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Joe Friel's Blog is for the serious endurance athlete who wants to stay current on the science and art of training for sport. Here you will find Joe Friel's thoughts and ideas before they are published anywhere else. You may also visit www.TrainingBible.com for more detailed and free content.
The new blog is at www.joefrielsblog.com. It includes a new, cleaner look and added features to bring you even more resources.
This is the last of 6 parts on how I coach novice athletes. Note that in the other 5 I have occasionally offered comments on how what I do with novices varies from the way I train advanced or experienced athletes. This last topic is clearly in that area.
6. Anaerobic Endurance. This is the training ability that has the greatest risk-reward associated with it. Doing workouts in this category have been shown to greatly improve aerobic capacity (VO2max), lactate/anaerobic threshold, and economy. And those are the big 3 when it comes to fitness. Lots of reward. But also lots of risk. Injury, illness, and burnout can all result from a steady diet of anaerobic endurance (AE) training. This is the most challenging workout the athlete can do, and since most serious athletes are of the "never enough" mindset, they often take this to the extreme.
So the bottom line is that it is highly unusual for me to have novice athletes do AE workouts. In fact, I can't recall having any do it, but it may have happened a long time ago. If so, someone would bring it to my attention, I'm sure. I seldom have experienced triathletes do AE training also. And then primarily those who are seeking to compete at the highest level at the shorter distances. I have on a few occasions had pro long-course triathletes do shortened versions of AE workouts to bump up their fitness in the late Base period. But this is rare.
For experienced road cyclists AE training is critical to success. Road races often come down to 2- to 3-minute episodes that determine the final selection (the break that succeeds). These episodes are played out on climbs and when there are strong cross winds or when a team is clearly superior. Motivation plays a big role in doing such hard workouts. You have to get "up" for the workout well in advance. This is why road cyclists like to do their group rides. These are usually mini-races made up of lots of AE efforts.
So what is an AE workout? There are many, many variations. Here is the most basic:
Labels: anaerobic endurance, novices, reward, risk, VO2max
7 Comments:
Thanks for a great series of posts.
-Mike
Can we count a crit as an AE workout?
Can we count a crit as an AE workout?
Ed--Yep
Joe, you the man! Thanks for your great summary of the abilities. And especially thanks for answering so many questions--even during vacation. Enjoy your time in Oslo.
Joe. Thank you for your insight. It is helping me along my journey to an IM 70.3 coming up. My question: What about core work? How important is it and what sort of exercises do you suggest?
David--Good question. I didn't address that but should have. For the athlete with weak core muscles this is limiting their transfer of power and, on the bike, how agressively they can be fit. It needs to be worked on year round. I have my clients see a physio I work with to assess this (among other things). Then we decide on a program to correct the weakness.
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