Eric Orton's Posts (87)

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Everest Marathon Private Run Camp: Jackson Hole

Rich said "it was the best three days of my life." He was most likely exaggerating a little, but I think you get the idea. We had a great three days running, training, talking, and dreaming! Here is a video montage of Rich's private Everest Marathon training camp, just as we experienced it!



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Question: When I have a bad training session or race I have a tendency to have negative
thoughts about my abilities as a racer. How do I combat these negative thoughts and keep them from affecting my performance in competition?

Answer: I tell my athletes, everyone has negative thoughts; it is what we do with the negative thoughts that separate the elite thinkers from the average thinkers in sport. This is important to understand. We all have negative thoughts, no one is immune. The first step is to understand this and realize avoidance is not the target. And, when we do have these thoughts it doesn’t mean we are not mentally strong. The mentally strong have trained and perfected how to respond to challenging times, which inevitably produce negative feelings. So the take home here is do not beat yourself up if you have bad thoughts during your performance, EXPECT IT and then MODIFY IT.

Modifying or changing the meaning of this negative self-talk is the key. When you are feeling tired or challenged in training or a race, this inner voice can be very negative. It can question what you are doing, talk you out of keeping going, and become a general nuisance. Positive self-talk is needed when feeling challenged.

Endurance racing and training involves coping with fatigue, which can be learned; you can turn the voice off and you can turn from negative to positive. First, think back to those challenging times when you felt tired and had bad legs. Think of what you said to yourself. Write it down. The next step is to change the negative self-statements into positive self-statements.

For example, consider the negative self-statement, ‘My legs have gone. I will have to slow down’. This relationship between feeling tired and what to do about these feelings is clearly terminal for performance. We need to change both parts of this self-statement. Rather than saying ‘my legs have gone’ we need to change this to a transient statement such as ‘my legs are tired’. This is more likely to be true in any case. Tiredness tends to come in waves during endurance events and intense feelings of physical tiredness can pass.

It is also important to change the strategy for dealing with challenging times. I suggest that runners should focus on their technique and riding relaxed when feeling tired. Focusing on technique and relaxation is a good strategy as it is largely under the control of the athlete. If the runner focuses all of their attention on relaxed technique, this can detract attention from sensations of fatigue. The outcome is a much more positive self-statement: ‘My legs are feeling tired, so I will concentrate on relaxed technique to make them more efficient.’

A good way of using self-talk is to try to anticipate difficult moments in competition or in training. Develop self-talk scripts to change negative scenarios to positive ones. Use a combination of imagery/visualization and self-talk to create situations in which you experience unpleasant emotions, and see yourself deal successfully with these situations, using positive self-talk to control the inner voice in your head that can be negative.

We must also not confuse difficulty with failure. I see this all the time when workouts are challenging or difficult for a runner. Because the workout or race is challenging, the thought process immediately goes to, “I am not good” or “I failed”. The workout or race should be challenging and difficult. So again, EXPECT IT and MODIFY IT. I coach my athletes to look forward to negative talk because this allows them the opportunity to perform to the fullest. You need to be challenged to be at your best. If you can view negative self talk as a positive opportunity and something NECESSARY for peak performance, a funny thing happens. Once you have the awareness that negative talk is necessary, you expect it, you are ready for it, you will embrace it, and you will not back down to the challenge. Sounds funny, but it works!

Remember that psychological toughness is built on a firm platform of physical fitness. To enjoy racing, athletes need to have experienced repeated training bouts of specific race intensity and hard efforts. In the same way you train your body to cope with these demands of training, you also train your mind to think positively about difficult times and hard efforts. The body follows the mind, and this must be trained.

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With many of my personal training athletes, I use the overhead deep squat as a movement pattern to assess limits within the body. I have posted the video of this exercise/movement so you can perform a self-assessment. The ability to perform the Deep Squat requires an optimal body weight squatting pattern and a poor performance of this squat can alert you to some stability, mobility and asymmetries within your body that may lead to run specific problems. The Deep Squat is used to challenge bilateral, symmetrical, functional mobility and stability of the hips, knees, and ankles....ALL very important for running injury free. In this video, I use two power balls of four pounds each. Using weight is NOT neccessary and NOT recommmended. Just hold your hands overhead, trying to keep them straight and overhead as much as possible. This is not an exercise, but a movement pattern assessment. Do not use heavy weight. Try this out and lets us know how well you perform - E.
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Free Form Intervals

I thought I would share with you my Sunday run. Currently, I am not in a structured training mode, just running frequently and consistently. Over the last two years, I have not been putting in the long miles typical to my training schedule and have stumbled upon a great workout to keep the legs "alive" during your off season or to "wake" them up from always doing the same type of run. I call this run free form or free form intervals because you are including a few intervals within a short run. The key is to peform these intervals during a run of 30-40 minutes only. This way you are not tired at the end, and they are short enough so mentally you can run fast, not worrying about fatiguing prematurely during a longer run. These are also a must for ultra runners who are used to putting in long miles and never do many 30 minutes runs...they are refreshing and get your legs away from long and slow. Here is what you do: Get in a good warm-up of 10-15 minutes. Then perform 2-3 X 6-8 minutes runs where you just run as you feel, but fast. Just start out and run as fast as you feel like and respond by how you feel. If it feels good, speed up until you need to back off. Or continue to increase your effort throughout the 6-8 minutes. Speed up, slow down. Pick a pace and try to maintain it the entire time. The only rule is to just do what feels good on EACH interval and try to run between 5k and 400 meter pace. Again, let your pace respond to the moment and how you are feeling physically and mentally. What you will find is that since there are no expectations or set structure, you end up challenging yourself, but you also stay within your ability. Remember, train, don't strain. You might say well this sounds like a fartlek run. Typically fartlek runs are short and hard with short easy recovery. This could be part of a free form interval, but you may also find that free form intervals are progessive in nature. Start out easy and continue to progress your efffort until you need to stop. Or just a steady, hard effort, harder than if you were doing MANY more intervals. Free form are not as confining as a fartlek. And by doing only a few intervals, you keep the legs working hard one or two days a week during the off season that can really help you to maintain fitness, without needing recovery. They leave you feeling very strong. These are also a great way to work on building good form and technique if you are new to mid-foot striking. Running faster, helps create better foot strike and free form running could be a great way to train foot strike. Simply run faster than your normal endurance pace or your zone 2-3 HR until you feel your form falling apart. Slow down to recovery and then pick it back up with good form again. Structure is very important for long term growth and improvement, but so too is a little creativity and free form running. E
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Winter Trail Running in Jackson Hole

Hi all - I am in the process of finalizing my Summer Run Camp schedule and as my mind is on summer, I thought I would post a short slide show of a great run I had during the holidays for everyone to get a glimps of my world and the Tetons under snow. Unlike most of the country, we have had an unusually dry and warm winter thus far in Teton Valley and trail running has been awesome! Enjoy - E
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Training With Eric - Custom Camp in the Snow!

I just concluded my last Run Camp of the year and thought I would post a few pictures. You never know what Mother Nature will throw at you in the mountains, especially in October. Eliza and Kate flew in from The Bay area for a 2 day custom run camp and we had a great time. The weather was rainy, snowy, sunny, and cold - but Kate and Eliza had a great adventurous spirit and we made the best of the weather. Our plan was to have breakfast and then hit the strength training facility to do some biomechanic analysis, strength training instruction, and some muscle activation for our long run. Kate and Eliza learned a great deal about how their body "operates" while running and found that their aches and nagging pains made sense once we analyzed what their body's were doing while they ran. Once we were able to activate some dormant muscles, they could feel a big difference in just the little we did and this also acted as a great dynamic warm-up for our run. After our two hour strength session, we hit the trails. The plan for the first day was to get in about 3 hours of mountain running. Since Eliza and Kate live in The Bay area, they were used to running hills, trails, and mountains - but the altitude got them a bit during the first 30 minues as we started a gradual climb, which included many short, steep rolling hills. This allowed for great conversation about their training, racing, and a lot of Born To Run questions.

Eliza and Kate at the turn around point - 8,500 feet

We were also able to work on good form and run technique, allowing some of the strength issues we discovered earlier to be addressed on the trail.

Eliza working on her downhill running technique

Kate working on her downhill running technique

There they go!

Day One Stats: 13.85 miles 6,297 total ascent Day two brought blue skies and cold temps. We had to get an early start and was able to get in a great 2 hour run before Eliza and Kate had to depart to the airport. It had snowed over night, so we hit snow soon into the run, which made it fun and we were finally able to get a glimps of the mountain peaks and great views from above.

Kate and Eliza were very strong, as we did some major climbing today and found it very hard to make that decision to stop and turnaround.

"Do we have to turn around?"

View of the "Hole" from above

With the snow fall and wintery weather, wildlife was hard to come by so it was a great treat to spot this bull moose on our way back to camp headquarters.

Thank you Eliza and Kate for a great two days of running and I will see you in San Francisco in the Spring for my Running With Eric California Run camp.
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Mojo Run - Support Dustin's Run Journey

“He didn’t even look tired! It’s like he was just…having fun!” – Born to Run (pg 103). I like to think of Mojo as being magic. But magic just doesn’t happen, you must put yourself “out there” and challenge the norm and what is possible. This often times creates fear, which is natural, but Mojo happens when we look beyond the fear and ACT on it. Dustin's Got Mojo! In recognition of Dustin Huck's 1,200 mile run journey, I thought it would be fun to have a Mojo Team Challenge to help support Dustin and to help put into perspective the magnitude of Dustin's undertaking. The Mojo Challenge is to see how many miles we, as a team, we can run collectively WHILE Dustin is running 1,200 miles, from California to Texas. Dustin starts his run Saturday, August 15th. Running With Eric has over 400 team members now, let’s see how many TOTAL miles we can run during Dustin's journey! This means to run as often and as much as you can and feel comfortable doing, with the focus on fun and creating run Mojo. Run to breakfast, run to the store, take the kids running, run some place new, run at night, run 2 miles further than you have ever run before. Stay within yourself and your ability, but try to do as many runs as possible and make it as fun as possible. Introduce someone new to running, with a run around the block. This could mean 5, one mile runs throughout the day or one long run, or anything in between. There is no run too short or too long, it all adds up. So get creative and challenge yourself to add to the team total. Many of you will be out training anyway, so just log your daily training miles here in the FORUM section. To keep it simple, log your DAILY run miles in the FORUM section under Mojo Run – Dustin's Run Mojo. Try to log your miles after each run so we can watch the miles add up daily. We will keep a running tally of the total miles run by the team, so the focus will be on Team participation and Team Mojo! I will randomly choose a "runner of the week" throughout the challenge who will receive a current Training Package of their choice. Have fun – have Mojo!
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There has been a lot of questions and emphasis placed on running form and technique. A big part of this was sparked by Born To Run and because of this, many runners think or assume this is the only component to running well and injury free. I would like to take this post to add another BIG piece to the equation, running strength. Many have heard me say, "run strong, to THEN go long". Many run programs have runners building endurance or run base first and then start applying speed and strength workouts once the base has been built. I do things differently, I build strength and economy first and then apply "specific" endurance to the strength base. This is not to far from what the Tarahumara runners instinctively acheive in their running process. As youngsters, they play their unique ball game at short distances. When there is a game planed, a wooden ball is carved out of a wood log, about the size of a soft ball. Each running team has one ball and the team is to run back and forth along a predetermined race course. Unlike races we are used to, the course is very short and the teams run back and forth, rather than from point A to point B. During this running, the team must kick the wooden ball, advancing it with the team as they run the course. Not unlike how we as kids would try and kick that small rock ALL the way home from school! The runners use special sticks to "pull" the ball onto the top of their foot and they flip the ball ahead more than actually kick it. Each team has a "handler" who is good at this flip. Very similar to American Ultimate Frisbee. This game forces runners to sprint hard, stop and change direction, move laterally, sprint hard, rest, etc. The Raramuri are not just running steady for a long time. Yes, they are running long distances, but in short hard sprints. This is key. This develops great strength in their legs and high end aerbobic capacity that just can't take place in running long and steady. The Raramuri youngers develop this from an early age, as their game distances are shorter than the adult version. Then, as the young runner matures to the adult game, this runner can immediately take that leap in distance without much difficulty because of the massive strength that was built in his youth. He built the strength base, to now run long, strong, and very FAST. This is exactly how I training Chris McDougall to run 50 miles without much "traditional" running base. I have put together a short slideshow of this ball game. I hope you enjoy this, as there are not many photos of this game out there. And, I hope this sparks your intrigue to think outside the box with your run base and to do a little less long and steady running. The ball Game Slide Show
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Pre-Run Rocket Fuel

I have experimented enough now to know I have found a great pre run energy booster using Chia seeds. Make a normal batch of chia gel as I described in the Chia Power gel: 1/3 to 1/2 cup of chia seeds mixed with 2 cups water. Wisk 2-3 times every 10 minutes and then set in refrigerator to thicken. 30-60 minutes before a short, hard run or key long run: Spread some peanut butter on a piece of whole wheat toast and then spread the chia gel over the peanut butter - enjoy. Based on my body type, I do better with a little more fat in my diet, so play around with your peanut butter portion based on the length of your planned run. It is hard to measure and quantify how I feel during my workouts after this snack, but I feel nothing short of what Chris describes in his experience in Born to Run. E
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Mid-foot Strike Video

Thanks for all the great questions regarding technique. I thought it was time to post some video to further address this. In the first video, you will see Margot demonstrate mid-foot strike. There have been a lot of questions as to what this is, what part of the foot is involved, etc. View this several times and then watch the second video of her running and putting the mid-foot strike in motion. Notice how relaxed she is and how everything is "inline" with her body. Also pay attention to her arm swing. I did not comment on this in the video, but she does an excellent job in keeping her elbows high and bent...driving the elbows back. You do not want to swing them too far foreward and/or across your body. Key note, there is a direct correlation between your arm swing and cadence. They will mirror each other. Thanks to Margot for helping with the video. You can read her Blog post on her recovery from ankle surgery and congrats goes out to her for just qualifying for the World Triathlon Championships - E
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MOJO Run - Celebrating 200 Members

“All he wanted was to find one Natural Born Runner – someone who ran for the sheer joy, like an artist in the grip of inspiration” – Born to Run (pg 94). As a coach, I am very focused on developing peak fitness for my runners, and it brings me joy to see athletes progress and achieve their goals. One of the major reasons I coach, and ultimately the most fulfilling reward, is helping athletes see beyond their self-imposed limitations and to think outside the box, not letting fear get in the way of training for something that almost seems impossible. Athletes often ask me, “is anything really possible?” I did not know how to answer this at first, as I doubt my wife would think it is possible for her to make the Olympic marathon team and I would agree with her. So, my answer is this. I feel anything is possible that you dwell on and think about and that is driven by passion. When we are driven by the passion of running, we think about it a lot and those thoughts usually come in the form of daydreaming. When we daydream, we often think “big”, but then reality sets in (our thinking) and we reign in our goals to what we know is possible, and not very daring. So, in celebration of the 200th member joining Running With Eric, I would like to challenge you and, more importantly, support you in achieving your “ultimate goal” for 2009-2010. I want you to think big. I want you to dwell on what would be an impossible goal for you and then commit to it. Most of the time, we think of all the reasons why something couldn’t happen, which will STOP us every time. Let’s not worry about whether your ultimate goal ever happens, let’s focus on committing to it and putting it into action. Taking action is the real reward and often times leads to greater results than originally intended. Here is the plan. Next week, run your favorite trail or course and focus on the “MOJO” of running or the pure magic that running provides you. Look forward to, daydream, and just go run free. During your MOJO run, commit yourself to a far reaching run goal for 2009-2010. Take a camera with you and when “inspiration” hits, take a picture that captures the MOJO of running to you. After the run, jump on Running With Eric and commit your goal to the team in the FORUM section under MOJO Run. Make it official not only to yourself, but to the team. You will not believe how empowering this will be…trust me. It might feel awkward to you and fearful or strange, but it will give you great energy and catapult your run passion to a new level. I also encourage you to post your inspirational picture on the PHOTOS page. The deadline for your MOJO Goal is July 12th. On July 13th, I will randomly pick one person to receive a custom 3-month training plan to kick start their goal success. This first contest is all about discovering the pure joy, magic, and passion of running – MOJO. I have run with Jenn Shelton, and she is one of the brightest new stars in the ultra running scene right now. She has MOJO and I am sure this is a picture she might submit…if she were a Running With Eric team member.

After all, this is what Running With Eric is all about – Natural Born Runners, running for the sheer joy, like an artist in the grips of inspiration!
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Strength Circuit for Runners

As many of the members of Running with Eric start diving into their Training Packages and get accustom to my run training methods, they soon have questions regarding strength training. So, I thought it was time to address this by posting a Strength Training Circuit that I often have my personal training clients perform during their training sessions. With the popularity of Born To Run, I have also had many inquiries from a variety of athletes who have read the book and been inspired by our story. These inquires have included former professional foot ball players and many who say they still perform quite a bit of strength training in gym that includes traditional heavy weights to promote muscle mass. This traditional strength work attacks major prime movers and often leads to overloading bigger muscles and neglecting very important stabilizing muscles. This bulk and muscle mass if also very inhibiting for a runner and leads to muscle imbalance and inefficiency. It is more beneficial to drop the heavy weights and work on developing equilibruim within the body, which promotes healthy movement patterns. This strength circuit will give you an idea of this approach, while providing you a great, simple and time effective workout to perform without sacrificing your run training time. Perform this sequence as a circuit, repeating 1-2 times based on your fitness level and time commitment. This can be done several times throughout the week. Wall Squat: 10-20. Progress to 20 reps and work on range of motion. These are hard, do not force it, just stretch it. FB Push-ups: 10 reps. Do not exceed 10, just make 10 hard for you by how slow you move. FB Crunch and Reach: 10 reps. Do not exceed 10, just make 10 hard for you by how slow you move. FB Knees to Chest: 10 reps. Work slow coming down. Progress to doing FB Toes to Chest. FB Prone Rocker: 10-15 reps. Do not exceed 15, make them harder by moving ball further away from you. Knee Circles: 10 each direction. FB Lunge: 20 reps. Start with using poles and progress to using no poles and holding your arms behind your head. These are very hard, PERFORM them, do not just rep it out. SEE THE VIDEO SECTION FOR EXERCISE VIDEOS FOR EACH OF THESE.
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Chia Power Gel

So, I have finally "Americanized" the Chia seed into a performance enhancement power gel. Here is my recipe: 1/3 cup chia seeds 2 cups water one packet of Emergen-C (your favorite flavor) Mix the chia seeds and water in a big bowl using a wisk. Place in the refrigerator and wisk every 5-10 minutes until the mixture starts to solidify and form a gel. Then take one of your gel flasks that you use on your long runs ~ 8-9 ounce container. Pour in the Emergen-C packet and add JUST enough water to mix the Emergen-C powder. At this point, spoon in the Chia gel and shake. Experiment with the amount of water and Emergen-C to create the strength of flavor and gel consistency to your liking. Try it out on your next run.
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Long Run Endurance Myth

Endurance athletes and coaches usually say that they perform long workouts for three key reasons: to build strength, boost endurance and add volume to the overall training load, presumably leading to significant gains in physiological fitness. VO2max, for example, is generally considered to increase directly and predictably in response to increased training mileage. Unfortunately, these popular assumptions are slightly misleading. Taking the notion that long sessions build strength, for example, it is important to remember that strength is always speed-specific; that is, if you utilize slow movements in your effort to improve your strength, your strength will be improved during slow movements but not fast ones – and vice versa. Of course, long workouts are almost always carried out at moderate-to-low intensities and so, while they do build strength, it is not the kind of strength needed at competitive intensities, which tend to be high. For endurance runners, for example, even a prolonged event like the marathon is usually completed at an intensity of 85% VO2max-or-so – well above a typical long-run intensity of 70-75% VO2max. Long sessions primarily build the strength needed to complete more long sessions, not the strength needed during competition. A similar argument can be constructed against the belief that long efforts favor endurance. The problem is that endurance is also intensity-specific, and thus the building of endurance at prolonged-effort intensities does not ensure endurance at competitive intensities. Do long workouts work any better in relation to their third presumed benefit – of enhancing fitness via the volume effect? It would be nice to give prolonged efforts a glowing review in this area, but my most truthful and accurate answer would have to be: it depends. The problem is that the relationship between fitness and training volume is a perfect example of the law of diminishing returns; specifically, as volume increases to higher levels, the gains in fitness become smaller and smaller. Eventually, in fact, fitness does not respond at all to advances in volume. Thus, adding a two-hour workout to an existing eight-hour week wouldn’t do much for VO2max. Worse still, long workouts do little for lactate threshold, since they are conducted at below-lactate-threshold intensity, and they probably improve economy primarily at the relatively low intensities chosen for the long workouts. In addition, they are poor producers of power, and they offer true specific preparation only for ultra-type events. However, long workouts can work well if you are currently training well below your normal work load or a beginner to your sport. If you can add more to such a program without adding TOO much fatigue, you can probably upgrade your velocity at VO2max. Note, though, that there is no scientific evidence to support the idea that a two-hour workout is better than two separate one-hour sessions; in fact, one might argue that breaking a two-hour workout into one-hour chunks would actually be better, since it would permit higher average training intensities. To summarize, we can say that prolonged workouts are not actually necessary for optimizing VO2max; the process can occur without the need to have a ‘biggie’ in your workout bag. Perhaps the greatest benefit of long efforts is that they do steel the mind for exhausting exercise, and such preparation can be very useful in competitive situations. If during a long run you can keep on going at a reasonable pace when your mind and muscles are screaming ‘no’, your confidence in your toughness and ability will be enhanced, and you will be more likely to keep on going at the ends of tough races. This is done in the Specific Phase.
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This is what I mean by variety: just when your body is getting pretty smug about how fit it is getting, you pull the rug out from under it and give it something uniquely challenging. Instead of running the same hill at your best pace, for example, you turn on the heat with very short hill repetitions. Instead of focusing completely on the repetitive movements associated with running, you embark on an intense six-week program of whole-body proprioceptive work to improve your overall coordination and efficiency. Or, instead of relying on ‘tempo’ workouts to lift your lactate threshold, you substitute much shorter – but more intense – intervals to give your lactate-processing abilities a boost. Overall, you prod your body into continuing the improvement process instead of resting on its laurels. Note, however, that using variety in your training does not always mean making your workouts tougher; in fact, sometimes you should make them easier. Instead of your usual 60-minute run, you might go out for just 30 minutes; and instead of training for eight hours per week, you might cut back to four. Again, you are prodding your body into continuing its improvement, but this time you are doing so by letting it recover from the hard work you have done. In effect, the training stimulus is drastically reduced, but the stimulus to synthesize new things within your neuromuscular and cardiovascular systems is accentuated. A period of 5-7 days of very light training often does a great job of augmenting fitness; and you can add these periods of lightness to your training every 3-5 weeks, or whenever sluggishness and fatigue hang around for more than a day or so.
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As a runner, you are constantly confronted with a basic problem: there are literally dozens of different workouts to choose from, which differ dramatically from each other in nature, intensity, and duration. How is it possible to know which workout is the optimal one for a particular day? Take tomorrow, for example: are you really sure that your planned workout is the absolute-best option? Might it not be preferable to carry out a more prolonged session at a lower average intensity? Would your fitness profit to a greater extent from a shorter, more intense effort? Should you add a bit of strength training to your day’s effort? Spend the day cross-training instead of engaging exclusively in your preferred sport? The answers to these questions depend, of course, on what has gone before in your training schedule – and what you have planned for the future. Although single workouts can produce dramatic effects on fitness, they cannot be considered in isolation; they can synergize with other workouts in unique and positive ways, or they can ruin the progression to higher fitness because of the inappropriate way in which they are blended with their companion efforts. This unavoidable interdependence of training sessions means that it is seldom easy to answer the basic question about what to do on a given day. Finding the answer is a bit less difficult, however, if you bear in mind a few principles about what workouts actually do and how they react to each other. The first principle is that variety is incredibly good for athletes. If you do fairly similar things in training over extended periods of time, your body will adapt to the challenge you are giving it in a way which is specific to the challenge – and then will adapt no further. Once your body can respond to a particular workout with relative physiological ease, it will stop changing and improving; it will cease its efforts to make your heart bigger or your stockpiles of intramuscular aerobic enzymes greater, and it will stop the process of fine-tuning your nervous system so that your nerves do a better job of controlling movement patterns at the intensities you have selected for your workouts. Of course, you might say that all this is obvious – that everyone knows that training must be varied. If such awareness truly is universal, the gap between knowledge and action is a breathtaking chasm. In my years as a coach, I have noticed that the majority of athletes complete the same basic workouts month after month, year after year, and yet expect to achieve major breakthroughs in performance. When the breakthroughs do not occur (because the athletes’ bodies have adapted completely to the basic workout plan and have not been properly stimulated to tack on additional improvements), a typical response is to attempt to complete even more work, but of the same basic type. Unfortunately, this pursuit of volume at the expense of variety can often lead to overtraining and injury.
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