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Archive for posts Tagged 'off season'

Anyone Know a Good Mojo Doctor?

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Friday, November 6th, 2009 in Tri Harder

I think my mojo is afraid of H1N1.

That’s the only reason I can think of that explains my mojo’s obvious absence. I have no interest in blogging (obviously) or coaching; personal training is slow and I don’t even care; I haven’t even wanted to do a cyclocross race since Capital Cup (although I’m doing one this weekend–an avondcross!); my cycling classes are boring and I don’t want to be there; I haven’t swam in who the hell knows how long. My mojo is definitely on hiatus. Maybe it went to someplace tropical; maybe I can go visit it there.

You know what I’ve been doing a lot of, though? Running.

Of all things, right? Anyone remember when I hated running, when those were the only workouts I ever skipped, when I did an Olympic tri without having ever run more than 4.5 miles? Apparently, those days are over. I love running.

And I’d love to tell everyone how that happened (because I know I’m not the only one who’s struggled with serious resentment towards one of our three sports), but I can’t. Because I have no idea how it happened. Maybe it’s like an arranged marriage–you spend enough time together, eventually you find love.

Anyway, if anyone knows a good mojo doctor, let me know. Otherwise, I’ll just be waiting for this mojo affliction to run it’s course. I’m sure that as the off-season progresses and I start reading about this race and that race and his plans and her plans, my mojo will take tentative steps back from Fiji or wherever it’s gone.

General, motivation, reflection, off season  #

Remiss

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Friday, October 30th, 2009 in Tri Harder

That is what I have been. Remiss.

Not so much as a peep from me in a full week! I’m sorry!

To those of you who are awaiting response from me re: free coaching, I will e-mail before the weekend is out.

For those who have asked for a new spinning podcast, it is in the works (up in Garage Band as we speak)!

For those of you who have no requirements from me except for entertaining and informative reading . . . well, my endurance faculties seem to be hibernating. And my work schedule is cuh-razy. Seriously. I get off work at 3 p.m. today and it’s *still* a 10-hour workday.

BUT! If you’d like to read what I’m reading (and some comments, besides), you can take a look at my Tumblr page: http://trihardist.tumblr.com/. On that site, I post articles that I read and find interesting, things that I think may be helpful, entertaining, or otherwise encouraging for my fellow athletes.

You can also follow me on Twitter. And between those two things, you can keep up with me (if you want to, although I must warn you that I’m not all that interesting) until I regain my blogging mojo.

Thank you for reading! And keep your eyes peeled for the latest installment in my one-on-one cycling workouts!

General, link, podcast, off season, update  #

The Next Step: Single-Sport Focus

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Tuesday, September 15th, 2009 in Tri Harder

 
This is the standard view for me when riding with the full-time cyclists.

You are a triathlete. That means you train for three sports simultaneously. You are (as one of my friends once put it) striving to be solidly mediocre in three sports. That means that when you pit yourself up against dedicated swimmers, focused cyclists, and well-trained runners, you are probably going to come up short. Why? Because you’re not trying to be the best swimmer, biker, or runner; you’re trying to be the best triathlete.

But when the triathlon season is over, there’s no reason to continue to pursue adequate mediocrity in three sports at once. Why not focus on just one sport, and get really, really good at it? What if you can make your “solidly mediocre” as good as a single-sport athletes‘ top performance?

It was this step, more than any other, that brought me more success as a multisport athlete. Running was always my weakness. I didn’t like it; I didn’t want to do it; it was my primary limiter in every race I did.

But I signed up for a half marathon anyway. And then I did another one. And somewhere in that training to go long, I encountered a runner within myself that I didn’t know existed. I started to enjoy running, to look forward to it, to consider myself a runner. Of course, once the triathlon season came back around, I became (once again) a triathlete. But the hard work I’d put in and the improvement I’d seen stuck around, and by this season, I was running 8:30/mile instead of 9:20.

My guess is that for most triathletes who weren’t previously athletic, running is the limiter. If you came from a running or cycling background, swimming is probably your biggest struggle. If cycling is your weakness, that’s completely legitimate, too. Whatever your weakest sport is, you need to figure that out (I bet you already know it, if you think about it). My recommendation to you is that you do an end-of-season focus on that sport.

The alternative to choosing your weakness is to choose what you like. You probably won’t see as much benefit going into next season, as far as catching up to your competition, but you will still come back stronger, more capable, and more confident in your abilities. Last year, I focused on a half marathon at the end of the season, and it saw my average speed drop by 50-60 seconds per mile; this season, I’m focusing on cyclocross and group riding, and I think by the end of next season, I can easily be averaging 22 MPH. That’s not going to provide as great an edge as if I were to drop my run times by another 30 seconds per mile. But cyclocross is fun and I’m enjoying racing with my cycling team. (FYI, I’m planning to do a half marathon and marathon after the cyclocross season).

Once you figure out which sport you’re going to focus on, here’s what you do:

Swim: Find a swim meet in your area or close enough to drive to. Determine which events you’ll compete in. Challenge yourself! Don’t do three long-distance freestyle events; try the 100 breaststroke, or the 200 IM. Developing your skills in the other competitive swim strokes will give you more overall strength and confidence in the coming year, as well as balance out your muscular engagement (which will reduce your chance of shoulder injury).

From there, you have two options: join a masters swim team and work with them on preparing to race your target meet, or prepare on your own. If you’re going to prepare on your own, you need to make a plan. It could be as simple as committing to swim 5 days a week; it could be as involved as building a periodized schedule with weekly yardage and daily training objectives. Read up on swimming–coaching techniques, tapering, stroke mechanics, and so on. The more you learn about your swim stroke from this phase, the more you’ll have to bring into your next tri season. If you’re going with a masters group, be sure your coach knows about your plans and goals; he or she might not write up a whole plan for you, but you’ll get some more specific help in workouts, and maybe even some workouts written with you especially in mind.

Bike: Again, you pick an event. It might be a race. It might be a series of races. It might be a tour; check at a local bike shop, as they’ll usually have flyers up, or will at least know the cycling scuttlebutt. Whatever your event, commit to it (psst: that means go ahead and register!). Once you’ve chosen what to do, start riding with a group. Start with a casual, local ride; again, check with a local bike shop. Be sure to ascertain what kind of pace the group keeps (you need to be able to hang in) and what kind of purposes the ride serves. If you’re racing (as opposed to doing a long tour), I highly recommend you find a friend who’s into the cycling scene and has some experience with racing. Cycling races aren’t quite as beginner-friendly (and not nearly as welcoming) as triathlons. Be prepared for that.

Commit yourself to getting out of your comfort zone. If you’re used to riding triathlon-style, you probably prefer to train by yourself. You’re not necessarily used to hanging in a draft; you don’t often need to feel responsible for holding your line. These are things that are valuable for a triathlete to learn and be comfortable with, just likes it’s beneficial to be able to swim all four competitive strokes (yes, even butterfly).

Run: This is probably the easiest of the three to focus on in the off-season. You have a few options available to you as far as how you pursue this emphasis, but all of them start with the same basic premise: choose an event! Maybe you want to gun for a PR at the mile, 5k, or 10k distances. Maybe you want to run your first marathon or half marathon. Maybe you want to try something new, like trail running. Whichever it is, choose an event and commit to it (yep, that means register)!

If you’re prepping for a PR, you should already have run the distance you’ll be gunning for. You should have an appropriate base of distance built up. And you should already have been working in some intensity (i.e. sprints, intervals, track work). Set up a detailed plan with a couple of speed workouts a week, a long run that isn’t more than 50% of your weekly volume, and some cross-training. If you’re looking for speed, I recommend 5 days of running per week; if you’re not running at least 4, are you really doing a single-sport focus?

If you’re shooting for your first half marathon or marathon, it’s all about building distance slowly and safely. Otherwise you get hurt. Plan on 3-5 days of running per week, with at least 2 days of cross-training. Look not so much at daily volume as weekly volume, especially at the beginning. The long run becomes all-important eventually, but at first you need to accustom your body to taking so many miles. When in doubt, take it slow. Never increase weekly mileage by more than 10%; never increase your longest run by more than 10%. And don’t do all your mileage in one big, long run!

The main physiological benefit you derive from a single-sport focus (in my opinion) is putting in all the time. Because you’re not dividing yourself (at least) three ways (we’re not even getting into weight lifting, flexibility, yoga, and bricks), you have a lot more time and energy to devote to quality workouts in a single sport. And that leads to big improvement fast.

But equally important is the psychological benefit–you become more confident. I went last year from claiming that my strength was transitions to firmly believing “I am a runner!” And the same will happen to you, whether you choose to spend this season focusing on swimming, biking, or running (or something else entirely; why not focus on weight lifting or yoga?).

So. Which one will you be doing?

General, Training, improvement, advice, focus, off season  #

Why Yes, I DO Know Better

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Tuesday, August 25th, 2009 in Tri Harder

I have one more race left for the triathlon season. Redman sprint. USAT Club Nationals. Hoping to win my age group and get good points for my team, KSRVTC. May be just on the edge of a realistic goal. I haven’t won first at any race except Emporia, and the field is so small that I don’t know how I’ll measure up at a bigger race.

But that’s not what I want to talk about.

Here’s the thing: at the end of the tri season, most of us start focusing on a single sport, yes? We start planning for a fall half or a spring marathon. We target 5ks and 10ks with hopes of a new PR. We do cyclocross or masters swim meets (actually, does anyone actually focus on swimming competitively in the off-season?). Triathletes are very good at multi-tasking. The whole point of the sport is to be solidly mediocre in three different sports. Focusing on a single sport for a while allows us to get ahead for next season, make our solidly mediocre a little better than everyone else’s solidly mediocre.

Make sense?

The point is that when you focus on one sport, you can come much closer to your potential than when you’re trying to get better at three sports at once.

So I have two goals for this off-season: Podium in the DeStad Cyclocross series (and, again, I’m not sure if that’s even a realistic goal; I feel like I have it in me) and break 7 minutes in the mile.

In other words, I have high-performance goals in two separate sports.

Yes, yes. I do know better.

I know that I can’t reach my ultimate potential in both sports simultaneously. I’ve got these two different training plans–one chock full of power intervals on the bike, the other chock full of speed intervals on the run–and I’m trying to juggle the two. Putting these two single-sport training plans is ludicrous. Ridiculous. And (quite possibly) futile. And I know better! But I’m still gonna try it. Oh! And I’m going to keep doing masters swim as (erm) “cross-training.”

I am, in other words, soooooo a triathlete.

General, Bike, Run, Training, humor, off season  #

Pre-Race: Derby Rec Center Indoor Tri (’09)

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Tuesday, January 20th, 2009 in Tri Harder

Admittedly, it’s a little early in the week for a pre-race article (entry? column? what the heck do I call these things, anyway?).

But I’m just so darn excited.

First race of the year. First triathlon of 2009. First triathlon with no Bush (in the White House, that is).

Can’t even tell you. I’m so stoked.

General, Race, off season, wichita  #

Bike-o-Latte: “The baseline is alive!”

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Tuesday, January 6th, 2009 in Tri Harder

http://bike-o-latte.blogspot.com/2009/01/baseline-is-alive.html
I’ve been having trouble with motivation. Haven’t wanted to do much of anything the past couple weeks. Maybe it’s the winter doldrums. Maybe it’s that I haven’t really raced in a while. Maybe it’s the feeling of restlessness related to the knowledge that my current location is not permanent.

Whatever it is, after reading Bike-o-Latte’s post on re-building the base, I feel a little bit more fired up to go out and just get ‘er done. Hope it helps you too!

General, Cycling, link, motivation, off season  #

Sabbatical

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Monday, December 29th, 2008 in Tri Harder

 

Give me ’til New Year’s, kiddies.

It’s not that I’m busy. Just highly unmotivated.

General, motivation, rest, off season  #

Reset

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Monday, December 1st, 2008 in Tri Harder

Starting to get little, niggling feelings in the back of my head. Like worms are nibbling on the base of my brain.

I got so burned out and tired at the end of this season–due in part, I’m sure, to the crazy hours I was keeping and the crazy responsibilities I took on at work–that I haven’t even wanted to think about next year. In fact, I wasn’t sure I would still want to race in 2009. Maybe it was time for a change. Give tri a break. Do just biking. Or just running. Or something completely different.

So I started to get back into climbing (long story, but there’s a girl involved). I’d go to the Kansas Cliff Club (local indoor climbing gym) once or twice a week and spend 2 or 3 hours climbing and belaying (and getting nowhere with said girl, ahem).

Thing is, climbing is one of those all-or-nothing things, at least around here. Because if you’re going to be into climbing and live in a state where there is absolutely no significant climbing available within a 6 hour drive, you’ve got to be really serious about it. Because it’s not like you can just drive to the nearest good climbing (in Arkansas, by the way) on a whim.

But I am not hardcore about climbing. At all. In fact, I don’t think I even really like it, right now (even with the love interest). You know what I like? Swimming. Biking. And–yeah–I really like running. I like doing those three things more than I like climbing or lifting weights or even doing yoga. And I don’t know why I like those three things so much, but I fully intend to keep doing them.

Which has got me thinking about next season.

General, Goals, Race, purpose, off season  #

2008 Season Recap: What I’ve Done

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Monday, October 6th, 2008 in Tri Harder

Last tri of the season is in the bag. Here’s a look back at the season that was.

I did my first half marathon.

I won my first real first place.

I got certified as an NSCA trainer.

I got my average swim time under 2:00/100 M.

I improved my butterfly.

I actually started using flip turns in workouts.

I got my body fat under 25%.

I got a little start on my six-pack :-) .

I broke an 8-minute mile.

I dropped a jeans size (or two, depending on where I shop).

I started making enough money to live on.

Even though it’s been a tough season, a long road, with a difficult job and very little free time, I look back on this season and I’m happy with what I’ve done.

May next year take us all even further.

General, improvement, purpose, reflection, off season  #

The Dumbass Chronicles

By jamielynnmorton@gmail.com on Wednesday, October 1st, 2008 in Tri Harder

Speed Racer once commented that I should write a post about how to properly perform a lat pull-down so as not to simultaneously embarrass yourself and completely ruin your shoulders. And since the season is mostly over, and we’re all thinking about transitioning from roads, lakes, and trails to spinning classes, treadmills, and weights, what better time to begin a new series?

A series that will teach you, in no uncertain terms, how not to be a dumbass at the gym

Seriously. Do you really want the personal trainers at the gym giggling as they walk past you, wondering WTF kind of move you’re doing? Do you want to be the person who can clear the weights area out by their very presence?


No. You do not. So prepare to be snarked into appropriate gym etiquette and proper weight-lifting technique. We’ll begin next time with our collective favorite: the lat pull-down.

General, weight training, off season, biomechanics  #

Sunday in the Park with . . a Bike

By vienna63 on Sunday, February 24th, 2008 in MICHAEL'S SWIM-BIKE-RUN ADVENTURES

A couple of days ago we finally had some serious snow here in New York. Today I woke up to beautiful sunshine. So we headed out for a nice two hour walk through Prospect Park. The snow was cleared of all the main roads, but still looked great on the me…

General, Cycling, off season  #

Back On Track

By vienna63 on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in MICHAEL'S SWIM-BIKE-RUN ADVENTURES

Life Happens, that pretty much sums up the last few weeks. While my plan was all along to take it easy during January, the unexpected news that we signed a contract to buy a new place here in Brooklyn, the fact that we have put our current home on the …

General, Training, off season  #

A Year without Banana Republic

By vienna63 on Monday, January 14th, 2008 in MICHAEL'S SWIM-BIKE-RUN ADVENTURES

I looked into my closet recently, and though admittedly our Brooklyn home is not blessed with ambple closet space, it was stuffed with things and it dawned on me that I own clothes to last me through the next administration. So, I figured what better w…

General, off season  #

Happy New Year!

By vienna63 on Monday, January 14th, 2008 in MICHAEL'S SWIM-BIKE-RUN ADVENTURES

Boy, time sure flies when you are not focusing on training and racing. Well, we had a great holiday, then after Christmas flew across the country to spend time at our little vacation home in Palm Springs. My daughter Kiera really loved the daily playti…

General, travel, off season  #

:Rev: :Rev: :Vroooom:

By Trihardist on Friday, January 4th, 2008 in Tri Harder

I got my February issue of Triathlete this week. Normally, I would have torn straight through it by now.But I’ve barely read five pages.Part of the reason is that, as we all know, Triathlete has become ridiculously populated with advertisements. Seri…

General, Training, focus, reflection, off season  #

Doing Nothing In Cancun

By vienna63 on Tuesday, December 4th, 2007 in MICHAEL'S SWIM-BIKE-RUN ADVENTURES

80+ degree weather and a sensible conference schedule awaited me here in Cancun. I am enjoying the sun and the beach, went on a short excursion to Tulum and mostly focused on my work and conference schedule, as well as dinners, reception and other fun …

General, travel, off season  #

Youch!

By Trihardist on Wednesday, November 28th, 2007 in Tri Harder

I never thought the easy workouts would be the end of me.Since the Genesis Multisport Club is on break until January, I reserved the climbing wall for us last night, as a kind of fun, social workout. During this easy workout, I was trying to master a …

General, injury, pain, off season  #

The Surge

By Trihardist on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Tri Harder

Thanksgiving is over (and happy Thanksgiving to you all!), and with this landmark holiday behind me, I find myself wanting to start base training. Immediately. Tomorrow. Time to work that weight off, dial in the nutrition (I’ve been prepping my nutr…

General, winter, reflection, off season  #

Race Report: Turkey Trot

By Trihardist on Monday, November 19th, 2007 in Tri Harder

Well, my race this weekend was nowhere near what Bill went through. The Wichita Turkey Trot involves either a 2 or 10 mile jaunt through Wichita’s Riverside area. Lovely parks and paths, it’s the perfect setting for a fun, late-season race (there are…

General, Race Report, Race, pain, off season, wichita  #

Off-Season Overlap

By Trihardist on Tuesday, October 30th, 2007 in Tri Harder

Did I mention that I work at an indoor rock climbing wall, in addition to teaching group fitness and coaching triathlon? Well I do. Which is great. I love climbing, I haven’t been able to do it for a while, and it gives me a way to stay active in th…

General, Swim, Cross Training, advice, weight training, off season  #

So What’s the Plan, Stan?

By Trihardist on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in Tri Harder

With my first half marathon under my feet and the Genesis Multisport Club going strong, it’s time to turn my attention to my second (third?) triathlon season. I feel like I’ve got a really good handle on how to plan a season, how to periodize my train…

General, Goals, Race, Planning, improvement, focus, dream, off season  #

So What’s Next

By Trihardist on Friday, July 13th, 2007 in Tri Harder

My triathlon season is officially over, now (although I’ve seriously considered looking for another race in the next few months). I’ve been racing since February, and have done something like half a dozen races here and there. And I feel like, for my…

General, Nutrition, food, Goals, Technique, improvement, protein, reflection, off season  #