4 Posts are tagged with: training_for_a_triathlon

Weekly Tips on Preparing for a Triathlon: Planning the Right Way for a Triathlon

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Oct 22, 2009 by Kurt Simonsen

Countless people join the sport of triathlon each year. Many become severely addicted and grow into everyday trainers with long-range goals. Others, however, struggle and fail, competing in only one before selling their bikes and using their swim goggles for protective eyewear on home improvement projects. Any person who has ever been involved in a triathlon can understand why people become attached, but the harder concept to comprehend is why some quit so early. A good possibility is that they simply did not plan well at the beginning, thus setting themselves up for failure.

To plan properly, that is once you have decided to go all in and actually do a race, whether it is a sprint, Olympic, Half Iron or Full Iron, you must select the best time frame for training. To begin, pick a race that is at least twelve weeks away. Anything closer will cramp your training and prevent your body from being totally prepared. Race day then will be a nightmare, for attempting a triathlon when being undertrained rarely results in that warm, fuzzy feeling needed to come back again and again.

Next, generate a training pace that allows your body to adjust. Throwing yourself into a massive workout will hurt your body, which again sours the experience. Ease into a pattern that has logical, safe increments. This will give your body time to rest, recover, and progress, and it will let you feel more accomplished and confident as the race date grows closer.

Finally, when scheduling your workouts, plan all of your swims first. Time in the water, either in the pool or open water, is the most difficult to attain, so make swimming your planning priority. Training for the running and the biking can be done just about any place at any time, so fill those in once you have mapped out your aquatic times.

If you begin early and establish a realistic plan that takes into consideration both time and patience, you stand a far better chance of enjoying the actual race. The goal of a triathlon is to get you to come back and be a true member of the sport, so plan well and you can change your life in ways you previously didn't think you could.

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Weekly Tips on Preparing for a Triathlon: Using Focus Months During the Off-Season

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Sep 17, 2009 by Kurt Simonsen

Triathletes, especially new ones, often find off-season training to be difficult and less intense. While clearly you cannot be as aggressive in your workouts during the off-season, as you are not searching to peak then for a particular race or time period, you can generate a training schedule that permits you to establish a motivated approach that will strengthen your weakest points and help you to avoid the dreaded plateau.

Implementing focus months can allow you to place all of your emphasis on a given discipline. For example, if you struggle with the swim and find yourself to be more proficient on the bike and on the run, spend a dedicated two months perfecting your abilities in the water. Swimming five to six days a week, rather than rotating each day like in a normal in-season workout cycle, will help you make greater gains in both strength and form. While you can do other workouts to maintain your run and bike, the majority of your efforts should be in the pool.

To do so, train hard for two weeks in the given sport, then schedule in an easy week of rest and reflection. Keep repeating this cycle for up to two months, and then turn your sights to one of the two other disciplines. After a six-month off-season, you will have had two focus months for each sport, and your overall proficiency in each will have improved without question. Then, as the triathlon season approaches, begin the normal rotational schedule that will permit you to peak in time for the races in which you will compete.

Sacrificing time on two to work on one may seem like odd advice, but it is sound and logical, especially during the off-season. Getting over that mental block so many triathletes have, the one that drives you to work on everything all the time, represents the first obstacle. The second hurdle to clear is training the right way. If you want to improve the swim, study quick swimmers. Watch their form and their habits, and do what you can to mimic them. Immerse yourself in the culture of the sport in which you need to improve.

If you try this approach in a diligent and dedicated manner, you will find that the gains you make set up your later triathlon season better than your old training methods. In your next off-season, give monthly rotations a try. I think you'll love the results.

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Weekly Tips on Preparing for a Triathlon: The Mental Balance in Training

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Aug 13, 2009 by Kurt Simonsen

Unless you are among the elite triathletes in the world, you probably approach the sport with goals and desires that do not revolve around winning. Instead, in all likelihood, you started the sport to challenge yourself, to prove something to yourself, to replace other sports you can no longer compete in, or to simply stay involved in a competitive manner. If so, then we all must admit that we train for different yet similar reasons, and, although we will go about our daily workouts differently, two very distinct commonalities do, and must, exist.

First, we each have a disciplined approach that seeks to get the most from our training. Whether we create a schedule based on what we want or we follow a delineated breakdown borrowed from someone more experienced, each of us has a daily goal designed to get us to the end. The work rate we invest begins as a struggle but will quickly alter into an addiction, once we see and feel the results of our efforts. Thus, we portion off a small piece, although how small varies person to person, of our lives to this sport, and within that time period we push and drive ourselves like we never have before.

Yet, despite our greatest desires to succeed, we all must realize the power of reality, which brings about the second, although slightly contradictory, commonality. Within the discipline rests a guilt that can eat a triathlete up: letting life happen instead of training. Many people experience an overwhelming sense of guilt if they eat wrong or miss a workout. Nothing could be more detrimental to your mental training stability than permitting yourself to feel this guilt. Life will happen, sicknesses will occur, so understand that although you see training as imperative, other parts of life have more value.

In the end, train really hard, but live life too. If you miss a workout, move on and don't try to compensate. Let your world continue because triathlon is about improving life and self-esteem, not making it more difficult and stressful. Relax and enjoy a sport than can change who you are.

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Weekly Tips on Preparing for a Triathlon: Understanding the Run

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Aug 6, 2009 by Kurt Simonsen

All three sections of a triathlon are grueling both physically and psychologically. Swimming forces you to not only deal with your physical ability to cut the water, but it mentally challenges you to stay focused through the unpredictability of open water. Cycling, which is physically more challenging in terms of maximum heart rate, gives no physical break following the swim, and it requires intense mental attention as you must manipulate a machine at high rates of speed.

Running, the third and final stage, however, trumps both in its physiological and psychological demands. Runners tax their bodies like no other athlete, as evidence by the long wait periods between major races. No runner can compete at high distance levels week after week like a cyclist can. No runner can perform the multi-faceted workouts in repetitive fashion that a swimmer can.

Runners must be acutely aware of their situations. Injury prevention is critical when building a running base for a triathlon, as overuse problems stemming from too much volume too quickly or insufficient rest can destroy any person's triathlon season. As far as elite runners go, they spend roughly 25% less time training than their counterparts in swimming and cycling.

Psychologically, the run can mentally hinder any ill-prepared triathlete. As the final stage, the run not only pushes your fatigued body, but it also sternly challenges your mind. Your mentality is stressed from the moment you hit the water, so as you enter the last phase, your brain is tired. Training yourself psychologically, knowing how to handle your body, playing mental tricks to keep focused, understanding how to overcome your brain's desire to ease up, will provide you with great returns come race day.

Overall, be smart about your run training on both levels. Set reachable goals that will allow your body to make small, manageable strides. Along the way, pay attention to how you respond psychologically to the difficulties you face. Knowing how to handle your brain on race day may prove to be the difference for you.

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