2 Questions For You
I.
What specific environmental triggers cause you to override your planned training during summer months, and how might you create safety nets to manage these triggers?
II.
What metrics, subjective and objective are most useful in tracking fatigue levels during this period. How can you use them to create mechanisms that safeguard your progress and avoid a fatigue cycle?
1 Real-World Example
A masters cyclist consistently experienced mid-summer performance plateaus and dips, despite maintaining or increasing training volume with the longer days.
We found that the cause was a big change in intensity at the start of each spring/summer season as the opportunities for midweek races came along with longer or harder weekend events.
Everyone is different but in this case, with a very strong tendency towards endurance fitness and limited capacity to work at higher intensities, he just wasn't getting enough recovery between the high intensity work.
To continue enjoying these fun events it was necessary to backoff significantly on volume to allow good recoveries. Sometimes accepting that he couldn't do everything.
Surprisingly, it may seem, this resulted in an overall improvement in performance due to the block of specific, high intensity work after a solid endurance phase over the winter.
As things stabilised and he got used to the types of intensity, we were able to build a sustainable routine, reintroducing training volume to a higher level and ultimately progressing towards some very impressive performances in his main goal events.
Book a free consultation with us to develop a personalized approach that works with your physiology rather than against it. Just like with David, our masters cyclist described above, the insights from our discussions could transform your approach to training and performance. Just click this link or the button below to arrange a time that is convenient for you.