A different thought on Cross Training


You may have read my last blog which was about ‘The Dreaded Injury”. If you did then this next blog follows on quite nicely from it. If you didn’t, not to worry, as this post is totally applicable on its own, but I do recommend going back and reading my last post.

One of the good things about the sport of Triathlon is simply that it involves 3 sports in one, and this point alone is good for multiple reasons. The point I would like to highlight is cross training. Whilst recovering from my Achilles injury I was forced to take some time completely off running. For any triathlete, especially those that really enjoy running this is extremely tough news to deal with. This brings me to my point; I still had swimming and cycling to train. A little juggling of programme changes and I had 2 sports to put all my energy into. For many sports an injury can mean having to take time completely away from your sport, but because of the cross training ability in triathlon, this is not always the case.

Becoming the best triathlete you can be is a lot harder than just giving 110%. It’s a fine art. Balancing three disciplines, getting adequate recovery, nutrition etc. For many this is where a coach is invaluable. They can help you take out the guessing of when to space key workouts, how many recovery days you need and how to generally structure your short and long term programme.
This idea of cross training virtually never leaves a triathlete with nothing to do (remember recovery is doing something) and so being able to train across multiple sports is beneficial in the injury setting, it can also be a double edge sword, that leads us to getting injured.
To be a top triathlete, you would like to swim like a swimmer, cycle like a cyclist and run like runner. Many world-class triathletes can hold their own against a world-class athletes in a single discipline. But we can’t train a full swimmers programme, a full cyclist programme and then a full runners program… trust me have tried. We must take into account the significant cross training benefit in order to be a triathlete and allow ourselves the right balance in training and recovery. For many age group athletes, I believe that means cutting out a lot of junk miles they do not realize they are doing. I’ve seen many age groupers that are just as fit as me, but yet they never go anywhere near as fast. I believe this is partly to do with quantity over quality.
Thus my next point I am making here is Quality. We are triathletes, we train a lot! Understand that we are getting gains from cross training and reduce some of those junk miles, and put quality into it. Instead of a long steady-hard swim set, put in some max/threshold every now and again. I can hear people already saying “but im not a sprinter”. Correct, you are not, but doing one or 2 quality speed sessions a week in each discipline does not make you a sprinter, but what it might do is increase you max speed ability, raise your natural comfortable speed, and raise your threshold pace. It also gives the body and mind a different stimulus to hours and hours of the same thing.

Give it a go. Change one session in your swim, one in your cycling, one in your run from a medium long format at a steady pace, to a short sharp intense session. Space them out across the week, allowing recovery time, and it might just spark you into life and out of the funk you may be in and send you towards PBs.

I realize this may be a different angle created by thinking about cross training than you may be familiar with, but that’s why I am writing this. It may scare triathletes to get out of that regular rhythm they are used to, but that’s not a bad thing. New Stimulus can do great things. Be adventurous. Get stuck into it.

May Update







Hi guys,
I hope that you have all been well and keeping busy.
May has been a tough month for me. After struggling with my left Achilles for the early part of the US season I decided to head back to Los Angeles to get on top of it and back running properly.

After consulting with my doctors and therapists back home and seeing a few doctors here in LA we decided that the best treatment was to get a PRP (plasma rich platelet) injection. This creates a healing respons in the body which is helpful in a low blood flow area like the Achilles tendon.

After 5 weeks of no running, well no running on the road, I have been jogging in a Alter G treadmill. This is a reasonably new technology that allows you to alter the amount of gravity you run with so you can control the impact on your body… after running in Alter G I am beginning to feel what it would be like to be a Kenyan! I have been back running properly on the road for a week and things are looking good.
Over my off period I managed to get in some good biking and swimming and it is good to have James Bowstead, a young triathlete from back home over here with me to train and race with. Not to mention it is great to have Kelly up here with me!

We have decided to go ahead with the racing season and next stop is this weekend over the other side of the country in Connecticut for the Revolution 3 Half Ironman followed by the Eagleman 70.3 in Cambridge, Maryland where I can hopefully defend my title.

Terenzo

Super Haka

James Bowstead and Terenzo Bozzone sending their thoughts and Prayers to Christchurch from the USA and hoping that Kiwis near and far take part in the Super Haka!

THE DREADED INJURY


A topic that almost all athletes can relate too.
In injury strikes, there is no quick fix, or short cut to recovery. Simple as that. Each injury needs to be seen by a professional and treated appropriately. Doing so will result in the best way to recovery.
There now I have got that off my chest, time to talk about what I want to talk about.
Knowing the above is important. Being told to rest when rest is needed is tough for those where exercise and pushing our body to the limits is as much a part of us as the blood flowing through our veins. This drive in the sporting arena is what is needed to be the best, but it is also what causes us to make poor choices when an injury is involved.
If you are reading this blog, then the message I am trying to get across to you is to beware of that tunnel vision drive towards your goal.
How many times do you see athletes overtraining, running despite being told not to, pushing beyond professional advice. We have all done, I have done it. Do we think we are smarter than the sports doctor/physio telling us we can’t run for 2 weeks, no, but it’s our drive that leads us to ignore the advice and ask too much of our body.
You may have gotten away with doing so once, maybe twice, but your are walking a fine line, are you seriously willing to risk your dreams over a poor choice when it came to listening to advice from a professional.
We all wish we were bullet proof, at times we think we are, but we are not. Realising this can be tough, but once we accept that to achieve our goals we need to look after our body (physically and mentally!)
Yes it’s a setback having to take a month or more off running, maybe miss your next race. But in the long scheme of things I would rather do that, get my injury fully recovered so I can push to the limits again and reach my goal. The other option is, train through the injury, do things that you have been advised not to. Why not race the race despite the pain. Firstly you will never achieve what you want to achieve this way, and at some point the injury will catch up with you, and by this time you have turned a 1 month recovery process into a yearlong process or even ruined your chance for good.
I know what you are thinking, I have heard this all before. You should have, but I’m telling you again. We are a mentally tough and driven breed us sporting athletes so to think clearly when it comes to injury we need to have this idea drilled into our brain, so when that decision comes to know when to stop and listen to the advice, we take it!

I feel like I’m almost telling you off whilst writing this blog if you are someone that can relate to this scenario, and I believe almost all of us can. I don’t wish to do so, but I am passionate about this topic and its importance, and I hate to dreams lost, goals never reached, bodies broken down to a fragment of what they could have been all due a poor decision with regards to injuries.

Yes it is easier said than done. On a personal note, I myself have an Achilles injury, and many of us no how serious these can be. I have just had a month off no running, and it has been hard to deal with. But I am aware of the importance in proper recovery, and at the same time am aware that proper treatment will mean I can reach my goal of becoming the Ironman World Champion in the future. There is still a longer road to recovery for my Achilles, but I will get though it and have it back to 100% in no time. I am also lucky to still be able to swim and bike so ill be working hard in those areas.

Good luck, train smart, recover when needed, and make smart choices.

Terenzo

ABOUT ME

Birthday: 1 March 1985.
Nickname: T.
Education: Two years Physiotherapy; 1 year Business Degree.
Occupation: Professional Triathlete
Coach: Performance Lab-Jon Ackland (since 1999)
Pilates: IQ Pilates-Raewin Hing
Language: English
Height: 179cm
Home Town: Auckland, New Zealand.
Favorite Food: Mums pizza. sushi, chocolate, Ice!
Interests: Snow Boarding; Tennis; Surfing; Movies.
Favorite Holiday: Banyan Tree Resort at Laguna Phuket, Thailand
Best Running Trail: Portland Oregon USA
Best overall Training: North Shore, Auckland, NZ / USA
Best surf Beach: Kumara Patch Taranaki.