SuperTour Cross Country Ski National Champs and Olypmic Qualifiers are Here

We at Silver Sage Sports Performance Center and o2fitness are pleased to support and sponsor the SuperTour. We will be hosting several presentations over the two week schedule of events, including Hydration and Nutrition for Skiing, Techniques of the Pros, and Off-Snow Stability and Mobility Strategies for Improved On-Snow Efficiency and Performance.

Technique of the Pros takes place Sunday April 7 at 6 pm at Tahoe Donner Cross-Country Center.

Using the latest in sporting video review technology, Dartfish video analysis, I will be joined by Sugar Bowl Academy’s Coach, Jeff Schloss; and Olympic Biathlete Glenn Jobe to dissect and analyze race footage of top SuperTour athletes’ technique. We captured video during Thursday’s skate prologue and Friday’s classic 10 and 15 K events – it was thrilling and inspiring to be trail-side as the best skiers in the world strutted their stuff. It is a free event, but donations are welcome to help sponsor the Tahoe Donner Cross Country Far West Farm Team athletes.

Visit our websites next week when we will post samplings of Super Tour ski action and Dartfish analysis.

We utilize Dartfish in many of the Silver Sage Sports Performance Center services, including bike fitting, as well as gait and running analysis. In addition we use Dartfish when developing individual return to sport, injury prevention and performance strength and conditioning programs as a way to precisely define and identify weak links in movement patterns.

What is the SuperTour?

The United States Ski & Snowboard Association (USSA) SuperTour Finals and U.S. Distance Nationals are the premier cross country ski races in the United States. The event is held annually each spring and features over 200 of the most talented cross country skiers in the world. Among the featured elite athletes scheduled to make an appearance is Kikkan Randall of the U.S. Ski Team, currently ranked second on the FIS World Cup tour.

“The SuperTour Finals is extremely prestigious. This is the most exciting race event to hit the local Nordic scene since the 1960 Olympics at Squaw Valley,” says Tahoe Donner Cross Country Ski Center manager Sally Jones. “I encourage everyone to come out to watch how fast these talented professional and amateur athletes can ski,” Jones says.

The United States Ski & Snowboard Association (USSA) SuperTour Finals, a Nordic Olympic qualifying cross country race series comes to Tahoe/Truckee on Thursday, April 4 through Thursday, April 11 with special Tahoe Donner festivities for two weeks surrounding the event.

Rio Strada Cycling Team Winter Training Camp

Mission accomplished on the inaugural Rio winter training camp.

The motivation in organizing (with the help of Bev McInnes, team director) the camp was to help the team understand the value of variety in their training. The winter training camp took place at Tahoe Donner in Truckee, and it kicked off with a social gathering and overview of camp objectives.  

I hoped to share with the Rio team riders that a variety of winter cross-training can be  fun and effective, and ultimately provides invaluable durability, injury prevention and improved performance.  Of equal importance, the inclusion of variety, especially preseason, prevents us from falling victim to feeling obligated to always riding our bikes. It allows us to understand there is a multitude of options for winter base endurance training – keep it fresh and fun.  Variety allows us to stay mentally and physically hungry to go after it when it counts, April-September. Over my career as an athlete and now coach, it has became clear that at a certain point, mental hunger and determination ultimately determines the victor.

Saturday morning – we woke to a bluebird day – and jumped in to a trunk stability program that focused on training a pillar-like neutral spine – with the goal to take that strength and awareness off our mats and in to our cross-country skiing. By training a functional neutral spine and maintaining it in our endurance pursuits – it creates a strong base from which to move and generate movement to our extremities. Efficient generation in to the skis and poles, in this case, with no energy leaks. 

After a bite of breakfast – we hit the trails for stride instruction. Morning instruction was followed by a snack (thanks to Andrew Strolin with Natures Bakery, who sponsored a generous supply of the natural fig bars for the team member’s valuable refueling), and then back out on the trails for time, to individually digest the technique concepts and practice what we learned.

Following lunch – free time allowed some to snowshoe for additional endurance time, while others capitalized on in-house massage with Daniella Gauvin. The idea with training camp was to provide an understanding of all the aspects included in training that create a comprehensive, effective and successful program. Regeneration in all forms – including nutrition//hydration, stretching, yoga and massage, along with rest, is a vital counter-balance to quality intensity training.

Saturday evening Jeff Angermann, Silver Sage Sports Performance Center physiologist and Assistant Professor, School of Community Health Sciences, University Nevada, Reno, provided an in-depth presentation on the physiological and nutritional aspects of effective training and racing. The presentation stirred questions and insightful answers, along with thought provoking discussion.

Sunday, and another blue-bird Sierra day, the training day started with isolated glute activation exercises and movement preparation exercises. This scientifically derived activation series helps us bring more glute awareness and trunk stability in to our endurance movements. As a society – due to sedentary lifestyles at desks and in cars – we are in a constant state of flexion. Consequently our hip flexors are tight, and we have lost our ability to activate and use our glutes, defaulting to an erroneously quad dominant movement strategy. The first step is to actually feel the glutes in order to strengthen them and then use them in movement. The tier of exercises derived from the six month fellowship at USC Movement Performance Institute I attended, effectively isolate and activate the glutes – and train them share the load with our over-active quads. The movement prep also allows us to become more aware of engaging the trunk, as well as firing the nervous system for improved balance and proprioception. Once we hit our skate skis for the morning instruction – we were primed for movement.

Sunday on-snow, cross-country instruction focused on the athletic, skate discipline. While cross-country skiing provides more general endurance base building – we can draw relations to specific movement demands, including compressing on to the ski as we compress the pedal.We started with instruction, which included lower and then upper body drills to break down technique,  and then hit the trails to bring the movements together.

Post-ski – a quick final bite, more delicious Nature’s Bakery bars, around the Tahoe Donner fire pits, hugs and smiles – a mass exodus, with the pedal to the metal home for Super Bowl.

A few other valuable, big picture reasons to add variety in winter training…

When I was racing – I would spend January at US National A Team training camps and then off to trade team camps in February. I would come home to master riders flying in February, winning the all-important training rides, like the infamous Sacramento River Ride and the long Sunday endurance rides – definitely the things contracts are made of….When I would return home again, at the end of May with a respite from international racing – these same people stale on cycling, had hung their bikes as garage art,  and were done racing for the season.

Effective training entails a more comprehensive, balanced approach than “more on the bike (or whatever the primary pursuit may be) is better.” It is a systematic orchestration of all the on-bike pieces to develop speed, explosive power,  efficient generation of force in to the pedals, specific pedaling strength, endurance, race pace intensity including subLT, LT, vo2 and anaerobic capacity efforts – we all know this, there are a bunch of books and blogs reciting all the same stuff. But the difference lies in how the program pieces are implemented, the athletes understanding of the “why” to training, the off-bike supporting activities, and the all-important mental training piece. 

Back to training camp concept, a big piece of the training puzzle is to keep each phase of training in perspective, and as a coach help the athlete understand the objective of each phase of training and maintain that perspective, irregardless of what everyone else is doing. Understanding ultimately helps the athlete hit each workout with purpose and intention, the key to glean the absolute from each training session- and helps the athlete understand and trust the training process as a process.

Using the foundation phase of training as an example – it is important to  continue to remind the athletes of the objective – to build a wide base of endurance and muscular strength upon which to build the other phases leading to competition. With proper investment this phase provides athletes with the ability to go deeper and effectively recover during race season. When this phase of training is skipped, athletes tend to be physically fragile, and are not able to adapt to and recover from training and racing loads.

But it is also the mental piece of maintaining the perspective of foundation training objectives  that in my opinion is of equal or greater value. The ultimate goal of the winter foundation phase is to emerge with the strong base, but mentally hungry to go after the next phase of increased intensity training. Allowing yourself to include a day a week or a weekend here or there of an entirely different base endurance activity, like cross-country skiing – is money when it comes to in-season mental hunger, tenacity and determination.

Too often – because we live in a physical world, we are consumed in our training with the heart rate or power numbers, what we ate or drank in examining our performances in training and racing – with little or no regard to our mental preparation leading in to or thought processes during the performance. This mental aspect of training should take center stage with the physical – and be central to every day and phase of training.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Silver Sage Goes Hawaiian

This week, Dr. Pasternak and I had the opportunity to ParvoMed Vo2 and lactate threshold test two world-class paddlers, Jay Wild and Mike Gabor. The rhythmic paddling motion transformed the lab in to a tropical paradise – well maybe not. But it was thrilling to watch these guys’ power in action. 

Jay is a multi-talented paddler, who established his fate when joining an Outrigger Canoe Club in 2004.  Jay approached his paddling career with determination, paddling year-round on the cold Tahoe waters.  Always looking to improve, Jay is constantly training and has built a solid team around him which has helped him move up the ranks  among the best SUP paddlers in the world.  Never one to limit his opportunities, Jay is looking forward to experiencing every aspect of paddling, continuing to improving his OC1 and Prone paddling skills. For more information visit his site, http://wildlifeathletics.wordpress.com/

Racing Highlights:

TEAM USA stand up paddleboard team member 2012
4th place copper medalist @ 2012 ISA world championships, Marathon race 

Mike has over 20 years of experience racing and training. His career began when he went to college where he started to lift weights and compete in intramural sports. After college, he took up mountain biking and competed in running, biking and triathlons. Later he competed in adventure racing which led him to paddling. Eventually he started coaching others in paddling and decided he needed to capture some of his experiences in a book that could be shared with others. He became a well rounded athlete as a result of competing in a variety of sports and has hundreds of podium finishes in his career.

Outrigger Racing Highlights:

2nd Place 2011 Ironman Outrigger Racing Championships

1st Place 2011 Weekly Standup Paddle Races South Lake Tahoe, CA (2 times)

1st Place 2011 Monterey, CA Outrigger Race

1st Place 2011 Kahanamoku Klassic Outrigger Race, Marina Del Rey, CA

1st Place 2011 Crystal Pier Outrigger Race, San Diego, CA

2nd Place 2010 Catalina 9-man Outrigger Race, Newport, CA

1st Place 2010 PaoPao 9-man Outrigger Race, Dana Point, CA

4th Place 2009 Catalina 9-man Outrigger Race, Newport, CA

1st Place 2009 Whitney Harrison 9-man Outrigger Race, Oceanside, CA

O2fitness launches Ironman Tahoe 2013 Individualized Training Plans

Wow its January and time to start foundation phase training for Ironman Tahoe 2013. I look forward to training with and supporting a crop of new clients prepping for this inaugural Ironman – all with their own individual Ironman goals. What an opportunity in our Sierra backyard.

Speaking recently with one of my Ironman clients, I was reminded that with all of our athletic goals – it is not the destination of race day, but the daily training, with its mental and physical challenge and resulting confidence and empowerment that enriches our lives. Registering for events like Ironman also provide the opportunity to maintain balance in our busy lives – goals on the horizon help us wrench ourselves away from the desk and minutia of life and escape to training time.  We own our training – no one else’s decisions or actions can skew or blur the outcome.  

But rallying fitness focus does not require registering for an Ironman – any goal on the horizon from bagging a peak to cycling a century that reminds us to carve time out of our busy lives and invest in physical and emotional balance – is the E-ticket objective.

 

Team Rio Strada Foundation Phase Training – Wrap-Up and Reflections

photo-16Mission accomplished for the Rio Strada team, foundation phase training, which wraps the end of December. We had our final group structured workout for this phase last Thursday night, capitalizing on a starry-filled night to take training to the streets.

The workout started with a warm-up spin to the Folsom dam road, which was the evening’s training venue, providing an ideal consistent 4-6% grade.

The workout consisting of short anaerobic efforts, ranging from 30-45 seconds, in and out and saddle, focused on muscular force development in addition to the physiological aspect. In the workout, we rolled at a slow roll in to the grade, and focused on efficiently generating explosive power directly into the pedals.  Beyond the obvious benefits of efficient rapid, linear force development, the workout extended the opportunity to hone every aspect of our cycling efficiency – engaging and maintaining trunk stability; training optimal body position/posture; driving the pedal from the powerful hips; developing upper body strength; coordinating upper and lower body strength and skills; breathing efficiently under the pressure of intensity; and sharpening economy of movement/mechanics.

Training and implementing efficient powerful movement demands several components including muscular activation and strength, endurance, range of motion (muscular and joint), technique and mechanics, and rapid force development.  In foundation, we began training these elements which we will continue to challenge and improve as we focus on preparation phase training and peak toward race season.  During foundation, we trained these objectives through the following workouts – mini-band exercises to train glute activation; slow frequency repetitions (SFR) to develop  specific cycling strength; long rides with teammates in hilly terrain at lower intensity zones to build muscular endurance; yoga to facilitate improved range of motion; single leg pedaling drills and intervals at higher intensities to hone pedaling mechanics; and off-bike plyometrics and workouts like Thursday night to develop explosive power.

But beyond these more physically tangible benefits, Thursday night’s workout reminded me of the too often under-estimated mental aspect of training. Every workout affords equally valuable mental and physical conditioning. Every training session presents an opportunity to train positive mental mantras. The mental state has a powerful direct result over the physical in terms of relaxation and improved performance. We have control over our thoughts – but like everything else it demands practice/training to progress toward the ultimate goal. Every time a negative thought or doubt enters our mind – it is our opportunity to sweep it away and replace it with a positive/desired outcome. Every time we succeed in replacing a negative with a positive it is a victorious step.

Training also affords a mental dress rehearsal for racing. So many times at pivotal points in races – I have mentally drawn on a training session that replicated that exact race situation. Training provides mental empowerment, confidence and performance momentum.

Way to go Rio Rippers – make the most of rest and less structure during the holidays – so you are recharged, and ready to rip in to the preparation phase of training.

Stake Your Claim to Cortical Real Estate For Injury Prevention and Improved Performance

Last weekend, I completed the final class of a six month course, Advanced Functional Biomechanics of the Lower Quarter Principles of Evaluation and Treatment. (That’s a mouthful.) In the following two part post, I will share highlights from the final class, which focused on strategies to develop an individualized, effective functional movement strength program. This intricately tiered progressive program can be tailored as a return to sport, injury prevention or improved performance protocol.  Part I focuses on specific aspects of this progression. Part II will focus on effective coaching techniques to support skill practice, training and retention.

This six month fellowship took place with Dr. Chris Powers, an Associate Professor in the Department of Biokinesiology & Physical Therapy, and Co-Director of the Musculoskeletal Biomechanics Research Lab at USC. He recently opened, in conjunction with USC, and directs the Movement Performance Institute (MPI), a state-of-the-art biomechanics lab.

This comprehensive six month course significantly enhanced the depth and scope of the return to sport, injury prevention and performance strategies I employ in my coaching and performance training programs. It was a knowledge-altering experience. These research-authenticated concepts provide the tools to develop cutting-edge programs to assist a range of clients, from those returning from injury to competitive endurance athletes and those seeking improved fitness through a safe and effective conditioning program.

The class reinforced the o2fitness mission to help athletes understand the importance of a balanced, progressively structured, less is more fitness approach. Whether an endurance or fitness-conditioning goal – results rest on a well-developed, systematic plan. It is ultimately how the plan is implemented that reaps the rewards. The difference in training and conditioning effectiveness is the athlete’s understanding of the why of training. This understanding is pivotal to motivation, which results in fully committed, purposeful workouts.

The athlete’s willingness to change the training mindset from more is better, to better is better is the final key to successful results.

Gabi+xc+jump-21

This quality-centric training approach presents the polar opposite of the quantity over quality, trend of the day of of  many boot camps, cross fit and insanity type workouts, which are proving to be job security for physical therapists.

At the last class, Dr. Powers presented a research-proven progression for an effective functional strength and movement program. This approach can be applied to the injured athlete striving to return to sport as well as athletes seeking the ethical edge for improved performance. This program is applicable to a range of athletes from those in team sports and endurance cycling and running to those seeking a safe and effective general fitness/conditioning program. many boot camps, cross fit and insanity type workouts, which are proving to be  job security for physical therapists.

In all cases, however, the success of the program, whether a return-to-sport or performance-focus, relies upon consistent diligent practice.

Power’s program is divided in to three objectives – activation, strength, and movement education, and consists of eight levels. As with all good programs, it starts with more simple static maneuvers, and as the movements are mastered, gradually advances the movement complexity. The eight-level program is broken in to three sections – static, dynamic and ballistic. Within these three sections, the exercises are further dissected – non-weight bearing, static; weight bearing static; double limb dynamic; single limb dynamic; double limb ballistic; and single limb ballistic. The eight-tiered program concludes with sport specific movement and skill training.

The reoccurring theme over the six month fellowship has been the lack of hip (gluteus medius and gluteus maximus) stability as the major culprit of lower extremity injuries and dysfunction leading to potential injury. Powers contends that the lack of hip stability results from our sedentary lives and state of perpetual flexion, leading to a quad dominant movement strategy. This chronic closed state shuts off our ability to feel, find and activate our glutes, creating a downward spiral in strength and consequently greater reliance on the quads.

USC Professor, Dr. Fischer presented her research on, among other aspects, our ability to remap our cortex – and acquire greater real estate for specific body parts. For example, the hips, and all postural muscles for that matter, have a relatively small representation on the cortex.

During the six month class Powers has presented his 10 years of research which clearly connects poor hip strength to internal rotation, hip adduction and pelvic instability leading to, among other issues, Based on Fischer’s research findings, Dr. Powers initiates his functional movement program with static isometric exercises that effectively isolate and activate the gluteus maximus and gluteus medius. The reasoning is simple – you cannot strengthen a muscle that you cannot feel. The static exercises push the exertion limits and demand concentrated mental engagement, which results in cognitive growth. Prematurely adding a dynamic nature to the exercises proves detrimentally distracting if the muscle activation has not been well-instituted. By effectively isolating and activating the glutes we grow its cortical real estate. Once you have purchased additional real estate – you then develop it. When it comes to purchasing and developing cortical gluteus real estate, mini-band exercises are money.

knee valgus. This dysfunction contributes to numerous injuries and pain including patella femoral, ACL and IT band issues. As a result of this research and resulting hip to lower extremity connection – hip stability and re-educated movement strategies take center stage in Power’s program. That said, this integrated program also rests on principles of trunk and pelvis stability, as well as active shock absorption.In the exercises that incorporate the mini-bands, the bands are over the knees and in most cases, athletes are placed in a flexed hip, knee and ankle position. The exercises in the intitial phases focus on isolating, activating and strengthening the gluteus medius and maximus, while limiting tensor fascia latae muscle activity.

Level one, non-weight bearing static transitions to level two weight bearing, double limb static exercises. In weight bearing we lose the ability to isolate – so it is important to have established the isolation and activation in level one. In these exercises body position including femur, tibia and trunk angles become key. Cues to properly guide bo

Level three progresses to weight bearing single leg static exercises – same cues as above – and oh yeah remember to breath. dy position and achieve optimal isolation and activation – include hips back and down, positive shin angle, slight trunk lean with chest in line with knees (with the exception for those with long femurs/short torsos), as well as the continual reminder to push out with the knees against the mini-band resulting in the knees over the toes in the frontal plane.

Levels one through four are slow and controlled. Levels five and six are balistic in nature to train a quick dynamic interaction between the extremity and ground. These levels train strength and its ability to apply/produce a rapid rate of force, which is directly applicable to performance.

Level seven starts to focus on movement education and prioritizes – hip, pelvis and trunk stability; and hip strategy for active shock absorption.

The program concludes by incorporating the trained pieces – activation; safe and effective body position; improved muscle strength, power and performance; and movement re-education utilizing the trained strength,  power and endurance to hone sport specific skills.

Part II will focus on coaching techniques to maximize movement education and skill development.

Silver Sage Sports Performance Center – 02fitness New and Improved Services

Maximize Your Workouts with Silver Sage Sports Performance Center and o2fitness

We are proud to announce new and improved services. Read on…

Silver Sage Sports Performance Center has just installed the ParvoMedic True One Metabolic and Vo2Max testing cart. This is the unit currently in use at the US and Canadian Olypmic training-centers. The lactate threshold and Vo2max testing equips individuals with the tools to fine tune training. The science-derived test data allows athletes, from elite to recreational, to maximize their precious training time investment, determine individual fitness strengths and weaknesses, and to track training effectiveness. Professional bike fitting and gait analysis helps ensure biomechanical efficiency and is applied to help injured athletes return to action, provide injury prevention strategies and/or improve performance.

Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR) Testing

  • Provides scientifically derived  individualized, baseline daily caloric requirements
  • Indicates the body’s utilization of fats and carbohydrates for fuel at rest
  • Relevant for individuals interested in maintaining or losing weight

Vo2Max Testing

  • Indicates the body’s ability at maximum efforts to deliver and utilize oxygen during exercise
  • Measures cardio-respiratory fitness and aerobic performance potential
  • Estimates the body’s utilization of fats and carbohydrates at various intensity/heart rate levels
  • Identifies ventilatory threshold and corresponding lactate threshold to determine individualized training zones based on heart rate or power production

Lactate Threshold Testing

  • Measures blood lactate concentration – the best indicator for endurance athletic performance
  • Measures muscle metabolism during exercise
  • Estimates muscle fiber recruitment pattern
  • Scientifically identifies lactate threshold – the most valid physiological marker from which to develop specific individualized, heart rate or power production, training zones

RMR, Vo2Max and Lactate Threshold Testing Costs – $175 for one test; $295 for any of the above two tests* 

Professional, Dartfish Video Analyzed, Bike Fit

  • Fit performed by Julie Young, former  12-yearUS National Team/World Championship team member
  • Fit protocol utilizes aspects from systems developed by US National Cycling team; Specialized Body Geometry fit system; and Chris Powers, USC Movement Performance Institute (MPI)
  • Includes a 20-point biomechanical and flexibility assessment
  • Prioritizes tailoring fit to the individual’s range of joint and muscular motion and biomechanical strengths and weaknesses
  • Dartfish video analysis utilized to capture key fit positions to ensure accurate joint angles
  • Fit balances the individual’s comfort with the optimal power output/aerodynamic position
  • Includes guidance on strategies (developed at Athletes’ Performance and USC-MPI) to improve flexibility, strength and neuromuscular activation to continue fine-tuning and optimizing biomechanics, position and power output

Bike Fit Cost – Two hour initial fit, road- $200; time trial/tt-$250 includes one follow-up fit on same bike*

 Comprehensive Gait Video Analysis – Coming Soon

  • Analysis performed by Julie Young, USC Movement Performance Institute  (MPI) Specialist
  • System developed by Dr. Chris Power, PT and USC researcher and leading biomechanist
  • Analysis effective to return runners, walkers, team sport athlete to sport, provide injury prevention strategies, improve efficiency and performance
  • Key gait phases captured and analyzed with Dartfish video analysis
  • Learn proper body and joint position to optimize power and efficiency while reducing ground forces
  • Identify individual muscular and biomechanical weaknesses that are causing pain or potentially leading to injury
    • Address with individualized specific strength, neuromuscular activation and movement strategies (developed at Athletes’ Performance and USC-MPI)

Gait Analysis Cost – two hour analysis with Dartfish, and individualized strength program -$350*

Performance Training and Endurance Coaching

  • Tri-athletes (road and Xterra), runners (road and trail), cyclists (road and mountain), skiers (Alpine and Nordic)
  • Learn to utilize physiological test results as tools to improve training efficiency
  • Individually tailored daily training developed around an individual’s current fitness, future goals and life schedule – to maximize limited training time and achieve results
  • Science-based systematic ally progressed training helps individuals avoid injury, fitness plateaus and overtraining,  while ensuring improved fitness/performance

Training and Coaching Cost – start at $200/4weeks delivered via TrainingPeaks*

*Group discounts and team sponsorships available

For further information or to schedule an appointment, please visit silverssagecenter.com or o2fitness.net or email jyoung@o2fitness.net; or call 775/853-9394.

Team Rio Strada Winter Training Kicks Off

No matter the time of year – optimize your training opportunity by attacking each day, from rest to specific intensity, with understanding and purposeful intention.

Winter, so-called off-season, is an opportunity to build a wide deep foundation of cycling specific fitness that allows for improved in season durability and recovery. But there is a fine balance of working on specifics while maintaining the perspective that it is off-season and time to prioritize rest as well as mental and physical diversity to fully recharge and regenerate. The key is maximizing this phase of training to develop the endurance base and efficient cycling mechanics while also emerging hungry and excited to ride, not cycling-stale.photo-16

At any point in the season, it is essential for you to work in partnership with your coach. As an athlete don’t resort to blindly, going through the motions of a prescribed training plan, but take the opportunity to understand the why of training and how you individually respond and adapt. The off-season is an ideal time of year, with no performance pressure, to develop this deeper understanding. It also presents an equally valuable opportunity for the athlete to take greater creative liberties with the training plan. This might include – performing the specified training elements but keeping it more spontaneous in nature; seizing the opportunity to do what feels and sounds right vs forcing that should do mentality; and capitalizing on a variety of endurance base cross-training opportunities like Nordic skiing, snowshoeing, mountain biking, trail running and hiking.

It is valuable to keep cycling specific elements in the training to fine tune and hone mechanics/economy of movement and cycling specific strength and power, but when possible mentally and physically mix it up on easy days and endurance days.

It is valuable to continue to remind yourself of the goals for the foundation/base training phase

    • Improve in–season durability (achieving higher intensities and improved recovery) and peak race fitness
    • Improve and build aerobic engine
    • Improve muscular endurance
    • Develop specific cycling strength
    • Hone efficient pedaling mechanics
    • Increase muscle mitochondria
    • Increase lactate threshold
    • Increase muscle glycogen storage
    • Develop general functional movement stability
    • Improve and maintain range of motion/flexibility/mobility

This year o2fitness devised a comprehensive season-long, systematically developed team training plan for members of the Rio Strada cycling team. It kicked off a couple weeks ago. It provides participants with a daily training plan posted on TrainingPeaks, supported by one weekly coached, structured team workout and one team endurance ride.

Thursday night team workouts, take place on turbo trainers – building that team togetherness and bonding. We use the Flower Farm in Loomis as our base camp, but also take field trips to other workout sites. Last week we swapped Wednesday for Thursday and met at the Folsom Rodeo grounds to spectate the Rodeo Cyclo-Cross. We took a night ride on the bike trail as our warm-up, and then positioned the turbo trainers and the most action-packed corner of the Rodeo cyclo-cross course. Spectating the roller derby on bikes, uber-energized the workout.

These weekly team workouts are opportunities to focus on key elements of base training, including – honing pedal stroke efficiency; economy of movement/speed skills; climbing technique/skills; specific cycling strength; tempo/medium endurance intervals; and improving in saddle horsepower and out of saddle explosive power.

These Thursday night workouts also include off-bike movement preparation, glute activation as well as functional strength. Throughout the year, cyclists (as well as all endurance athletes) need to prioritize non-sport specific functional strength in the form of dynamic trunk, single leg and hip/pelvis stability designed to improve cycling biomechanical efficiency. This functional strength conditioning also creates the safe and effective foundation of stability and movement, as we progress toward explosive plyometric strength training.

Sunday is the get out there and enjoy winter riding, with teammates training. The team meets and hits one of the multitude of world-class, rolling, ascending and descending foothill routes at a pure endurance pace.

Bottom line – we do not want to win training – we want to understand how each and every day connects to our long term racing goals, and hit each and every training day with intention and purpose. Maintain the big picture perspective to guarantee you are hungry to race your bike April through September.

 

Want peak performance this winter? Consider physiological testing

 

Below is an article that Dr. Andy Pasternak and I wrote for the Reno Gazette Journal. Martha Bellisle wrote a personal sidebar of her Vo2max testing experience.

Physiological testing provides the tools to maximize your training time investment.

Often, we find that it’s the person relatively new to exercise who benefits the most from testing.

Athletes can gain a deeper understanding of how individualized training zones connect to their fitness goals. This information can take an athlete from unproductively and mindlessly going through the motions to purposeful, motivated daily workouts.

Athletes can have a limited timeframe for exercise and do the same activity at the same intensity, every day. We all know people who diligently runs for 30 minutes and are mystified why they are not experiencing fitness gains.

At Silver Sage Sports Performance, we primarily serve people determined to optimize their limited workout time and achieve results.

We work with individuals pursuing a range of fitness goals, from weight loss and general fitness to master athletes and elite competitors looking to peak for their next event by offering a menu of physiological tests to support them.

Testing and the resulting training tools can be applied to athletes of all abilities and interests, across a variety of disciplines. We work with a range of aerobic, endurance-inclined clients, including triathletes (road and Xterra), runners (road and trail), cycling (road and mountain), hikers, snowshoers and Nordic skiers. Testing can also be helpful to those more anaerobically inclined athletes such as track runners and alpine skiers.

How it works

Testing includes resting metabolic rate, lactate threshold and Vo2max.

The RMR determines an individual’s basic daily caloric requirements. It also indicates how your body uses fats and carbohydrates for fuel at rest. RMR testing is especially of interest for individuals interested in maintaining or losing weight.

Lactate threshold testing is done by obtaining a small sample of blood while exercising at increasing intensity. Once we graph your individual data, we can then help you determine your heart rate zones and speed as you train to meet your goals. This test is also our favorite way to demonstrate how your exercise program is improving your fitness.

A VO2 test indicates the body’s ability — at maximum efforts — to deliver and utilize oxygen during exercise. It measures cardio-respiratory fitness and aerobic performance potential. We also use this test to show people how their body uses fats and carbohydrates at various heart rate levels.

While the LT and VO2 tests can be administered individually, it is often beneficial to couple these tests to provide the most definitive data.

Why test?

Physiological testing provides invaluable understanding to empower athletes and improve their training.

The tests provide baseline data for each individual’s current fitness. It serves as a science-based starting point upon which to develop a systematic, progressive training program.

This contrasts with generic training plans presented in books or websites, which use an arbitrary training plan starting point, and do not take the individual’s fitness in to consideration.

The initial baseline also acts as a reliable, valid performance tracker. Following a three- to six-month period of consistent, progressive systematic training, there is a clear base of comparison.

Testing helps the athlete, from recreational to elite, avoid common training pitfalls and focus each day’s workout toward achieving the ultimate goal.

Individuals also learn and understand the importance of quality intensity and quality rest, and incorporating variety in to the weekly training plan.

Successful training plans at every level are based on gradual progression and systematic variety of elements relative to each individual’s current fitness and future goals.

A well-structured training plan utilizes an individual’s training zones to develop a program that progressively stresses/challenges the body’s central and peripheral components, while countering the workload with rest and recovery. This plan achieves continual fitness gains.

Andy Pasternak owns Silver Sage Center for Family Medicine and Silver Sage Sports Performance Center. Julie Young is director of Silver Sage Sports Performance Center and owner/head coach-performance trainer at o2fitness Coaching and Training.

 

Girls On the Run (GOTR) – Inaugural Fall Reno 5K

The article below was written for the Girls on the Run (GOTR) newsletter

Training From the Couch to Cruising your First GOTR 01515K

Entered in to the Girls on the Run, Reno Inaugural 5K and feeling overwhelmed by how to start your preparation? The answer is just start. The key to running your first 5K is to simply start consistently moving.  Running presents a seemingly tricky balance between making fitness gains while remaining injury free. However, we do not have to accept the fate of injury as runners. There are a few key cornerstones of injury prevention and performance to help guide your preparation – a gradual progression of training that includes supplemental base training; an emphasis on quality training that incorporates a variety of elements, coupled with quality rest; and a consistent practice of non-running, foundational functional strength.  If we tie all these elements together and love the activity of running for the sake of it – we avoid the common cram-session type preparation that leads to too much, too fast.

Please remember while reading this article that you need to individually tailor each concept presented, based on your past level of activity, current fitness and future goals, and make the absolute concepts individually relative to you.

First and foremost you want to enjoy the activity of running on a daily basis versus a grin-and-bear-it approach, all the way to the 5K big day. Generally speaking to adhere to a fitness plan, I feel you need four components. Love the activity of choice for the sake of doing it. Have a goal on the horizon to effectively focus and rally the training, as well as provide that mental nudge out the door when you lack motivation. A circle of training partners to provide that sometimes-needed accountability and social fun-factor.  And finally, a training plan you trust, understand and consistently follow.

Now that you have discovered a joy of running, the next step is consistent gradual progression of aerobic movement.  This is considered the base phase of a systematic training plan. During this period it is important to run with purpose and institute a foundational base of solid, efficient movement patterns.  Then just a like a building – you build upon this functional base.

While you focus the majority of your aerobic movement on running – it is also beneficial to incorporate supplemental endurance base training in to your training. This would include cycling, swimming, hiking and in winter snowshoeing and cross-country skiing. In my opinion this equally benefits mind and body – providing mental variety and physical low impact, overall strength.

During this phase you develop muscular endurance, your aerobic engine, as well as running-specific neuromuscular activation and mechanics. Once your base is established, you phase in to the preparation phase of training. At this point you add variety in to your training to continue to mentally and physically challenge yourself – and through these stressors, counter-balanced with rest and recovery you experience fitness gains.

This variety includes speed work which effectively hones efficient mechanics – endurance is a game of efficiency. Amazingly – we run mechanically best, when we run fast.  Speed work also develops sport specific strength and power. It has been said, we get fit to run, not run to get fit.

During this phase of training you also include defined periods of timed intensity, otherwise known as intervals – where you pick up the pace to your goal race pace or slightly above. To me training in general, but especially this type of interval work is my mental dress rehearsal for my event. It provides the mental and physical challenge and resulting confidence and empowerment that I have done it and can do it.

As I mentioned it is important to find that training program you trust and understand – you want to know why you are doing a workout and how it relates to your specific goals. This understanding provides invaluable purpose and intention to each and every day of training. Also mentally connect the dots – for example when I am doing intervals I mentally place myself in my upcoming event which allows me to glean the absolute utmost from the workout. I find that during the event – I mentally draw on these interval sessions to power me through the sticky points.

Improved mechanics that result from the speed work and race tempo intervals are equally vital to performance as injury prevention. Again we need to be considerate of individuality and avoid trying to force a square peg in a round hole by trying to reinvent ourselves with the latest running craze technique.  I am currently mentoring with leading biomechanist Chris Powers, who suggests injury prevention is greatly dependent on effectively absorbing and redirecting the ground forces that result with impact. His research indicates that with proper body position – flexion in ankles, knees and hips and very slight torso tilt, runners reduce the magnitude of forces as well as direct the force’s torque away from delicate knees and toward the body’s sturdy center of mass. In order to put this in to running practice, runners need to learn proper movement or mechanics. Proper running movement requires – muscular strength of the quads, hips (glutes); mobility or range of motion of joints and muscles; and neuromuscular activation, or the brain’s ability to communicate with the muslces.

During the preparation phase, you continue to include pure, low intensity endurance days – sport specific as well as supplemental endurance activities – hiking, cycling – mountain and road and/or swimming.

Remember to consistently provide equal respect for rest days and recovery weeks. In my training plans I advocate two rest days per week – these can be what we call active, very light aerobic movement and/or supporting strength, or complete rest.  I develop plans that build in volume over a three week period with the fourth week recovery – again it is active but low volume, low intensity and no structure. Rest days and recovery weeks are in my mind the key to stoking that mental and physical hunger and fire – motivation.  Prescribed rest allows you to capitalize on exactly what you feel like doing versus caving in to the guilt of shoulds.

Generally speaking I feel all runners need a mental makeover when it comes to training. I persistently advise and encourage my clients that improvement and performance is more than just about running, running and more running. In my training plans I carve time away from the running time to include functional trunk, hip and single leg stability as well as strategies to improve and maintain range of motion and symmetry, like yoga. With the functional strength – the key is to start with simple static exercises – then progress with complexity by adding movement and instability. And just like running set the foundation of precise movement and build upon that base.

As you approach the GOTR  5K – you move in to what we consider the competition phase. I think of this period as the polish, you have done your homework. During this period you reduce the overall volume and maintain a degree of intensity to stay sharp. Remember the objective of this phase – it is fine tuning. Leave your workouts wanting more and save it for race day. This insures you hit the start line excited and hungry to run.

Seize the day – enjoy every stride along the way.