Showing posts with label beginner triathlete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beginner triathlete. Show all posts

Press Release

We are happy to announce that E3 Training Solutions and Beginnertriathlete.com will collaborate offering a 16 week cycling program to help athletes improve their power. The plan will be available either power or heart rate based, free for active members and it will be available to be downloaded into members training logs.


About BeginnerTriathlete.com
Beginnertriathlete.com is the largest triathlon specific site on the net with over 200,000 registered members, and ~20,000 weekly page views! Beginnertriathlete.com's philosophy is to make healthier people and to promote an active lifestyle throughout the world. Triathlon is that perfect lifestyle. In a fast-paced world where available personal time is short, stress runs high and lifestyle preventable diseases are on the rise, BeginnerTriathlete.com is transforming the unhealthy to the healthy, the couch-potatoes into athletes. With a large library of articles, a superb training log, a busy online forum, great members and several training plans, BeginnerTriathlete.com has all the necessary tools to provide people with the information and motivation to get out the door and begin training today. (more info here)

Coach Jorge has offered this program for the past 3 years and this year he will continue to provide online support for all members following the program through Beginnertriathlete forums. 

For more information about Coach Jorge and E3 Training Programs visit our Facebook page and our website

Racing Week Review

Great racing weekend from E3 athletes and friends.

  • Dan Arnett continued his season success racing back to back days finishing 1st AG and 4th OA at the mistletoe tri and 2nd AG and 6th OA at the first coast Xterra Tri.
  • Brenda Chroniak kicked off his tri season racing the Danskin Tri and finishing top 10!
  • At Ironman Lake Placid Brendan Hall completed succesfully his 1st Ironman in 11:40hrs
  • Ed Galante battled dehydration but toughen it up and completed his 2nd Ironman LP
  • Jerry Maguire completed 2nd dreams, 1st to get back to running injury free and 2nd to complete his 1st Ironman rocking LP.
Many Boston Triathlon Team members had great success at Ironman Lake Placid, Nantucket Triathlon and Danskin Tri. Our friends from Endurance Concepts, PBM Coaching and ETA also had amazing success. Congratulations to all your athletes and your great work as coaches!

Racing Week Review

Another successful racing weekend for E3 athletes and team members/friends from the Boston Triathlon Team

  • Alaina Neary Case raced the Musselman sprint and half iron; she finished 2nd female overall for the sprint on Saturday and on Sunday she fought some stomach issues and still managed a 4th place overall at the Half!
  • Ryan Case (E3 friend) also race at the Musselman sprint/half iron; he finished 2nd AG at the sprint and similar to Alaina, he experienced issues though his were mechanical finishing 5th AG. Way to get it done even with adversity!
  • Noah Manacas raced at the Stowe 8 miler and posted a solid 1hr time!
  • Kirsten Knowles raced at the Stowe 8 miler a week after the Missoula Marathon were she PR and posted a solid ~1 hr result
  • Brenda Chroniak raced as well the Stowe 8 miler posting a solid 1:04hr time
  • Amy Duverger also raced the Stowe 8 miler posting a solid 1:11hr time
Fellow team members for the Boston Tri Team also had great racing results specially at the Fairlee Tri where many members made the podium: Brian Kearney won the Clyde division, Rachel Saks Aronis placed 3rd AG, Kelwin Conroy placed 3rd AG, Maggie O'Toole 1st Athena, Trish Henwood 2nd AG, Ira Sills 2nd AG and others I don;t have their results just yet.

Congrats to you all! 

Racing Week Review

Another successful racing weekend for E3 athletes and friends.

  • Dan Arnett continued his successful 1st year racing Xterra with a 2nd place on the Xterra trail and the next day he got 3rd at the Xterra Whitewater Tri.
  • Jana Richtrova (aka the Czech Chick) added a 3rd podium in as many races to her season with a 3rd AG and 2nd fastest AG bike split overall at the Providence 70.3 earning her spot for the Vegas 70.3 World Championship.
  • Brett Johnston participated at the Marlborough Tri as part of his preparation for Ironman Cozumel and he also finished on the podium in 3rd place AG!
  • Kirsten Knowles ran her 2nd marathon of the season and she PR with a 3:30 hr result and just missed the podium.
  • Patricia Brownell raced the Rev3 Portland Half Iron Distance and battled nasty blisters and still achieved a 7 min PR!
  • Kris Kaplan got back to racing and finished top 10 AG at the Marlborough Tri
  • David Hauser kicked off his Tri career with a top 10 AG at the Marlborough Tri
Our friends from the Boston Triathlon Team also had good results with Lauren Cullings, Mary Beth Begley and Janice Biederman all podium at the Old Colony Tri!

Our friends from PBM Coaching coached by Kurt Perham had great results as usual, noticeables were Catherine Sterling winning the elite amateur division at Life Time Fitness and Mike Caiazzo was 2nd Pro at Muncie 70.3


Jana's Rev3 Race report - coach perspective - part 2

After providing some general training information for Jana’s program on part #1, now I dive into what was the more specific prep for Rev3 Quassy Half Iron distance, how we set up her tapering scheme and how we set up her fueling plan.

When preparing racing and fueling plans for my athletes I based all the information on what they have done in training and what we have practiced fueling wise. Using devices like a power meter and a GPS/pedometer for collecting data allows me to not only do performance modeling, but also produce racing execution plans.

That is, I use the data collected (training rides, testing, races) and based on that I can estimate when I can expect for each to hit peak performance and when I need to start the tapering based on their current fitness per sport (as opposed to following some arbitrary general taper plan, a common practice by many). With that in mind and based on the experience from coaching Jana for a bit less than  year before Rev3, I knew she didn’t need more than a week roughly to bring her fatigue curve down while maintaining her fitness high and the offset of fitness minus fatigue will result in a peak in performance.

Since Jana raced the American Zofingen (Tough duathlon with 5 miles run, 29 mile bike, 5 mile run, 29 mile bike, 5 mile run) with  3 weeks prior Rev3, she had a big build up for that which also became part of the peak training during her specific phase as I intended in her season planner. That means Jana had 6 weeks of intense training before Rev3; I set up her build up with ~12 hrs of training per week with almost 60% of that done at intensities of tempo (30%), threshold (20%) and VO2max (5%) for cycling, 55% of tempo, threshold and VO2max for swimming, and around 50% for running. After that it was followed by a ~6 day taper reducing training load broke down as 6 days for running, 5 for cycling and 4 for swimming.

After Zofingen, she had an unload week (low training load) before having a last intense 12+ hr training load week (similar load break down as before Zofingen) and for Rev3, the taper was actually a bit shorter (5 days) broke down as 5 days for running, 4 for cycling and 3 for swimming. This decision was possible thanks to the data collected on her training and knowing the recovery rate Jana has for each sport.

Once the taper plan was settled, the next step was to tweak her fueling plan which she has trained with pretty much since Clearwater 70.3 and something we have just polish ever since.  Based on her power data Jana needs ~1650-1750 Kilojoules (kJ) to cover 56 miles at the same constant body weight (which oscillates between 127-128 pounds). Knowing that, the variable will be how fast or not she will cover that distance which will change a bit her reliance on carbohydrates vs. fats (the more intense you race, the more carbs you’ll need in general).

I won’t go into the details as to how I produce the carbohydrates needs for my athletes in their racing plans as I don’t want to give away the calculator I created, but it is not something I developed nor secretive. It is available out there in books, studies and the web for anyone curious enough to find out and with some excel skills to produce! You basically need to know the kJ, critical power (CP), race intensity (% of CP), current weight, an educated guess on efficiency and every day diet (food Kcal intake based on %s of carbs:protein:fat), we know she needs ~70 grams of carbohydrates per hour. This correlates well with what current evidence suggesting how athletes can absorb around 1-1.5 grams of crabs per minute or 60-90 gr of crabs per hour.

Using pace plus the info suggested above you can also estimate how much you might need for swimming and running (though the latter is trickier). For Jana based on her weight, race pace (intensity), distance, every day diet, the fueling consumed per hour when biking, and the fact it is a bit more difficult in general to digest fuel when running,  she can handle ~40-45 gr of carbs per hour. In terms of triathlons, we fuel before the race hence we have enough to get through the swim portion, for that reason, for anything shorter than an IM, I am not too concerned at determining in detail fueling needs for this leg.

Jana (like many of my athletes) likes to train and race with Powerbar products because those don’t upset her stomach and it is what you find in many races nowadays. We also like the fact Powerbar peform has their C2max blend which means having two sources of carbs allowing a better/faster absorption in our body. This might sound as a promotional ad, but their C2max blend is actually supported by current evidence suggesting that sugars like glucose, maltose and maltodextrin can be absorbed faster when exercising, and while fructose is absorbed slower, a mix of something like maltodextrin and fructose will allow faster/more absorption as the body uses two different pathways (‘doors’) to absorb it.

Also, Powerbar products make it simple for my athletes to determine their fueling needs based on our plans because they clearly indicate the nutrition fact per serving but also, they advise mixing directions which another key element when considering a fueling plan. If you don’t have an optimal carbohydrate concentration of your sport drink (carbs vs ounces of water) you might risk, GI distress or even something like side stitches (transient abdominal pain) which evidence suggest might be related with the consumption of hypertonic drinks (high carb concentration). Most powerbar products used a 9% carb concentration, which falls within the 6-9% suggested in current research.

Considering all of the above, you can see Jana’s fueling plan below that she has trained with on most of her long rides and/or race rehearsals and also what she used for Rev3. She made some adjustments on the go with water but for most part, the fueling aspect of her races is almost automatic. This means, she doesn’t have to worry much on fuel details, she already has trained this and when racing is a matter of executing and focusing more on the pacing portion.



As you can see the plan above (which is included in all of our One-on-One coaching programs or available as a separate service through our fueling plans) is very detailed and make it simple for the athlete to know how much and when they will need fuel. We always make some adjustments based on every race and weather conditions and the plan is a flexible guide that we tweak as need it.  

Many of my athletes and myself like Powerbar products because of their quality and the way they make it simple to use taking the guessing out of the equation. For full disclosure I am sponsored by them through the Boston Triathlon Tea, still, after trying many products over the years I still like PB better.  At the end of the day, there are many quality products out there so go with whatever works for you!

On part 3 (and last) well talk about pacing and execution. Stay tunned…

Andrew Thompson BSL 70.3 Race Report (70.3 WC slot!)

By Andrew Thompson

Pre-Race
We drove up to Lubbock on Thursday/Friday, so we had plenty of time on Friday to go to the expo and pick up my race packet. Had a nice dinner on Friday night and then went to bed early.

Saturday we woke up early so Analise could do her race, so unfortunately I was out in the heat for about 6 hours on Saturday. I was able to fit in a swim in the lake and a 30 minute ride on the course. We left there about noon and immediately went to get a big (late) breakfast at IHOP. I was really dehydrated, so I was sucking down sports drink/pedialyte all day. Had a fairly light dinner and then went to bed around 8pm.

On Sunday I woke up about 315 a.m. to fit in breakfast 3hrs before race start and get everything ready. By 4:20 we were on the road to the race. Got set up in transition, walked through a few things, did some visualization and then it was time to head down to the water!

Warm Up
I decided to only do a swim warm up, so I got in the water and did about 300yds with a few hard efforts. The wetsuit felt fairly constrictive, but I knew I was just amped up on adrenaline.

Swim
This swim was way faster than I expected. I felt really good during the swim and executed well, but the course may have been a little short. However, most folks I know had times about what they expected, so if it was short, it wasn't by much.

I started off fast in order to get on the heels of a few of the faster guys I knew. I didn't stick with them long, but it got me ahead of a lot of folks in my wave. Within the first few hundred meters I was catching people from the wave in front of me, which I took as a good sign. There were a lot of bodies in the water, but I was able to get on the feet of a few people and draft for a good portion of the swim. The course was very easy to navigate, so I stayed right on course for the entire thing. The entire swim I was right on the edge of feeling like I was about to be out of breath and/or panicking, but I was able to ride that edge and before I knew it I made the turn and could see the finish. It got shallow near the end so I ended up wading for the last 25-30yds.

T1
Long run from swim exit to my rack, but it gave me a chance to get adjusted to being vertical again. No problems here other than getting my seat stuck on the rack as I tried to grab my bike.

Bike
The wind made things very difficult, but I was very pleased with my bike performance. I had a plan and stuck to it very well. My legs felt great and I was very disciplined with my position and power targets. The biggest challenge was keeping up with the fluid intake, but I stayed on top of that pretty well.

Coming out of transition is very difficult on this course. You hit a 9% grade within the first 50 yds and have a second steep but short climb after about 1/2 a mile. After that the ride out of the park was into the wind but flat.

Miles 2-10 were with tailwind, so I was feeling good. Then we turned into the wind for a long stretch (miles 10-18) where it was really tough to keep going. This stretch was broken up by the first downhill immediately followed by a tough 7% climb. I kept spinning and kept my watts as low as possible. At the top it was into the wind again until the turn around.

The turn around was around mile 19 and for the next 10 miles or so it was a tailwind. I flew through this section and hit 47mph on the downhill and kept it steady back up the other side of the canyon. By this point the sun was starting to be a factor, so I was using some of my water to pour on my head/back to keep cool.

From 30-43 there were a few turns so it was a mix of head/tail/cross winds but there were a few climbs to break it up. I was feeling really good at this point in the race and my confidence was really high. Still very focused on my power targets, but did have a hard time keeping my power down during the climb at mile 41.

The next stretch, 43-53 was the toughest. The wind had picked up and we were riding straight into it. I allowed my power output to climb into the 220's here and was still having a hard time keeping 17-19mph. I tried to make myself as small as possible, but by this point my neck and shoulder were starting to hurt. It was also very hard to drink/eat during this section, which I think may have hurt me for the run.

Finally at mile 53 I turned into the park and had a nice tail wind into the finish. The last climb in the last mile was painful, but I held back and tried to save something for the run.

Overall I'm very pleased with my execution on the bike. I stuck to the plan and finished feeling strong. I was very pleased at my discipline at staying aero and not letting the wind get the best of me.

Ave Pwr: 218W
Max Temp: 93 degrees
Elevation gain: 1600ft

T2
I failed to get my left foot out of my shoe in time, so I had to run with one shoe on. Fortunately it wasn't far. I struggled to get my socks on, but I wasn't up for 13.1 miles sockless.

Run
I started off the run feeling great. The first 3 miles are fairly flat and I kept to my planned paces. At the 3.1 mile mark, I hit the first hill and half way up I knew I was in trouble. My left quad started to cramp and I had to walk for the first time to get it calmed down. I was able to jog up the rest of the hill, but I knew that with 10 miles and a couple hills left, it could be trouble. This negative thinking really hurt me.

After the hill I kept moving at my planned pace until I hit the next hill at mile 4.5 and, as expected, had the same problem with my left quad. I walked/ran up the hill and only then realized that the toughest portion was yet to come.

At the top of the hill, from mile 4.75 to 6.6, you're out in the open running into a strong headwind. Temperatures were above 100 degrees and people were dropping like flies. Staying positive for this section was very difficult. I kept moving, but my pace dropped to around 8min/mile, which was demoralizing.

For the first half of the race, I jogged through all the aid stations. I would dump a cup of ice water on my head and drink a cup of sports drink. I'm not sure if this was sufficient.

Fortunately, at the turnaround they were handing out some coke, so I walked through the aid station, poured 3 cups of ice water on my head and body, drank some coke and got moving. With the wind into my back I was able to pick the pace back up and ran the next 3 miles at about 7:30/mi pace. I was starting to feel better and made sure to really get some ice down my shirt at each aid station.

Unfortuantely, at mile 9 is the last climb. My quads cramped twice on this hill, meaning I ended up walking twice. At the top, there's a small flat section and then it's back down into the canyon. I'm glad my legs didn't cramp on the downhills, because if so I would have rolled down the entire hill. There was no strength left to stop myself.

The final 3 miles are fairly flat, but it was still a struggle. I kept it right at 8min/mile and was feeling really down on myself. The run has always been the segment I could count on, and here it was the worst part of my day. I was about a full minute per mile slower for this run.

I tried to push the last mile to finish strong, but just didn't have anything left in my legs and was just happy to keep jogging that final mile!

After
I finished the run pretty depleted. I came across, grabbed a cold towel, cold water and was then asked by the medic if I wanted an IV. I would have been okay without it, but the medical tent was still fairly empty, so I took them up on the offer to help with recovery. I sucked down a sports drink while the IV went in and reflected on the race.

Then it was down to transition to grab the stuff and back to the hotel!  I rested for a while, went to see a movie and then went over to the race hotel for the awards ceremony.  I felt like it was probably a waste of time, but would have been upset if I left and found out later that I had a chance.  It was a long wait, but sure enough, the last slot in my AG rolled down to me.  I was more than happy to take it, but next time I'm going to win it outright and remove any doubt!

Overall
I was originally very disappointed in this race.  In retrospect, conditions were really tough and overall my execution wasn't bad.  I'm very happy with my slot to Vegas and am looking forward to fixing some of the weaknesses that this race exposed.  I'm really pleased with my swim, and I think my bike was really solid.  I know that there's no such thing as a good bike followed by a bad run, but still...

Racing Week Review

This weekend was a busy weekend for E3 athletes and friends full with great results.
  • Andrew Thompson fought hot conditions at the Buffalo Springs 70.3 race going sub 5 hrs and earning his ticket for the 70.3 World Championship in Vegas!
  • Analise Thompson had an amazing day finishing 2nd OA at the Buffalo Spring Lake Sprint with the fastest female bike split of the day. It seems the bike training is paying off!
  • Dan Arnett continued his great season placing 2nd OA at the Tri the Parks triathlon.
  • Patricia Brownell had a great performance at the Cohassett Tri finishing 2nd in her AG and earning a spot for USAT Nationals in Vermont... again!
  • Kirsten Knowles race the inaugural BAA 10K and set up a new personal record completing in 43:31
  • Amy Duverger also raced the BAA 10K posting a PR.
  • Noah Manacas and Brenda Chroniak also participated at the BAA 10k and had solid days with 44:xx and 50min finishing times.
  • Carrie Mosher completed the warrior dash obstacles course!
Athletes from the Liver Foundation team also participated at the BAA 10K setting PRs and having solid days; among them were Tom Murray with a solid race!

Grace Tsuei completed the 1 mile Captain pond swim and placed 3rd in her AG!

Boston Tri Team members also had fantastic results/accomplishments over the week at Tris, Ultras and obstacle racing!

Matt Davenport completed the Western States 100 and finished under 24hrs earning his belt buckle
Tony Felos completed his 1st 50 mile ultra in 13:39 min and 3rd AG!
Tris Henwood placed 1st AG, Sue McCloud was 2nd and Erica Allen was 3rd at the Cohasset Tri sweeping the podium!
Maura Olcese completed the Warrior Dash obstacles course race.

PBM Coaching athlete Catherine Sterling had another great day winning the Cohasset Tri

-- To learn more about E3 Training Solutions Programs, visit our website! --

Jana's Rev3 Race report - coach perspective - part 1

Last June 5, 2001 took place the Half Ironman distance race Rev3 Quassy; one of the fastest growing racing series and Revolution 3 is quickly earning a spot among the top triathlon production companies in the country. (good news for us triathletes!). The event also offers an Olympic distance race the day before and both take place at the Quassy amusement park in Middlebury CT which makes it an ideal venue for families as well as earning a reputation of one of the toughest races in the Northeast with a hilly bike AND run course.

Many E3 athletes participated either at the Olympic and Half Ironman distance and all enjoyed very much the event, the challenge and they achieved great results with podiums and personal records. Given Jana Richtrova (aka the Czech Chick) was the athlete I've been working with the longest and the one I have more data compiled, I decided to do a simple race report from a coach's perspective.

I hope this help you illustrate some of the preparation considered for each of our athletes, present you some of the many features our programs include and teach some of the things each of you should consider for your next race.

Let's start with a quick training summary: I've been working with Jana for a little less than a year now, last year she had a solid racing season with podiums and PRs at the Olympic and Half Ironman distance ending with her trip to the 70.3 World Championship in Clearwater, FL. The focus last year was to improve her fitness as much as possible while already in the middle of the racing season. This made challenging to address her weaknesses (her swim primarily, run secondarily) which forced us to focus on her strengths (cycling).

For this year, the focus changed to address her weaknesses while consolidating her strengths in the early part and later focusing on race specific fitness. Is no secret that her swim speed has been her Achilles heel ever since we began working together and we have taking a long term approach to improve it. We have seeing speed gains already but now we have to make those a reality in race conditions (open water). Rev3 posed a challenge as due to the nature of the weather in New England early in the year, Jana didn't have much opportunity to do open water swims and it showed in the race (more on this later).

Nevertheless Jana's Critical Swim Speed (CSS = the maximal speed she could sustain for roughly 3000 mts swim) has improved from 1:58 min/100 yds to 1:40 min/100 yds in 8 months. I actually think her CSS is faster but we'll confirm that in a coming test soon. Even though the Rev3 swim time didn't showed any improvements, I am certain was due to lack of open water swim practice and skills and for RI 70.3 things will be better. Still, it is important that her CSS is improving and you'll see why below when talking about critical power and critical velocity, not to mention the other benefits it might have provided, even when the swim time didn't reflected it.

In terms of cycling, her fitness which was good to solid to begin with has really improved at a very satisfying rate and has set her apart from her competition. Over the past 6 months post 'off-season', Jana's Critical Power ( CP = the maximal power she could sustain for roughly 1 hr) increased over 12% to roughly 240watts, all while riding less than 2/3 of what she rode the previous year.

I mentioned this to illustrate a point (and to poke a bit of fun to the base training crowd). Training gains are a function of training load which equals to volume plus intensity. To only focus on volume is to only address half of the training load equation. In addition, each athlete has particular needs and limitations, for the majority of the athletes I coach with other life priorities (work, family, social, etc.) the biggest limitation is time available for training/recovery.

I wish all my athletes had the luxury of having 20+ hours for training every week and still be able to be productive on other phases of their lives. But that is usually the exception, hence peak training weeks happen sporadically through a periodirized season plan. In Jana's case, time availability is a limitation, that plus her need to focus extra time on her swim and run fitness limited her time available for bike training.

Since I made her a convert to training with power when we began working together, it allowed me to have a lot of data from 2010 and helped us to manage her load more efficiently. Since riding hours and mind numbing miles at steady pace (base training) was not an option, we focused on endurance, race specificity AND intensity, all mixed together week after week. This allowed her to maximize her time and fitness gains with almost half of the total volume she did a year before.

Jana's power distribution Jan-May 2011
AR = active recovery, E = endurance, TE = tempo,
TH = threshold, VM = VO2 max, AC = anaerobic capacity
For comparison, from Jan to May 2010, Jana rode ~1900 miles mostly as 'base training' before we worked together. For the same time frame on 2011 she rode ~1250 miles, mostly with a variety of intensities though with emphasis on her CP. Also most of her riding was on the trainer on 2011 vs 2010 due to time limitations.

Still, I wish I would have data from her intensity from 2010 because I can guarantee her intensity (completing the training load) was a lot higher in 2011.

For reference, on the chart above you can see how out of all the miles Jana has rode on 2011, most of her time has been spent on Tempo pace (80-90% of CP) which is race specific for a half iron distance and she spent almost as much training at her threshold and VO2 max than at her endurance ('base building') -- check her 2010 data here -- and 2011 data here --

This methodical approach yield Jana great critical power improvement, it allowed her to increase her power to weight ratio to 4.11 w/kg, which means for every kilogram of body weight she can produce ~4.1 watts. This is up there with some of the strong cyclists in triathlon races including male athletes!

But how is it possible that Jana improved her critical power without doing much "base training"? Better yet, how is possible that Jana increased her CP and endurance at the same time? It is simple, it was because she is a great athlete, she works very hard and because together we formulated a plan addressing her own needs. There was no trying to fit her into a one-size fits all plan, there was not forcing her to match my coaching beliefs and certainly there was no forcing her to mold into any kind of 'system'.

That and of course understanding why improving one's critical power should be a focus for any endurance athlete. To illustrate this see the graph on the left. It shows how her CP increased to around 240w on 2011 (from ~210w on 2010).

Considering most athletes will race a half iron distance between 80-85% of their CP, it is easy to see why Jana's mixed training allowed her to go faster with seemingly less volume (which is not to say less training load). In other words, riding at the same intensity (80% of her CP) for a half iron distance allowed her to race around 20 watts higher than last year simply by having a higher CP and doing the adequate training!

In terms of running, while Jana's running is solid vs some of her competitors, in terms of her goals (winning races overall) it is a 'weakness'. Hence, we have been proactively addressing and making it also a priority within the context of the entire program. 6 months ago Jana's Critical Velocity (CV =  the maximal velocity she could sustain for roughly a 10 Km) was around 7:02 min/mile and just before Rev3, her CV improved around 6:40s. Same as CP, CV is one of the most important markers for endurance athletes; if you improve it, you will be able to race faster at the same sub-maximal effort level. That is, if last year she was able to race around 90% of her CV for a half iron (~7:35 min/mile), this year, on a flattish course, she should be able to do around ~7:15s min/mile. (I guess will find out at RI 70.3!).

That said, her training progression has been different given her specific needs. Prior we started working together, Jana was battling some hip/leg injuries hence all last year the goal was to address this minor injuries and then get her fit without placing too much strain risking re-injuring it and managing the ongoing racing season. Earlier this year, the goal was to set up a foundation to allow her to increase the training load via volume and frequency with some specific intensity. At the same time we focus on a strengthening program to make sure no other imbalances will result in overuse injuries as the load increased.

This has allowed her to increased her CV without injury set backs (knock on wood), and now, we can focus on maximizing her CV which will be the focus for the coming months.

Now, that I set up the stage about Jana's training program and fitness progression, on part 2 I'll dig into her racing plan, compared it to her execution (sharing power/pace data) and will share her fueling plan before, during and after the race. Stay tuned...

Performance Training Plans

We create a personalized training plan addressing your specific needs, time limitations and athletic goals for a particular race or for an entire season.

This option is a great alternative for athletes seeking structured training and coaching support without the full integration of our one-on-one programs.

This allows the athlete flexibility to tweak the structure in a personal way and get other services as need it.Our programs are evidence-based in basic physiology and proven training concepts that have produced remarkable performances from elite to recreational athletes.

Here you won’t find any marketing buzz, no magic ‘systems’ and no shortcuts. Our athletes succeed based on hard and consistent work.

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Race specific plans can be scheduled for 10 or more weeks targeting an specific race. The annual membership requires a 52 week commitment and the plan will be developed around all your target races up to 10 races (you receive 4 weeks free).


It includes:
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  • Monthly conference call with your coach to address specific training questions (as needed)
Discounted Services:
20% off Performance Analysis (Gait/swim analysis and bike fit optimization)
15% off Clinical Run Gait Analysis
30% off Personalized Racing/Fueling execution plans
30% Personalized Nutrition Plans
50% Coached Group Training Sessions (i.e. track workouts, long runs, group rides etc.)

Sign Up!


* Annual Membership requires a 52 week commitment; the payment will be set up through automatic billing charged on credit/debit card as $145 every 28 days for 48 weeks and you get 4 weeks free


- If pay upfront you get a 5% discount off -

Winter Cycling Plan Results

Back on November 1st, 2011 we kicked off the cycling winter plan version 3.0 at www.beginnertraithlete.com, a free plan I began offering 3 years ago and one which has focused on helping athletes improve their critical power or heart rate pace at maximum lactate steady state (MLSS).

Over the past years those athletes who have followed the plan consistently, have achieved great results improving their power/speed around ~15% over 14 weeks of training. This year I updated the plan with some new workouts and a slight different progression addressing different intensities to maximize physiological training adaptations and allow athletes improve their fitness more efficiently.

The plan officially ended last week though some athletes started the program later or will start at a later date; still, those athletes who already completed the plan began posting their results and yet again, those who follow their plan consistently achieved great results! This years the improvements have ranged between 12% to 20% power/speed improvements over 15 weeks on no more than 4-6 hrs of cycling training per week.

The plan by itself is nothing special or something anyone with simple understanding of training concepts and basic physiology couldn't do. The plan simply address different important adaptations and it is based in nothing more than consistent training. In other words, those who have the drive and motivation to do the work, can and undoubtedly will improve their Critical power or HR at MLSS.

This plan is focused for those athletes with a limited amount of training time and/or those leaving in places with tough winters where riding outdoors can be challenging early in the year. In other words, this plan can help people with tight schedules and also, it will complement most athletes' needs with different racing goals from sprint to Ironman distances.

Still, for our personalized programs the training load distribution can and will vary based on the athlete's specific needs, goals and annual season planner. That said, working towards improving one's critical power (or FTP or HR at MLSS or...) is one of the most important adaptations any endurance cyclist will need and should focus on in spite of their training phase whether increasing it or maintaining it.

Anyway, among the many riders who have been following the winter cycling plan and experiencing great improvements was Nate Thomas who participated at the Boston Triathlon Team Indoor Time Trial 2011 and went to finish 3rd overall in the open men category against a very strong local competition (great job!).

If you are looking to improve your cycling, check out our Online Coaching which follows the same principles as the winter cycling plane. Or even better, you can consider our personalized coaching programs for cycling, running and/or triathlons were you will beyond doubt improve even more! Don't miss another personal best...

Training Concepts - Part 2 – Training Load

Continuing article part 1 where I discussed what Stress/Strain/Adaptation, in this part I’ll focus on defining what training load is and why it is important related to structuring a training program.

As a brief reminder of part 1, it was mentioned how training is considered a “stressor” and how much of it we do, it will place different levels of strain which ultimately will produce different adaptations (positive/negative) that can lead performance improvements, overtraining and/or injury.

The main goal of any training program is to constantly strain our bodies enough to produce positive adaptations without placing so much strain that instead of allowing the body to adapt and get stronger/fitter/faster, it can't cope with the strain level and the result can be a decrease in performance or injuries.

In order to keep our bodies positively adapt following a progression which will allow each athlete produce specific adaptations particular to the main event, athletes need to pay attention to their training load. This concept is defined as the sum of all the training we do:

Training Load = volume + intensity + frequency

Volume – refers to the duration/distance of a particular training session.
Intensity – relates to the level of exertion at which an athlete performs a particular session
Frequency – relates to repetition of volume + intensity over many training sessions.

Frequently athletes talk about how much training they do, and more often than not they only refer to volume and rarely to intensity. i.e. when athletes discuss training load, the usual response would refer to number of hours or miles per week.

Considering the training load formula, then  expressing load in terms of volume only represents half part of the equation and considering training load is relative to the fitness of each individual, it is difficult to make assumptions whether running 'x' miles or 'y' hours per week is an adequate load for an athlete or not. But, quantifying volume it is simple, while it not the same with intensity hence it is common to refer to load only in terms or hours/miles.

Still, any athlete knows that running 45 min at an easy conversational pace is not the same as running 25 min at or near his/her 10K pace; the latter in general will produce greater DOMS, accumulated fatigue, etc. In addition training at different intensities will result in different physiological processes that will induce different training sessions.

In coming articles I’ll discuss in more detail the type of training adaptations our bodies experience at different intensities and why optimal training load will vary based on individual’s needs. For now, remember that our fitness will improve based on how much (volume), how easy/hard (intensity) and how often (frequency) we train.

Why is load Important?
Understanding the concept of training load will allow an athlete their coaches to design training programs based on the specific needs for each individual. There are many ways to set a program and some of you probably are familiar with the different approaches often discussed in books, magazines and online forums such as high volume/low intensity (commonly referred as ‘base’ training), low volume/high intensity (often referred as HIIT), or a mixed training load.

The discussion of these approaches can result in passionate arguments defending or criticizing the benefits of each approach, but that’s beyond the goal of this article. In the future I’ll discuss each approach in detail and let the reader interpret the information presented to and make up their own minds.

Still, the reality is that different approaches based on different training loads can and indeed work, and all have a place in a training program. Certain individuals will require a greater focus in a given training load, but that’s more specific to the individual’s needs such as: current fitness level, time availability, racing goals (distance), athletic background, gender, age, etc.

In any case, training load is important to allow our bodies to constantly adapt and improve our fitness, but in order to know how much we need to do, we need to determine how we can quantify intensity and for that is necessary to discuss the energy systems and how training at different intensities / durations result in in different adaptations. 

In Part no. 3 I'll continue addressing Training Concepts and I'll focus on Specificity/Overload which ties into training load. After I complete talking about training concepts, I'll  move to discuss energy systems, physiologic parameters and how we can define intensity to be able to manage intensity; the often neglected part of the training load equation. For now the take away message is – we need to strain our body so it can adapt; to manage how much strain we induce we can use training load which is the sum of all the training we do.

*** News - Presenting New PBMC Coach: Michelle Riordan Quigley ***

We are very proud to welcome to our team new coach Michelle Riordan Quigley. A life-long athlete, she played soccer, basketball, and softball in high school, earning team MVP honors in each sport, and joined the golf team at Boston College, where she also discovered her love of distance running. Attending law school in Los Angeles, Michelle ran her first marathon.

Having incorporated cycling and swimming into her training, she had the opportunity to race a triathlon when her mother, who had just overcome a battle with cancer, asked her to join her at the Danskin women's triathlon, raising funds for cancer research and treatment. Her 1st triathlon season was rather successful starting 3 races and earning 3 podium finishes.

Pursuing her passion for fitness, Michelle decided to forego being a lawyer to become a personal trainer and Triathlon coach. She received her personal trainer certification from the National Strength and Conditioning Association and became a Level 1 USAT Certified Triathlon coach and USA Cycling Level 3 coach.

As a Private Trainer at the elite Sports Club/LA, she has quickly developed a niche working with triathletes, runners, cyclists, swimmers, and other athletes looking to build a solid foundation to prevent injuries and improve performance in their sport.

Coaching Resume:
USA Triathlon Coach
USA Cycling
NSCA – CPT
3+ years coaching endurance athletes

Michelle is a great addition to our experienced roster of coaches as a great athlete, but most importantly, as a knowledgeable and experienced coach. She also brings an unmatched positive attitude and energy that will certainly benefit our athletes. Welcome to the team!

New Year Deal

For any new athletes signing up for our Online Coaching program before January, 09, 2011 get 10% off the monthly fee for the entire program.

Our Online Coaching program includes:
- Initial assessment and consultation to recommend the best plan based on your current fitness levels and goals
- A 16-20 week general plan delivered every 4 weeks adjusted to your specific limiters
- Access to our a private forum on Beginner Triathlete or Facebook group where you can ask any questions to our coaches
- Access multimedia materials, 'how to' guides
- Calculators to determine: your training levels (power, pace and/or heart rate) and fueling needs
- Race pace and fuel planner.

Don't miss another Personal Best and this great opportunity, save and sign up today. It is very simple to get started, just complete your initial assessment and we'll follow up with you!

Pricing:

Athletes News

A great racing weekend for PBM Coaching Athletes

At the 70.3 World Championship:

- Dan Arnett posted a run PR to complete the race in 4:31hrs
- Jana Richtrova also competed and posted an 8 min PR finishing in 4:46hr and top 20. Not bad for the Czech chick in her 1st year racing this distance.!
- Carrie McCusker also had a great performance at the WC finishing on the podium in her AG!

At the Beach to Battleship Iron Distance, Coach Alex finished 2nd Overall. Not bad for a busy year as a pro and a new dad!

At the Miami Man International, Leszek Wnuk wrapped up his 2010 season finishing with a PR and 2nd AG place!

Athlete and Friend Tom Civitenga participated in his 1st half marathon ever competing the Chilly Half-Marathon and finished it in 1:50hrs. Not bad for a guy who recently started running and is into martial arts and not endurance sports!

Coach Kurt and athlete Curtis Boivin finished 1 and 3 at the Plymouth South Cyclocross.

We killed it!

Are you racing an early Season Race for 2011?

If you are racing any of the following 70.3s/HIM: Rev3 Knoxville, Rev3 Cost Rica, Rohto Ironman 70.3 CaliforniaMemorial Hermann Ironman 70.3 Texas, Ochsner Ironman 70.3 New Orleans, Ironman 70.3 St. Croix, Ironman 70.3 Port Macquarie, Ironman 70.3 St. Croix, Thomas Cook Ironman 70.3 Mallorca, Rohto Ironman 70.3 Florida, Ironman 70.3 Busselton, Avia Wildflower HIM


Now is the perfect time to start your a One-on-One Coaching or 21 week Online Support Program with us.
The Online Support plans have a comprehensive approach and a simple progression addressing your specific needs and plans can be followed based on power/pace or heart rate monitor/perceived exertion.


Online support include a 21 week plan, training guides, access to our coaches via our private online forum (beginner triathlete of Facebook), specific training levels, fueling and racing plans.

Our One-on-One programs have limited spaces, for more info email us at jorge@pbmcoaching.com or to begin with an online support program complete your Fitness Assessment today!

Athletes News

Congratulations to Andrew Thompson for a solid race at IronStar HIM. Andrew had to overcome bike technical issues but still managed a top 20 OA with a strong run. Also a shout out to his wife who placed 2nd AG and 4th female OA!

PBM Coaching Newsletter Fall 2010

Check out our Fall 2010 Newsletter http://conta.cc/bHoyZ1 via #PBMCoaching

We still have opening for the 2011 Season. Call us today, we only coach a limited number of athletes every year. Don't miss out!

Simple Injury Prevention Tips

Most of you are either in the middle of the off-season or already starting programs for early season races. Here are some simple injury prevention tips that might help you get ahead of nagging injuries.

Keep in mind that doing just enough load (training) within your own limitations and fitness level is probably the most important determinant to avoid injuries, still, taking care of the details is what makes simple training into optimal training!

Simple Injury Prevention Tips PDF

Athlete News

Congratulations to Leszek Wnuk for completing the Miami 70.3 fighting back after two flats. Good job!