Updated
January 22, 2016
| By Bob Fugett
Ultimate Fast Paced Training Program
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Here is the ultimate fast paced master class guide for performance training. It
outlines the basis of all training guides.
In summary: ATP takes the sprint, Glycogen takes the hill, and Fat takes the
day.
Use this page to skip generic one
size fits all low level training programs and quickly put together your own high
level precision program specifically designed to meet your own particular goals
and potential.
This is going to go quick so clip in.
Below is a table that outlines your body's three (3) energy systems which provide
your power and speed in all sports.
Substances your body makes use of are:
1) ATP 2) Glycogen 3) Fat
(Put aside CP for the moment.)
You will note the table is organized according to elapsed time.
ATP is where the rubber meets the road by providing immediate conversion to
power, but it only lasts a few seconds.
Glycogen is less powerful but lasts longer, up to a couple of minutes
without oxygen then a couple minutes more with oxygen required.
Fat is even less powerful but lasts a lot longer, the typical human has
enough fat stored to run across America (even before the obesity epidemic).
These three systems require different amounts of oxygen to function.
ATP requires zero (0) oxygen, that is to say it can function anaerobically
(without oxygen).
Glycogen uses oxygen to transform into ATP but can go for awhile without it by
establishing an oxygen debt that must be repaid.
Fat needs oxygen from the git-go.
ATP takes the sprint, Glycogen takes the hill, and Fat takes the day.
The main strategy in cycling sport (which is a team sport by the way) is to
trick opponents into using their most powerful assets ATP and Glycogen early in
a ride without noticing.
Actually Glycogen is the target depletion, because ATP can be restored
somewhat during a ride, but when Glycogen is gone it takes 48 hours to recover,
and if you are not careful it can be gone in the first 10 minutes.
Don't worry about losing your fat, you are plenty fat enough.
Tricking unwary opponents into overworking is quite easy to do, because until
the moment ATP and Glycolytic systems are on the verge of failure the perceived
effort is almost nil.
In fact just before failure there is a little whiff of euphoria that helps
push people over the edge.
Using a power meter I have easily shown a 59 year old woman with significant hip dysfunction
who was also just recovering from a broken
leg how insanely effortless a 425 watt
performance can seem.
I said, "They will get you to do it, and you won't even know the effort
occurred, but let me tell you, your body will record it."
In any case (back to the point) each system is trained by performing activities that stress
its use.
Your body will learn to use ATP more efficiently if you practice sprints and
short ultra hard efforts.
Your glycolytic system improves through longer near maximum efforts.
Your fat burning system adapts to long steady efforts.
Here is the wiki:
5-12 seconds max sprints - ATP (strength) 45-60 seconds near max - Glycogen
(pace) 2-4 minutes strong efforts - Fat (distance)
These areas are most efficiently trained by focusing on one at a time and
performing multiple repeats of the appropriate effort with rest intervals in
between —which resets your ability to perform.
You need lots and lots of rest, and water too, but not much food (probably no
supplements at all), and certainly no drugs.
Kind of as an aside, strength training will increase mitochondria density
while distance training will increase capillary beds and all of it will increase
biochemical efficiencies, but that is beyond the scope of this discussion so
look it up later.
The duration values in the table reveal that there is no hard cut-off point but
overlapping transitions from one system to another.
An overarching organization can be viewed as the requirements of oxygen
intake.
Without oxygen (hold your breathe if you want) ATP is soon aided by CP
which provides the transition to Glycogen which will then tide you over through
an oxygen debt until your body positively demands oxygen, and lots of it if you
are trying to catch
me.
Progressively each of the systems enlists a new set of processes that steals time
away from
the overall results.
That is to say: you are going to slow down over time, no question about it.
Strength work is anaerobic, while pace quickly becomes aerobic, and distance work is
aerobic without breathing so hard.
Glycogen is best preserved by a gradual buildup in effort over a 20 to 40
minute period called a warmup.
If you skip the warmup your glycogen stores can be gone in as little as 10
minutes and that means no hills in your pocket and no sprint on your record.
Ever wonder why the fastest riders always seem to show up at the ride having
already put in a few miles then go easy on the back drafting for awhile?
Now you know why.
Moving on: in order to track your gains in each area you need an objective reliable
repeatable measurement, and nothing comes closer to direct measurement in
cycling than an on-bicycle power meter, and the most proximate measurement of
applied force at the pedals comes from a Powertap's measurement of
Torque.
Write down the results of your workouts so you can review and compare results
in order to get better over the years instead of staying just like you started—or rather not staying the
same but getting worse and blaming it on age—as do most people you know.
You may have realized that track and field races are organized according to
the durations given in the table above.
Look up world records for the 100 yard dash, quarter mile, the mile, and 10,000 meters
These distances are not accidental, and now you know why it is the fastest that a human
could run a mile was so hard to get under 4:00 minutes, and why it will never
be under 3:00 minutes.
In fact the parameters for human performance are so close and predictable
that sport spectacles have resorted to pretending how beating another human being by
as little as a 100th of a second is a world shattering achievement.
Now go back to any (and I mean absolutely any) training program you may have
heard about or participated in and review it keeping in mind the basics outlined
above.
Shocking isn't it?
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