maintenance" level by reducing the total volume of aerobic training considerably— down to between 25 and 50 percent of the original volume. Your efforts will now be dedicated primarily to improving your ability to tolerate lactic acid buildup, which is really a more significant limiting factor than aerobic capacity for most athletes.
Understanding Intervals
An interval is defined as a period of time or a specified distance. For athletes, it means repeated bouts of high intensity exercise with intermittent rest periods. Since the 1960's, interval training has come to be thought of as the key to endurance performance success. In some training programs, it accounts for 50-75% of the total training volume.
Intermittent exercise allows a higher total volume of high intensity work, and also accumulates a greater volume of stress on the blood pumping capacity of the heart. According to exercise physiologist Dr. Steven Seilor, the periodic elevations and decreases in intensity may create special loading stresses on the heart that are adaptive. Seilor suggests that during an interval, heart rate climbs high, then at the moment you stop the interval, heart rate immediately starts to drop, but venous return remains high. These exposures to additional ventricular stretch may help trigger ventricular remodeling (increased heart ventricle volume).
Training Parameters for Anaerobic Interval Training
This phase of your endurance training program should be tailored to the actual event duration that you’ll be expected to endure. If you’re a kickboxer entering a match composed of (6) 2 minute rounds, there’s no point in engaging in 3 hour runs to improve your endurance for the fight!
In fact, even if you decide to employ 20 minute intervals with 5 minute rests between intervals, you’d be using ten times the volume that you’ll experience in the upcoming fight! If you think that this will improve your "wind," you’d be dead wrong, because you’ll be training the wrong energy system for the job. It would be like trying to improve your 100 meter speed by running 1000-meter intervals!
When performing anaerobic intervals, you need to be working hard— as hard as possible, for the duration of each interval. But perhaps more importantly, you need to focus on the quality of what you’re doing. After all, what’s the point of doing repeated 2 minute intervals on the heavy bag if your technique is atrocious? Although I will present two hypothetical programs for anaerobic training below, always make modifications as needed based on your present performance capacity.
For example, if you can’t go "all out" with an opponent for 30 seconds without falling apart, neither of the following programs will be appropriate, and you’ll have to reduce the duration of the intervals, at least for now. The rule-of-thumb is: first establish quality, then increase quantity.
Let’s look at two athletes, one with better strength than endurance, and the other with better endurance than strength. We now have 8 weeks to go before the fight. Here is a hypothetical interval training program for each athlete:
Athlete is strong, but needs better short-term endurance:
| Week | Mon | Wed | Fri |
| 1 | 10x90sec | 11x90sec | 12x90sec (rests= 120secs) |
| 2 | 9x120sec | 10x120sec | 11x120sec(rests= 120secs) |
| 3 | 10x120sec | 11x120sec | 12x120sec (rests= 120secs) |
| 4 | 9x150sec | 10x150sec | 11x150sec(rests= 90secs) |
| 5 | 10x150sec | 11x150sec | 12x150sec (rests= 90secs) |
| 6 | 9x180sec | 10x180sec | 11x180sec(rests= 90secs) |
| 7 | 10x180sec | 11x180sec | 12x180sec(rests= 60secs) |
| 8 (taper) | 8x150sec | 4x120sec | 2x90sec (rests= 60secs) |
Athlete has good stamina, but needs more strength and speed:
| Week | Mon | Wed | Fri |
| 1 | 8x150sec | 9x150sec | 10x150sec(rests= 90secs) |
| 2 | 10x150sec | 11x150sec | 12x150sec (rests= 120secs) |
| 3 | 9x120sec | 10x120sec | 11x120sec(rests= 120secs) |
| 4 | 10x120sec | 11x120sec | 12x120sec (rests= 150secs) |
| 5 | 9x90sec | 10x90sec | 11x90sec (rests= 150secs) |
| 6 | 10x90sec | 11x90sec | 12x90sec (rests= 150secs) |
| 7 | 9x60sec | 10x60sec | 11x60sec (rests= 180secs) |
| 8 (taper) | 8x60sec | 4x60sec | 2x60sec (rests= 180secs) |
As the above scenarios indicate, strength is developed by performing intervals which are slightly shorter than the competitive event-duration, while endurance is developed by performing slightly longer intervals. No not blindly copy the above programs, but instead, learn to apply them to your specific situation.
Unlike the aerobic build-up period, the activities you’ll perform must be much more event-specific during this phase. Use primarily competitive skills and skill-elements in a controlled, yet challenging environment to prevent injury in the final weeks leading up to an event. Athletes can spar with safety equipment or by handicapping themselves, for example, rotating opponents to keep them fresh. Another example of a handicap is to spar without using a favorite technique, which will force you to develop your weaknesses.
Phase 3: Maximize Technical Efficiency
To this point, I’ve said that high level endurance performance depends on
Your VO2 max sets the upper limit for your sustainable work potential. The lactate threshold indicates how much of your cardiovascular capacity you can take advantage of in a sustained effort. Multiplying VO2 max by your lactate threshold gives us a measure of the size of your "endurance engine." In sport, however, victory does not automatically go to the athlete with the biggest engine. Efficiency (or technical skill) is critical to maximizing performance capacity.
You might have a V02max of 85 and a lactate threshold of 90%, but if, during a sport training session, you waste precious energy by attempting techniques from poor positions of leverage, or made bad tactical and/or strategic decisions, it’s all for naught! In other words, from a functional perspective, improving your technical and tactical skills improves your ability to endure, since you are moving with better efficiency.
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Final ThoughtsAthletes need to make the distinction between doing endurance training for the purpose of improving endurance, and doing such workouts as a tool to improve body composition. In the latter instance, both aerobic and anaerobic variants are viable tools when used judiciously and in the proper proportions. Aerobic work, when performed at low intensities, are valuable in assisting recovery from intense workouts. Anaerobic interval training, when done at or near lactate threshold, assists in fat loss through the production of growth hormone levels. Strangely, moderate intensity endurance training seems to be most counter-productive for athletes interested in improving body composition— they wear you down without producing the hormonal environment conducive to fat loss. In the final analysis, I’ll leave you with a concept that always holds my clients in good stead: when making decisions about training load, strive to do the least amount of work that will lead to a result, rather than the most. Seek to become efficient with your training efforts. Avoid waste— any training program that leads to results will also lead to injury if followed to long and/or too repetitively. |
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About The Author
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His colleagues call him an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients call him The Secret Weapon for his ability to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself a geek who struggled in Phys Ed throughout school. Whatever you call him, Charles methods are ahead of their time and quickly produce serious results. His counter-intuitive approach and self-effacing demeanor have lead to appearances on NBCs The TODAY Show and The CBS Early Show. Currently, Charles competes in Olympic-style weightlifting on the masters circuit, with a 3-year goal of qualifying for the 2009 Masters World Championships. |
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