Rest Day 1/12/14: Are you prepared to compete day in and day out?

Jimmy from the Loyola Men's Crew Team working his Shoulder Flexibility in the Overhead Squat over the holidays.

Jimmy from the Loyola Men’s Crew Team working his Shoulder Flexibility in the Overhead Squat over the holidays.

The first week of the Renegade Rowing Training Plan is in the books.  What days did you hit?  What blocks did you focus on?  How are you feeling?  I almost hit them all, but mid way through the week I got hit with a sinus cold, so I’m going to focus on getting healthy over the next couple of days.  I wanted to take today and let you know my thoughts on preparation and competition, two important parts of our training.  Let us know what you think in the comments!

Preparation and Competition

In general, each week of the Renegade Plan can be classified as either a preparation week or a competition week.  During a preparation week one fitness block and one rowing block will be introduced.  In the following competition microcycle those two blocks will be repeated and individuals will be expected to compete and try to better their performances from the preparation week.  In order to know if you’ve improved you must be recording your results after each workout.  Going into this week keep an eye out for workouts we did last week and see if you can push a little bit harder to improve your performance.

Preparation is the key to reaching peak performance.  To be prepared is to consistently have your thoughts, feelings, and bodily responses at the right state at the right time.  The consistency that is required to reach peak performance and compete day in and day out will never happen if practice and competition behaviors are left to chance.  By creating a systematic approach to how we think about, feel, and react to different situations we can reduce the fear of the unknown and the stress associated with it.  The goal of preparation is to create processes that we can employ daily, weekly, seasonally, yearly, in a warm-up, at practice, in a race, and after competition to improve our readiness to perform.

Abby getting after it at the Renegade Rowing League last Saturday!

Abby getting after it at the Renegade Rowing League!

Competition is the basis for all sport.  People play sports because they’re fun.  Sports are fun because every participant is given a chance to compete.  It’s not the outcome or the opponent that matters.  People enjoy competing because they’re given an opportunity to test themselves and their abilities in order to experience the thrill of an improvement toward a goal.  Competition can be both individual and team oriented.   By incorporating competition into everyday practice, Renegade Rowing allows us to track progress toward our goals, but more importantly to have fun and experience the journey.

In order to compete, athletes must develop mental toughness.  Firsthand athletes are developed through competition when they harness the power of the mind.  Our thoughts affect our feelings and our feelings affect our actions.  Anyone can develop an ability to do work with regards to fitness and rowing, but when work capacity is combined with mental toughness, athletes can control their actions and reach their goals.  Mental toughness is an athlete’s ability to commit to competition with a belief in oneself, to have a positive focus on the things they can control, and to embrace challenge as an opportunity for learning and self-improvement.

Renegade CompetitionWhile the thrill of intrinsic motivation should be what drives us, we should not forget about the power of the opponent or the teammate in competition.  We can push ourselves as individuals, but the opportunity to push ourselves against others will only make us better.  I’m a competitive guy and I like being pushed and challenged and testing my abilities against others.  There’s honesty in giving it all you have against others, especially knowing they’re doing the same.

Rowing is an Olympic Sport that elite athletes train for year round.  Some athletes may only compete 5 to 6 times per year and of those competitions they might only peak for one race.  Most other sports have seasons filled with games allowing for learning and development during competition.  Renegade Rowing incorporates daily competition so that athletes have the same opportunities that other sports have.  Renegade athletes will have the confidence needed to perform on race day.  By providing many opportunities to experience race day competition in practice, athletes will have a wealth of experiences to draw from when race day arrives.

Going into the coming weeks, focus on your preparation and go hard when it’s time to compete.  Record your results, reflect on what you can do better, and use those thoughts in your preparation for the next day of competition.

Get after it and have fun!

Rowing WOD 1/11/14: 6×2:00 w/ 1:30 Rest – Post Best Split

Rowing WOD:

The women getting after there 2k at the Renegade Rowing League - next race is January 25th!

The women getting after their 2k at the Renegade Rowing League – next race is January 25th!

6 x 2:00 w/ 1:30 Rest

(1st @28 s/m, 2nd @28, 3rd @30, 4th @30, 5th @32, 6th @Open Rating)

  • Post Best Average Split and Stroke Rating to Comments

Strength WOD:

3x10RM Shoulder Press

  • 3rd set of 10 is for Max Reps (10+)
  • Post Load and Reps

Conditioning WOD:

6 RFT

1 Wall Climb

50m Bear Crawl

5 Front Squats (115/75 lbs)

50 Double Unders

  • Post Time to Comments

What stroke rating are you most efficient at?  Use today’s Rowing WOD as an opportunity to gain confidence and figure out what your most efficient race pace is for the next time you have to do a 2k or 1k… perhaps the Renegade Rowing League coming up on Saturday, January 25th at 11am?  Get after it and get ready to race!

Post your best average split and the stroke rating you maintained.

Note whether it was because you were fresh or because that stroke rating seemed easier for maintaining a faster split.

Rowing WOD 1/10/14: EMOM20 – Row 40sec @2k+7 – Post Distance and Avg Split

Rowing WOD:

Nick going long and stroke at the RRL!  Who's coming January 25th?

Nick going long and strong at the RRL! Who’s coming January 25th?

Every Minute On the Minute for 20min

Row :40 On @2k+7 @Following Stroke Rates

(Paddle Light during :20 Off)

Minutes 1-4 @24 s/m

Minutes 5-8 @26 s/m

Minutes 9-12 @28 s/m

Minutes 13-16 @26 s/m

Minutes 17-18 @24 s/m

Minutes 19-20 @22 s/m

  • Post Distance and Average Split to Comments

Conditioning WOD:

Complete For Time (Alternating Movements) …

5-4-3-2-1 Snatch (95/65 lbs.)

1-2-3-4-5 Lateral Burpees Over the Bar

  • Post Time and Load to Comments

Strength WOD:

EMOM10

3 Power Cleans

  • Should Be Touch and Go
  • Work Up To Something Challenging
  • Post Load to Comments

Todays focus is the Rowing WOD.  The goal of the workout is to control both stroke rating and pressure.  When the stroke rating is low you’ll have to push harder and take longer on the recovery … more ratio.  When the stroke rating comes up it should be easier because you can achieve your split with the stroke rating and not pushing as hard, less ratio.  Get focused and push it out.  The end will be very challenging, so be ready!

In the Olympic Lifting movements today be sure to practice perfect form in order to translate that power and speed to our rowing stroke.

Have fun and let us know how you do!

Conditioning WOD 1/8/14: 250m Row, “Helen”, 250m Row – Post Time and Splits

Rowing WOD:

The guys getting cheered on by fans at the RRL!  Who's getting ready for January 25th?

The guys getting cheered on by fans at the RRL! Who’s getting ready for January 25th?

10′ Erg Warmup

3×20 Strokes (10 w/ Pause @1/2 Slide, 10 Building to Race Pace)

Conditioning WOD:

Complete for Time…

1. Buy In: 250m Row

2. “Helen” – 3 Rounds

  • 400m Run
  • 21 KB Swings (24/16 kg)
  • 12 Pull Ups

3. Cash Out: 250m Row

Strength WOD:

Superset

1a. 6×4 Dips

1b. 6×10 Sit Ups

Today’s focus is aerobic conditioning.  Get in some good skill work to warmup with the Rowing WOD and then attack the Conditioning WOD.  Go hard for the start and finish 250m, but be smooth and efficient through “Helen”.  Focus on breathing and consistent pace.  If you execute consistency through all three rounds you get to empty the tanks on a 250m sprint just like the finish of a 2k.  At the end of the day the Strength WOD includes some supplemental strength for the shoulders and core.  Find the right scale so that each movement is challenging.

Take quality strokes and have fun pushing yourself.

Post your time for the Conditioning WOD to comments as well as your splits for each 250m piece.

 

Rowing WOD 1/7/13: Max Pressure – 10x:30 On/:30 Off – Post Average Split

Rowing WOD:

Checkout the virtual boats that get projected on the wall at the RRL!

Checkout the virtual boats that get projected on the wall at the RRL!

Max Pressure

10 x :30 On / :30 Off

  • Post overall average split as well as fastest and slowest splits to comments

Conditioning WOD:

Complete For Time (Alternating Movements) …

5-4-3-2-1 Bear Complex (95/65 lbs.)

1-2-3-4-5 Bar Facing Burpee

  • Post Time and Load to Comments

Strength WOD:

Gymnastics/Core Strength

Tabata Hollow Rocks

8 x :20 On/ :10 Off

  • Post Scales to Comments

Today’s focus is Rowing Power, so be sure to get in a good warmup and go hard for the 10 x :30 On/ :30 Off.  During the On strokes keep the rating under 36s/m and fight to remain smooth and clean as you get after it.  During the Off strokes paddle lightly at a 16-18 stroke rating while focusing on breathing and bringing your heart rate down.  Build the pressure up with about 3 seconds remaining in the rest.

Blocks

The Renegade Rowing Training Plan uses a block system to vary training focus, stimulus, volume, and intensity.  A block is a workout.  Each block can be classified by type and length.  Rowing blocks will be short, medium, or long.  Fitness blocks will be short, medium, or long.  Strength blocks differ slightly from the others in that they will not have a designated length, but rather a designated focus of total, lower, upper body, supplemental, or core strength.  Depending on the focus of the training cycle, the week, and the day the programming will use specific blocks to fulfill our needs.

Individualization

The Renegade Rowing Training Plan can be tailored for you, your schedule, and your ability by adding or subtracting blocks based on what you need work on or what you have time for.  If you need to build endurance be sure to add additional rowing blocks each day that focus on building aerobic capacity like the Pyramid and Castle workout from yesterday.  If you only have a half hour to fit something in then hit the focus for the day, which is posted in the title of the blog.  Today’s focus is the Rowing Block.  If you only have time to fit in two blocks, then hit the focus for the day and either the strength or conditioning blocks based on what you need to improve.

Have fun and post your results and experiences to comments!