It's early season here in the USA I have started the crazy travel schedule again. My thanks to Adam Zucco & his TrainingBible Coaching crew for hosting me again in Chicago - they do a great job. I do an evening lecture for them & then a compact 90min session with groups of six long course athletes. Below is a note I received to my website this morning:
"Hi Bobby, I just
wanted to thank you for coming out to Chicago for a great couple of days. I
applied what you spoke to me about after the clinic, and saw immediate
results... I can't wait to see the changes in the long term as I apply and
practice. Specifically, I ran a 2 mile run off a difficult 4 hour effort on the
bike... I kept my HR in Zone 2, but dropped my pace by over a minute! 4 days
before, during my long run (on full rest) with the same HR restrictions, I was
over a min slower on pace. I look forward to the long term journey in making
these changes feel more effortless and "natural"... basically undoing
years of crap form! ha Thanks again, and have a great week"
It is immensely gratifying to see all levels of triathlete gain benefit from assessing their run form & taking on the process of tweaking it to gain performance benefits.
So keep working on upping the stride rate safely & go fast!
Bobby McGee
www.BobbyMcGee.com
Monday, April 30, 2012
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Some thoughts on warming up for the endurance athlete
I've been missing in action, but no excuses this time! I've been luckily & happily involved in plying my trade all over the country & globe!
Recently a coach & athlete asked me if a "more scientific" warm up, that included "endless lunges" was better than the "old school" method of a jog & some strides.
This was my reply:
Bobby McGee
www.BobbyMcGee.com
Recently a coach & athlete asked me if a "more scientific" warm up, that included "endless lunges" was better than the "old school" method of a jog & some strides.
This was my reply:
Warm up is a tricky one; here’s what I see about warm-up nowadays:
1. Old school – we felt it was a fixed set of rules
2. Theoretical – learned from lectures, research & non-human resources (often applied by clever, theoretically trained individuals without ruts in their foreheads from being trackside for 30 years!
3. Practical – based on the following principles:
a. What combinations of applied science & experience give the athlete a best chance at success
b. Individualized, based on athlete type: power-type - plenty of recruitment or endurance type - prolonged aerobic build-up, etc.
c. Event – shorter the event, the more prolonged the warm up & vice versa
d. Fitness level – the fitter the athlete is, the longer & more specific the warm-up required
4. All this being said, make sure that the central system is brought up evenly to operating temp (1*C raise in core temp – therefore longer WU when cold). By even I mean it must be slow enough to ensure that local muscle beds – like quads & calves, do not develop local anaerobic discomfort/thickness. Breathing must get to steady state without a bypass – i.e. heavy breathing then settling, but rather gradually go up aerobically. HR must do the same – i.e. rise steadily, not up, over & then back down. All this done top ensure athlete's best fast-component VO2 kinetics.
5. Peripherally, once core temp is up, movement must be facilitated & muscle recruited – this includes progressive range of motion activities, (no passive stretching!) & then move up to movements that load beyond the repeated load that is expected in competition – hence the lunges, bounds, hops, strides, etc. This to recruit muscle for efficiency (over & above minimum for safe execution). Then rhythm needs to be established, which is sequential coordinated movement that is reflexive – all this serves to “activate” & potentiate the running motion. Warm up should also include error-proofing drills, like connecting chest to pelvis & with triathletes, overriding the shadow of the other 2 events on the run, like heel walks & crawling
6. Finally a warm-up is JUST as much mental/emotional, as physical – it should connect the athlete to his body & bring him from whatever other activity & mindset he was in, to one that is optimal for racing this race; a feeling of self-efficacy on every level. A warm up creates focus, optimal arousal & a readiness to deliver a performance commensurate with current fitness & ability or even beyond
Hope this helps – developing the specifics for the individual requires some work, but a walk, a progressive run, some dynamic drills, strides & a prime run are the basic gist of a good pre-race warm up
Bobby McGee
www.BobbyMcGee.com
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