Dec 4 2016
Plocina Tribute
I was moved by a tribute video made for Michal Plocek, the 22 year old rowing talent who ended his life a week ago:
Michal Plocek Tribute – R.I.P from Bastian Faralisch on Vimeo.
I think the video catches very well what a tragic loss this is. Doing my steady state row of today, I had a lot of time to think about it. The Czech media and the Czech rowing community gossip is full of information around his death and I am unqualified to distinguish between facts and lies.
Still, this tragedy forces us to think about what we are doing, in our clubs, as coaches, as masters rowers, as members of club boards, to prevent. In my mind, whatever we do in rowing, building a positive community with love for the sport and being part of a team should come first, and winning races should be a result of a positive experience rather than the end goal. Sports clubs are one of the few places where the generations are not segregated and as rowing adults we may be role models, and we cannot deny that we may have a small influence on young people, and by enforcing the importance of good results in school, a positive attitude in life, or, in general, by making your rowing club a place where young people can build self confidence.
I am not and have never been a world class athlete. But still I think that rowing has taught me some very important skills that have helped make me the person I am, and I am grateful to my coaches and team mates for that. Rowing and sport have become a life long addiction for me, and I am reaping the benefits of that every day.
We should also be aware that sometimes people have such big struggles, that even though we try to be there and be positive, we cannot prevent a tragedy. There is only so much an individual can do, and it can make the difference, but sometimes it doesn’t, sadly.
So these were my thoughts during a 19km steady state row, rowed as 4km/3km/2km/1km/2km/3km/4km at 20/21/22/23/22/21/22 spm:
Workout Summary - media/20161204-1540090o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|19000|78:30.0|02:04.0|185.4|21.2|157.9|169.0|11.4
W-|19000|78:31.0|02:04.0|185.1|21.1|157.7|169.0|11.5
R-|00000|00:00.0|00:00.0|000.0|00.0|000.0|169.0|00.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|01000|04:07.2|02:03.6|180.3|20.2|130.0|140.0|12.0
02|01000|04:10.2|02:05.1|179.8|20.2|142.9|151.0|11.8
03|01000|04:07.0|02:03.5|184.7|20.4|146.8|153.0|11.9
04|01000|04:07.0|02:03.5|185.7|20.2|151.0|154.0|12.0
05|01000|04:05.3|02:02.7|189.8|21.0|155.7|158.0|11.7
06|01000|04:04.7|02:02.4|190.9|21.1|158.6|161.0|11.6
07|01000|04:05.8|02:02.9|188.5|21.2|159.8|163.0|11.5
08|01000|04:02.7|02:01.4|195.8|22.1|162.6|165.0|11.2
09|01000|04:02.3|02:01.1|197.0|22.2|164.0|166.0|11.2
10|01000|04:00.9|02:00.5|200.0|23.0|166.3|168.0|10.8
11|01000|04:03.3|02:01.7|194.5|22.4|166.6|168.0|11.0
12|01000|04:03.8|02:01.9|193.1|22.3|166.6|169.0|11.0
13|01000|04:08.0|02:04.0|183.6|21.3|163.1|166.0|11.3
14|01000|04:09.2|02:04.6|181.0|21.5|162.9|165.0|11.2
15|01000|04:09.7|02:04.8|180.0|21.2|162.5|165.0|11.4
16|01000|04:12.2|02:06.1|174.6|20.6|161.3|164.0|11.6
17|01000|04:13.2|02:06.6|172.6|20.4|160.1|162.0|11.6
18|01000|04:27.6|02:13.8|170.4|20.1|155.8|160.0|11.2 - change radio station
19|01000|04:11.0|02:05.5|177.1|20.8|159.9|162.0|11.5
Steady State does give you time to think.
Lactate measurement at the end: 1.3 mmol/L. Rate of perceived exertion: Time flew by.
Dec 6 2016
Another 15k of steady state
No training on Monday.
And today, another staple 15km of steady state. This time I did it as a 3x5km/1min rest interval workout. Outside temperature was -1C, but in my rowing basement it was a comfortable 6C.
Workout Summary - media/20161206-2005090o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|15317|64:04.0|02:05.5|191.9|21.5|161.6|175.0|11.1
W-|15000|61:04.0|02:02.2|194.9|21.5|161.9|175.0|11.4
R-|00320|03:00.0|04:41.6|076.8|19.8|151.5|175.0|01.4
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|05000|20:19.4|02:01.9|192.4|21.2|153.5|163.0|11.6
02|05000|20:18.3|02:01.8|195.4|21.3|164.7|173.0|11.6
03|05000|20:27.1|02:02.7|196.9|22.0|167.6|175.0|11.1
I had to stop in the last interval because the playlist ended with 3.5km to go. I figured it was better to start a new playlist than to row in silence. I have turned around the erg (Romana’s wish). The positive thing is that the cold outside air is now near the flywheel and my back is towards the inside of the house, which is good for preventing backpain. The downside is that the radio is not any more an arm reach from the erg. With the old setup, I could switch from bluetooth mode (playlist played from phone) to radio within one recovery. Now I have to get up.
I looked at the plot for Average/Peak Force ratio and it shows some interesting oscillations. I was wondering what this is, so here is the plot for the peak and average force.
It looks like the main variations are in the peak force.
Drive length doesn’t seem to depend on stroke rate, but again looking at the metric vs distance is interesting:
Definitely looks like some fatigue setting in, leading to shorter drives. And here is the reason why this is bad:
The shorter the drive length, the less energy in the stroke. This is a pretty good example of a strong correlation.
It’s fun to look at these data. My power histogram over this erg season is starting to show a strong steady state component:
By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: concept2, erg, metrics, OTE, rowing, steady state, training