Rest Day 7/10/14: How do you set and attack a Goal? – Share

Rest Day:

Renegade Rowing Team post Race! Will you be in this boat?  Sign Up and join us July 17 @5:30am @CRI to tryout and join the team!

Renegade Rowing Team post Race! Will you be in this boat? Sign Up and join us July 17 @5:30am @CRI to tryout and join the team!

What’s your goal for next week?  What’s your goal for the month of July?  What’s your goal for the Summer? How do you set and attack a Goal?

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.

The first step in preparation is goal setting.  Goals provide direction and purpose.  While it’s important to set goals at the beginning of the season, keep in mind that goal setting can be performed whenever we need to focus, to increase motivation, to decrease anxiety, and to increase confidence.  Good goal setting involves a team vision, a mission, or set of values as the ultimate goal.  (The goal of the Renegade Rowing Team is to give rowers the resources, knowledge, and experience needed to compete on the water and in the gym.)   After that there are both long-term and short-term goals.  Last come smaller targets that when reached bring us one step closer to the long or short-term goals.

The Goal Setting Dam

Goal setting can be thought of as a dam that creates a body of water for us to row on.  The targets are small rocks and pebbles that fill in the gaps and support the short-term and long-term goals.  The short-term and long-term goals are larger boulders that provide support to the concrete slab that is the vision, mission, and team values.  When we set goals we pour the concrete slab first, then we set the boulders, then we fill in the small rocks and pebbles.

In order to always have a body of water to row on the dam must be maintained.  Goals only work if they’re looked at regularly.  If targets aren’t being reached or serving a purpose, remove them and replace them with better ones.  The same goes with short-term and long-term goals.  Set goals, but continually reassess them.  We will aim to set and reassess our goals once every month.

When building the dam and setting goals it is important to remember there are two types of goals, process-oriented and outcome-oriented goals.  A process-oriented goal would be getting body preparation by half slide or maintaining a tight midline through a squat.  An outcome-oriented goal would be winning a championship or squatting 300 lbs.  Our dam should be filled with both, but the more process-oriented goals the stronger the dam.  Process-oriented goals will help us reach our outcome-oriented goals.

Most of All!  Set goals that are …

Positive, specific, and controllable.  Positive, meaning they “add” and “do” things instead of avoiding them.  Specific, meaning they’re focused, tangible, and not vague.  If needed they could be measured.  Controllable, meaning it is up to us to achieve and manipulate our goals, not some outside force.  We should have the power to affect change and control the goal.  So, start setting goals.  While you do, always ask, are my goals positive, specific and controllable?

Post your goal for next week and your process to attack it to comments!

Rest Day 7/6/14: 15min of Skill Work – What Skills are you working on?

Rest Day:RR Hollow Rock1

15min of Skill Work

I hope you’re all enjoying the weekend with family and friends.  Take 15 minutes out of your rest day to practice some skills.  Better yet, try to teach a friend the skills you’re working on.  If you can describe and demonstrate a skill through teaching someone else, you’ll reinforce yourRR Hollow Rock2understanding and ability with that skill.  Try to pick one skill you’ve mastered and one skill you’re working on and alternate back and forth between the two.  If you crush double unders, but can’t hold a handstand, do 15 double unders and then 5 attempts at a handstand.

Have some fun and get excited for another solid week of training!

Post your skill work to comments.

Rowing WOD 6/27/14: 4RFT – 200m Row, 20 Air Squats – Post Time and 1k Goal

Rowing WOD:

Bringing it home in the sprint! Who's interested in joining the Renegade Rowing Team this Summer?

4 Rounds For Time …

200m Row

20 Air Squats

Today’s Rowing WOD is a quick burner to get primed for our 1k test tomorrow.  This is a great opportunity to not only practice the start and finish of your 1k, but the quick release transition on and off the erg for competitions.  For the first 2 pieces perform your start and settle.  Since the piece is so short you may only have a couple of strokes to settle before getting off the erg.  Make them count!  Hit your 1k goal pace the stroke after your 10 high in the start.  For the last 2 pieces build over 10 to your 1k goal pace and then sprint out the last 10 strokes with negative splits.  During the squats be smooth and breathe.  Make sure you hit full depth to give the quads a little break and flush out some lactic acid from those quads.

I hope your excited to crush the 1k tomorrow.  The tryout for the Renegade Rowing Team will involve a 1k and it would be awesome to have a game plan and know where you’re at going in.  Tryouts will be July 17th at 5:30am at Community Rowing.  Sign Up Here and come ready to crush it.

Post your time and 1k goal to comments.

Rowing WOD 6/6/14: 3RFT – 1k Row, 20 Air Squats, 30 Sit Ups – Post Time and Splits

Rowing WOD:

Rowing Warmup at CFB

3 Rounds For Time …

1k Row (@2k Pace)

20 Air Squats

30 AbMat Sit Ups

Today’s Rowing WOD is to build some aerobic endurance and continue dialing in our control at holding consistent splits mid race.  We’re training for the 1k this month, but since we’re combining it with other movements I’d like to see everyone focus on consistency at their 2k pace.  During the squats stay connected to the floor and keep good posture all the way through.  With the sit ups be sure to use your arms to help you find a rhythm you can maintain all the way through unbroken.  For the first 1k you can practice a full pressure race start, which is 1/2, 3/4, Full, and then 10 High Strokes.

Focus on being smooth, maintaining your breath, and keeping your posture.

Have some fun and challenge a friend!

Post your time and average splits for the 1k’s to comments.

Rowing WOD 6/3/14: 6 x 650m w/ 2:00 Rest – Post Avg Splits

Rowing WOD:

Renegade Rowing Team getting their point to start the Rumble on the River

6 x 650m w/ 2:00 Rest

  • FOCUS: RACE STRATEGY
  • Hold 1k Goal Split

Our next testing day will be June 28th with a 1k, so now is the time to dial in your race strategy and build your confidence.  You’ll definitely want a game plan going in. This is a Rowing WOD we did over the winter and today is a chance to test your training and see if you’re progressing.  Use today’s Rowing WOD to test out your race strategy. Perform the first two pieces with a focus on consistency in stroke rating and splits. If you’re feeling solid try to go a little bit faster each consecutive piece.  If you have your splits from the winter try to improve upon them and finish stronger on the last couple of pieces.  Ideally your splits will be a little faster because we’re focused on the 1k instead of the 2k and there is a little more rest.  Over the next two weeks we’ll be dialing in our speed with shorter intervals, so get after it today.  Now is the time to see what you’ve got and push yourself.

Post your average splits for each piece to comments!