Things That Keep Us From Reaching Our Full Potential
Solutions for Achieving Your Full Potential
Why Goals Are Useless
Training Programs
Phase 5 – Week 1 – Re-Evaluate Strength, Endurance & Lactate Tolerance
Weekly Synopsis
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Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Plyometric Assessment | Rower: 1000 Meter Time Trials | Bike or Row: Active Recovery (40-45′)
MX: Aerobic #1 | Bike Assessment: 10-Mile Time Trial | Rest Day | MX: Speed Assessment
2 Hour Nap | Push-Pull-Sprint Speed Assessment
2 Hour Nap |
Attached are your P5 Testing, training and daily nutritional protocols for next week. Please review each day closely. With the intensity being high numerous times during the week, it is imperative that you come into each day well fed, hydrated and rested. In order for you to determine your percentage of improvement over your phase four assessments, we need your body and your brain (mental focus) on point. Testing a fatigued body doesn’t reflect the fitness and performance abilities, it simply tests your ability to get injured.
Importance of a Strength and Aerobic Bases
At this point in your program, I want you to stop and think about all of the elements that have contributed to your current level of speed? The answer to this question is a solid aerobic base complemented with a strong physical strength base. When you are strong, you produce the “force” necessary to get up to speed and maintain. Your aerobic engine has developed in two ways: first, your heart now pumps more blood per beat than it did three months ago. Second, you have created more capillary beds within the muscles. These capillary beds are the channels for fresh oxygenated blood to efficiently get to your working muscles along with providing channels for the dissipation of lactic acid (the by-product of burning stored sugar in your muscles and liver).
With this in mind, mentally embrace your blue-aerobic enhancement workouts displaced throughout your training week. When you realize that your speed is a result of your aerobic training for the last three months, think where your speed will be three months from now if you keep developing on par! Like I have mentioned before, your potential as an athlete is only limited by injury, illness or over-training (in regards to both volume and/or intensity). Though completing speed work is an adrenaline rush, please keep your weekly volume of high intensity training under control by adhering to the volume and intensity as outlined within your training schedule. By documenting your body analysis information, updating your heart rate spreadsheets weekly, and paying attention to your energy levels and performance results as it relates to your food and fluid intake, you will stay on a continual path of improved performance. Remember, stay focused on the blueprint that has gotten you this level of performance – make adjustments to keep improving and ignore negative people that train without purpose and/or focus.
Another set of tools to help you Work Smart, Not Hard and Avoid Overtraining!
Yours in sport & health,
-Coach Robb, Coaches and Staff
Thought for the week:
“Results are the meals of champions”
— Donald Kircher, Executive