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TRIATHLON AND MULTISPORT
NEWS - DECEMBER 2008
The results are in and the first races of the
season have been run and won. The testing ground
for the off sesason training and planning is open
and there is still a long season ahead of us to
work on weaknesses and fine tune and post the
great performance which we all aspire to have
- that day where it all comes together and can
say to ourselves we had a perfect race. That goal
certainly keeps us coming back for more and is
the allure for triathletes the world over.
The Aussie season of course is a long one - stretching
from September to May so pacing oneself in training
and racing is crucial to keep it all together.
Having some time going back to base and aerobic
training and laying off the super hard stuff for
a few weeks over the Xmas and new year period
will go a long way is staying on top when the
season cranks back up come February.
Train smart to race well
Nick Croft
LATEST
SQUAD RESULTS
Hawaii Ironman - October 11th
James Hinchliffe 40-44
Julie Drysdale 45-49 from Noosa Tri Club Bike Group
Both James and Jules lined up for thier first
assault in Hawaii and came through is great Shape.
James went just 10.09.26 - just a bit slower than
his qualifying effort at IM OZ and Jules went
12.46
Bribie Island Tri - October 19
Bree Morris 3rd / 25-29, Neil MacPhee 3rd / 50-54,
Peter Fry, David Coulter 2nd / 60-64, Alsion Caiafa
2nd / 50-54, Dan O'Rourke, Karen Artis 3rd / 45-49,
Angelika Hannon, Brian Hannon
Noosa Triathlon - November 2
Well done to our Noosa tri participants - a few
first timers going around had a great expoerience
and we also had a few top 5 and 10 finishes as
well as some podiums. A great way to start the
season.
Justin Hunter, Jon McLachlan, Alison Caiafa -
2nd 50-54, Bree Morris, Peter Fry, David Coulter,
Angelika Hannon, Brian Hannon, Tim Stevenson,
Kate Appleton, Ariane Lauk - winner 24-24, Tim
McGavin, Caroline Giles, Neil MacPhee, Gary Brayley,
Michael Sweeny, Sam Cooke, Mark Revell, Julie
Drysdale, Harry Burnett, Byron Carter, Paul Argall,
Peter Crockett
Australian Sprint Distance Champs -
October 18
Mark Preston 3rd in 50-54
70.3 World Championships - Florida USA
Jason Keg 5.10 - 30min Personal Best
NOOSA
TRIATHLON CLINIC
MSC held it's clinic to a packed first time triathlete
audience on the Saturday before the race. It is
great top see the sport still growing and the
influx of first time athletes certainly are very
healthy. Talking with one the the USM staffers
pre race unearthed a fact that some 3000 in total
(of the teams and individuals) were turned away
this year - and the race was full be the end of
July.
UP-COMING EVENTS
Noosa tri club race - November 23
Australian National Series Race One (Olympic
and Sprint distance) - Adelaide November 30David
Coulter, Neil MacPhee, Paul Argall, Bree Morris,
Alison Caiafa
Ironman Western Australia - December
7
Byron Carter, Mark Revell, Sam Cooke
Phuket Triathlon - Thailand December
7
Brian Hannon, Angelika Hannon, Jason
Keg
THE
MANY BENEFITS OF A LONG RUN
Categorically speaking, long runs are moderately
to highly challenging workouts that are taxing
for their duration more than they are for their
intensity. Long runs are more important than high-intensity
run workouts such as speed intervals and tempo
runs because without long runs you wouldn't even
be able to finish a middle-distance or long-distance
triathlon, whereas high-intensity run workouts
only help you finish faster, supposing you already
have the endurance to finish.
Long runs are performed at any pace between an
easy jog and marathon race pace (60 to 85 percent
VO2 max). Therefore some of the benefits that
come from doing long runs are the same as those
associated with shorter runs performed within
the same intensity range. What qualifies as a
long run when you're training for sprint triathlons
is unlikely to qualify as a long run when you're
training for an Ironman. But one thing is absolute:
every triathlete needs runs that are long for
him or her, today.
General benefits
Long runs enhance your ability to handle the repetitive
impact of running without getting injured by increasing
the density of the bones of your lower extremities
and creating thicker, tougher tendons and stronger,
more rupture-resistant muscle fibers. Precisely
because they last longer than other workouts,
long runs advance these crucial adaptations further,
as long as you build up to them gradually.
A second benefit that long runs share with other
run workouts is that of improving your running
economy. The more time you spend running, the
more waste your neuromuscular system is able to
remove from your stride. The two factors that
determine how much time you spend running are,
of course, the frequency of your runs and their
duration. For this reason long runs are among
the best economy-boosting workouts.
Two further benefits that are associated with,
but not particular to, long runs are increased
aerobic capacity and enhanced aerobic metabolism.
Your aerobic capacity is the maximum rate at which
oxygen can be delivered to your muscles. A host
of distinct adaptations serve to increase aerobic
capacity; these include growth of the heart muscle
and increases in blood volume, hemoglobin in the
blood, and capillary density in the muscles.
Aerobic metabolism is the process by which energy
is released from glucose, glycogen, fatty acids,
and amino acids with the help of oxygen inside
your muscle cells. As with aerobic capacity, there
is a whole list of adaptations stimulated by moderately
low- to moderately high-intensity running that
serve to increase your capacity for aerobic metabolism.
These adaptations include an increase in the number
of mitochondria (the organelles inside your muscle
cells wherein aerobic metabolism occurs) and an
increase in the activity of the enzymes that facilitate
the oxidation of glucose/glycogen and fatty acids.
Particular benefits
There are additional benefits of long runs that
are more particular to this type of workout. The
most celebrated special benefit of long runs is
that of delaying exhaustion due to liver and/or
muscle glycogen depletion. Moderate-intensity
running enhances fat burning, allowing you to
burn less glycogen and thereby conserve it longer.
Long runs that deplete glycogen stores also stimulate
higher levels of subsequent glycogen storage,
in effect giving you a bigger gas tank to work
with. Finally, long runs enhance your body's capacity
for gluconeogenesis - that is, for converting
lactate and amino acids into glucose in the liver.
This allows you to keep running strong even when
your original glycogen stores have fallen low.
Muscle damage is another major cause of fatigue
in long runs that you can become more resistant
to by regularly doing challenging long runs in
training. Individual muscle fibers are susceptible
to rupturing as they contract eccentrically to
keep your body from crumpling to the ground every
time your foot lands. As this damage accumulates,
your form falls apart, your nervous system cuts
back on muscle stimulation, and you start to feel
sore and miserable. In a word: you bonk. Long
runs increase the muscles' capacity to survive
repetitive eccentric stress and thereby delay
the point at which muscle damage reaches a critical,
bonk-inducing level.
Tips for long runs
Start doing long runs once a week beginning about
six weeks into your training program and continue
doing them throughout the remainder of it. Skip
the long run during recovery weeks, which you
should indulge in every third or fourth week.
Your first long run should be just 10 percent
longer than the longest run you've done up to
that point in your training program. Increase
the duration of your long run by up to 10percent
with each subsequent iteration. Aim to do your
longest long run 4-12 weeks before your last or
longest race of the season. Four weeks is best
if it's a long-distance race or any race wherein
your goal is just to finish. Closer to 12 weeks
is better if you're training to be competitive
in shorter triathlons. After that point your long
runs can level off and you can focus more on high-intensity
workouts.
While you're increasing the duration of your
long runs, do them at a comfortable pace. Just
going the distance is enough to stimulate the
adaptations you seek. The danger of doing your
long runs too fast is that your muscles will be
forced to burn carbohydrate preferentially, foiling
your objective of increasing your fat-burning
efficiency. When your fitness reaches the point
where just covering the distance is no longer
challenging, you can start to push the pace and
do some variable-pace long runs. The two conventional
formats for the variable-pace long run are (1)
starting slowly and increasing the pace every
few miles throughout the run and (2) throwing
some marathon-pace or tempo-pace surges into an
otherwise easy long run. Save these tough workouts
for the final weeks of your training program.
Wear a fluid belt on all your long runs and drink
a sports drink throughout them. This will enhance
your performance in these workouts and in so doing
enhance the training effect you derive from them.
It will also help you recover faster from your
long runs, especially if you use a sports drink
containing amino acids or protein. If you just
can't be bothered to carry a bottle, at least
carry gels and find water taps where you can wash
them down.
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