You Are Disciplined to Train, But Do You Have Training
Discipline?
I have the privilege of working with motivated athletes and they
all exhibit a high degree of self discipline. Often, one of the
hardest things to do is to get them not to train, or to rest and
recover. Training can be a slippery slope. You have to balance
the right amount of stress with the right amount of rest. Even
though you may be a disciplined athlete, training discipline
means performing the right volume, intensity, and work out and
then allowing your body to recover from it. It also means
knowing when not to train. Training too hard can be more
detrimental than not enough.
Too many athletes confuse high volume training with high quality
training. Just increasing the amount your run or ride will not
necessarily get you faster. You have to choose the right work
outs to train your weakness and capitalize on your strengths.
Training should be a slow steady progression. If you add 10 more
intervals to what you accomplished last week, the first 3 may
have been beneficial, and the last 7 counter productive. A
proper plan will not increase overall volume more than about 8%
per week with a maximum of 10%. Try to keep these numbers in
mind when you design your plan.
Another common mistake is training too hard in the weeks leading
up to a race. Depending on your event you should taper your
training for 1-2 weeks or more. In this time overall volume goes
down while intensity stays up. The purpose of this is to have
you fully rested while maintaining a high level of fitness. Some
athletes find it hard to taper their training and feel they are
under training before their event. As Chris Carmichael once told
me,