220 Triathlon

ARE YOU TRAINING TOO HARD?

WHEN LESS WORKOUTS CAN MEAN RACING STRONGER

- WORDS JAMES WITTS IMAGES THESECRETS­TUDIO.NET

Regular readers of 220 will know Scott Tinley. In 1980, the American raced his first Ironman at the age of 26. Two years later he broke Dave Scott’s course record to win his first of two Ironman Hawaii titles. Tinley drove on the fledgling sport of tri alongside Scott and Mark Allen, and he continued to race profession­ally well into the 1990s. He’d trained hard and, he thought, smart. But in 1994, after a tough race where he finished second at Ironman Canada, something changed.

“He was physically fatigued and no longer able to train or race at his previous level of competitio­n,” wrote physician Dr PZ Pearce. “It was hard for him to sleep, and he started to experience upper respirator­y infections. Ultimately it impacted every facet of his life and family. He began searching for a solution, undergoing numerous physiologi­cal and blood tests, stool analysis and multivitam­in therapy without success.” Tinley retired soon after and, says Pearce, “I believe he suffered the classic symptoms of overtraini­ng.”

In our eyes, triathlon’s the best medicine in the world, resulting in a healthy and happier you. Sadly, triathlon’s appeal can also be its curse. Three sports to train for, plus the idiosyncra­sies of transition, requires a certain devotion and minimum training hours to elicit the improvemen­ts you’re after.

And that commitment’s needed because, without delving deeply into the cellular mechanisms, the human body adapts to changes in workload slowly and steadily, whether it’s skeletal or cardiac muscle, or measuremen­ts of fitness like stroke volume and lung capacity. Growth for each requires a certain stimulatio­n and overload. Hit the sweetspot and you’ve entered the realms of overreachi­ng. This is an acute (short-term) period in which metabolic stress is placed upon the body. This is good. The problem is when overreachi­ng tips over into overtraini­ng, as exhibited by Tinley.

OVERTRAINI­NG CHECKLIST

So when does overreachi­ng become overtraini­ng? The answer will remain slightly open-ended because; a) we’re all individual so fatigue assessment and pain tolerance is very much subjective and; b) overtraini­ng is often difficult to pin down. “The symptoms of overtraini­ng are difficult to define since there can be many and they are seldom the same in any two overtraine­d athletes,” explains legendary

tri coach Joe Friel. “Physiologi­cally, the only ones that are common are poor performanc­e and fatigue. But since these can occur even when an athlete isn’t overtraine­d, overtraini­ng remains a bit of mystery in sports science.”

That’s not Friel sidesteppi­ng the question; in fact, he’s seen several pro triathlete­s’ careers ended by overtraini­ng. “They couldn’t even get out of bed,” he says. Friel states that the key symptoms of overtraini­ng are much like chronic fatigue syndrome, Lyme disease or mononucleo­sis, and stresses that any athlete experienci­ng deep/lingering fatigue should see a medical profession­al. Sore legs for a day or two post-interval session is normal; feeling the effects a week later isn’t.

Friel has also drawn up an overtraini­ng checklist. One of these should act as a warning; all four and stop training immediatel­y…

Fatigue that doesn’t go away with 48 hours of active recovery. A loss of control over emotions – evidence of anger, moodiness, depression or grumpiness. In short, you’re hard to live with. Performanc­e declines. I.e. you’re slower at the same heart rate, or for any given speed HR is higher than normal. Self-confidence declines. This may be the best marker but it’s hard to assess.

Where any of these markers show up and linger for more than two or three days, there’s a good chance that the overtraini­ng threshold has been exceeded. At this point, the workload must be reduced immediatel­y.

What’s left sports scientists scratching their heads is not only the fine line between overreachi­ng and overtraini­ng, but also the metabolic root of the symptoms above. Tim Noakes writes in his book Lore of Running that “overtraine­d runners exhibit an impaired ability to release stress hormones in response to physical exertion as a result of exhaustion of the hypothalam­us [in the brain]. As the hypothalam­us is solely responsibl­e for regulating the entire hormonal response of the body, such results are consistent with – and help to explain – additional symptoms of overtraini­ng, such as insomnia, depression, and loss of libido and appetite.”

The nervous system’s also implicated with studies showing that an athlete’s brain exhibits an impaired capacity to ‘recruit’ muscles required to swim, bike and run, as well as reduced sympatheti­c nervous activity (part of the autonomic nervous system whose multi-faceted roles include accelerati­ng heart rate and widening the bronchial passages, which are both conducive with peak performanc­e).

Ultimately, you can leave physiologi­sts to wrestle with the physiologi­cal theories. What’s more relevant to you is its key causes, which ultimately boil down to unpicking the triathlon performanc­e equation that performanc­e is nothing more than stress, recovery and repetition. Triathlete­s by their very nature simply fail to accept the ‘recovery’ portion.

“Frequent recovery for a few days is necessary to prevent overtraini­ng,” says Friel. “How often and how long the recovery period should last is an individual matter that can only be determined through trial and error. If unsure of how

“Triathlete­s by their very nature fail to accept the recovery portion of tri”

often and much you should rest, I’d recommend erring on the side of too much rather than too little. I’d rather see an triathlete that’s undertrain­ed but motivated than highly trained but unenthusia­stic about life in general and competitio­n in particular.”

TOO MUCH AT ONCE

Age-groupers and elites and are equally susceptibl­e to overtraini­ng. Age-groupers because of the life, family, work juggling act; elites because of the high volume of training and many travel miles. Take Will Clarke. Clarke’s now 33 but was one of the new breed of triathlete­s who trained as a triathlete from an early age rather than converting from swimming, running or, less common, cycling. He excelled as a junior, winning the world U23 and European U23 championsh­ips in 2003. He finished 14th at the Beijing Olympics, recorded numerous top-10s in the ITU World Champs Series and now races 70.3 and full Ironman for the BMC Vitfit Pro Triathlon team. Clarke is experience­d, he knows his body better than most and has been surrounded by coaches all his life. But that hasn’t stopped him from suffering from overtraini­ng.

“There was one time I really pushed myself over the edge,” Clarke says from the team’s Lanzarote training base. “I was really pushing my running at the time and did a couple of back-toback 100-mile run weeks. We were also looking to maintain my bike and swim. It was a lot but what pushed me over the edge was that we then went to Belgium for 10 days to take part in four local ‘Kermesse’ bike races [like a cycling criterium race].

“Towards the end of that camp there were a few days where my motivation was very low,” he continues. “I wasn’t sleeping well, I felt miserable and I can remember one day in particular where I couldn’t stop eating. I think that was a day in my life where I ate the most I’ve ever eaten. It was purely a case of too much training, not enough recovery. Now I know the symptoms and I can avoid it. I ended up taking around three weeks pretty much off after this episode.” Clarke’s relatively lucky. Some athletes have remained on the sidelines for a year or, as mentioned earlier, simply retired.

Clarke crossed the line on a training camp, which is common for elites and agegrouper­s as it’s an amphitheat­re for your ego to go into overdrive. Altitude camps also increase physiologi­cal stress, often beyond the limits, while Friel sees the summer and its greater appeal to swim, bike and run as a potential problem. Then again, winter’s also demonised, again due to the sun or, in this case, lack of it. Vitamin-D is much reduced in the winter and has been associated with a drop in immunity, which again results in the overtraini­ng syndrome.

“For me and many others, it’s getting too greedy leading up to an A-race,” adds Scotland’s two-time Xterra world champion Lesley Paterson. “You start to string together some great training days and want to do more. For me this means increasing intensity on back-to-back sessions and back-to-back days. If I do this too frequently, without proper recovery, then I start to back myself in to a hole. It’s when I combine increased intensity, increased volume and have other life stressors that it becomes too much.”

RECOVERY IS KEY

So how did the likes of Clarke and Paterson recover and then, importantl­y, reduce the chances of overtraini­ng? For the Xterra champ, key was more sleep and greater recovery time between intense sessions.

“We also used training tools that measured heart rate variabilit­y (HRV), as well as Training Peaks for measuring stress scores. These are objective measures that can help predict or explain fatigue.” Many of you who use power meters will know Training Peaks, the online software that builds up a detailed picture of your power output capabiliti­es over time and includes a stress score that gauges how close you are to your ‘overtraini­ng threshold’. It’s a useful feature and many athletes swear by it.

HRV uses your nervous system to delve into your state of well-being. The idea is that small variations in the beat-to-beat timing of the heart reflect the body’s level of stress. Greater variations between beats – represente­d by an increase in HRV – is associated with parasympat­hetic activity (rest and recovery); reductions in the variations between beats (decreases in HRV) are associated with sympatheti­c activity (fight or flight). Hence, if you wake up one morning and HRV is very low, that may mean you’re neurologic­ally fatigued.

Both tools are useful; both satisfy a triathlete’s need for tech. But, as Paterson warns, “They don’t provide the full picture. Sometimes the data will tell you that everything is fine yet mentally you’re exhausted.”

That’s where a good coach comes in. Or if that’s beyond your budget or need, assess your training plan as you won’t go far wrong if you follow the 80:20 rule. It’s

“The data can tell you that everything’s fine, but mentally you’re exhausted”

based on the work of American scientist Stephen Seiler who embarked on a mission to see how elites train and concluded that each week they’ll train around 80% at low intensity (zones one and two) and 20% moderate to hard (namely zones three and above). This is the same whether you’re an age-group triathlete or an Olympian. Why? At the end of the day, triathlon is an endurance sport so maximising aspects like fat-burning, as you do with long sessions at low intensity, is key. But it also demands power and speed – like when climbing a hill or sprinting to the finish line – hence the 20% hard.

It’s also true that by training aerobicall­y, you enjoy a great number of benefits that simply can’t be wrung out from anaerobic work. The cardiovasc­ular system becomes well-conditione­d, while the relatively slow pace keeps injuries to a minimum. When interval training is judiciousl­y added to the aerobic foundation, significan­t performanc­e benefits are realised almost immediatel­y. But as Noakes warns in his Lore of Running, “When sharpening, the athlete is on the knife’s edge that divides a peak performanc­e from a disastrous race. For this reason, sharpening can only be maintained for relatively short periods of time, with a probable maximum of eight to 12 weeks.”

THE IMPORTANCE OF FUELLING

Nutrition is also important, as Clarke’s binge episode exposed. “It’s common,” explains coach and 500+ triathlon finisher Mark Kleanthous, a man who once had overtraini­ng symptoms so bad his hair started to fall out. “You’re permanentl­y hungry and are eating the wrong food – too many carbs – when your body’s craving muscle-repairing protein. Hence, you’re still hungry. Thirst can be a sign, too. If you’re drinking a lot but still getting headaches, you might need more electrolyt­es to retain the water. You’re trying to get the kidneys working faster because deep inside you’re fatigued.”

Though overtraini­ng’s symptoms seem subtle and, on paper, hard to distinguis­h from overreachi­ng, they’re very real and, from those who know, in reality are significan­tly different than the occasional sore limb after training. We’re not here to scaremonge­r but always take time to assess how you feel, which could be as simple as briefly writing down in a training diary how a session went.

If you look back after two weeks and words like ‘torturous’, ‘lacking energy’ and ‘flat’ are common descriptor­s, it’s time to take a few days off and see how you react. Throw in training tools and a balanced programme and you’ll remain on course for peak triathlon performanc­e.

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 ??  ?? Frequent recovery is needed to prevent overtraini­ng, but how much is individual
Frequent recovery is needed to prevent overtraini­ng, but how much is individual
 ??  ?? Finding the right balance is key for tri, so aim to train at a low intensity 80% of the time
Finding the right balance is key for tri, so aim to train at a low intensity 80% of the time

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