I hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving and got a chance to enjoy time with family and friends. We did the YMCA Pie Run in Middletown and braved the cold to earn our Turkey and Mashed Potatoes! Here is the training plan for this week. Let’s kick off December on a strong note and bring it home for the New Year. Let us know if you have any questions or would like to join the Renegade Rowing Project in fighting for your goals!
Weekly Training Plan:
Weekly Challenge:
Spend 3min in the bottom of a squat each day … tell us how it goes!
RR Social WOD:
Hike Harvard Stadium @6am on Tuesday
(Let us know if you’re going so we can keep an eye out for you!)
One thing that all good athletes have in common is a sense of efficiency. The athlete that can maintain proper mechanics and spend the least amount of energy to complete a task will be able to push harder and farther compared to the athlete that just flies and dies. This weeks’ Rowing WODs introduce a key concept to being efficient in rowing and may improve your efficiency in longer wods.
Checkout the focus for Monday’s RWOD… Start the workout by rowing 1,000m at 28 strokes per minute and holding a 2k+5 split. This will get you warm and ready to go to work. During the 4min rest fit in 20 push ups however you want. Then, set the monitor for 3′ of work and 1′ of rest. Each 3-minute piece is broken into 1-minute sections that should be rowed at the designated stroke rating holding a 2k+7 split.
In order to hold the goal split while decreasing the stroke rating you must perform a ratio shift. A ratio shift changes the timing of the stroke on the drive and the recovery. For example, shifting from 1 on the drive: 2 on the recovery, to 1 on the drive: 3 on the recovery. This is a challenging workout. Use it to develop a sense of efficiency. A proper ratio shift maintains the power per stroke but allows the rower time to breath and prepare for the next stroke a little bit more.
Post your results for this weeks workouts and your Experience with ratio shifts.
Below are some pictures of Mike T. after working on staying connected through the finish. What does your finish look like? Is it efficient? How fast do your hands move through the finish? … Just a few things to think about as we continue to work on suspension through the stroke and balanced finishes.







Set the monitor to display the power curve (or force curve) during your next warmup to really dial in body awareness and technique. The ideal curve is a smooth inverted parabola with the peak located in the center of the curve. If you can make this happen then your technique has a nice smooth transition of force being applied to the handle from the legs, hips, and arms. Everything from your head to your toes is working together in a nice smooth sequence that results in an efficient application of power.
If you’re looking for an added challenge, as the stroke rating increases to 24 strokes/minute and then 28 strokes/minute, try to move the peak of the curve to the left and get the curve to start higher up the vertical axis with a very steep slope. This will mean you’re very connected and getting good initiation with the legs. The challenge then becomes can you keep the curve smooth and chatter free!





