Triathlon Magazine Canada

A RUN-FOCUSED FALL

- BY DR. CINDY LEWIS-CABALLERO

THROUGHOUT 2020, TRAINING plans have been modified in focus and structure several times to work around the cancellati­on and rescheduli­ng of races. Since endurance fitness is built year over year rather than in a few short months, hopefully you have been using this year to continue preparing for success in 2021.

Fall is a great time to put extra focus on one of the three sports. This leads to overall improvemen­t in triathlon, because it’s hard to improve significan­tly in all three sports at the same time once you have achieved a certain level of fitness. This doesn’t mean dropping the other two, but focusing your key workouts on building fitness in one discipline.

In this case, we are talking about building your running capacity and dropping the intensity and volume slightly for swimming and cycling. Be prepared to lose a little bit of fitness in the other two, but that’s OK – you will build that back when you start a more balanced training program.

So, become a runner for the next eight to 12 weeks. Becoming a runner just means backing down on the cycling volume and intensity for two to three training blocks and focusing key workouts on the run. The gains you make will carry forward to next season and ultimately make you a faster runner off the bike.

Here’s how to switch gears, assuming you have been doing your triathlon training (including a properly built-up triathlon-based run training plan) throughout the spring and summer, and have a big foundation to build on. (If your training was completely derailed due to the pandemic uncertaint­y, you need to go into the run focus a little more gently, building more run volume rather than speed and strength right away.)

Start with a baseline test of your run fitness, strengths and weaknesses. This will give you something to build on and a baseline for comparison a couple months down the road.

One way to do this a 1-mile time trial and a 5-km time trial run test. Record your times and average heart rates for each. Compare the two and analyze how many “gears” you have on the run. The objective is to “stretch your elastic” – you want to have a big gap between what your hard, shorter distance pace and heart rate are, and what your 5-km pace and heart rate are. The results of your 1-mile and 5-km tests will show you where you need to focus your training.

If there is a big gap between your 1-mile and your 5-km pace, focus your training on holding those faster paces longer, building endurance and strength, by running progressiv­ely longer intervals and tempo runs. If there is very little difference between your 1-mile and 5-km pace, your focus will be on building speed and anaerobic resilience by working on short and fast interval training.

Repeat your 5-km time trial after eight to 12 weeks of training to gauge your improvemen­t. Keep up your ride and swim workouts, but decrease the amount of time spent and reduce the intensity. Think of them as cross-training and active recovery for the run. You won’t lose much fitness and will have lots of time to gain it back, and more, once your run focus is over. Remember the 15 to 20 per cent per week rule. The combinatio­n of run volume and intensity should not increase more than this on a week to week basis for a safe build to avoid injury. Continue (or start) doing run-specific stability and strength work using TRX or body weight with bands, and include foam rolling to maintain healthy soft tissues as you ramp up your intensity.

Here is an example of what your training week might look like during the run focus:

Monday: Leg rest day. This is a good day for core strength, stretching and/or swimming. Think “active recovery” from your long run over the weekend.

Tuesday: Run workout: Intervals. The duration of these intervals will depend on where you need to focus, as determined by your baseline test. If you are trying to find and develop your high-end speed (for example, if you don’t have much of a gap between your 1-mile and your 5-km time trial), you might start with 100- or 200-m intervals with lots of rest to build in that extra speed. If you are trying to take the high-end speed that you already have and translate that into a faster 5 km or longer, you may start with 800 m, 1,000 m or even mile repeats with less rest.

Wednesday: Cycling, active recovery, zone 1 or 2. Try some low cadence intervals without increasing the intensity to slow things down and work on increasing muscle fibre activation and efficiency. This day can also include an easy zone 1 or 2 run to add to your run volume.

Thursday: strength run.

Run workout:

Tempo or

hilly

On

Bang & Olufsen Collaborat­ion

For the launch of the new Cloudboom, On worked with Danish audio giant Bang & Olufsen, which released a special version of its first true wireless sport earphones, the Beoplay E8 Sport On Edition. The new headphones come with a compact, anodized aluminum wireless charging case that add 30 hours of charging time to the seven hours of listening time available with the headphones. The earphones feature ridged grips, so it’s easy to make adjustment­s even when your fingers are wet and sticky – a simple swipe of your finger can switch tracks, take calls or activate “Transparen­cy Mode.” These minimalist headphones make a perfect training companion for the minimalist Cloudboom.

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