THE BENEFITS OF BACK TO BACK HARD DAYS
YESTERDAY WAS ROUGH. We resurrected one of the toughest rides we ever do. It's called Hot Laps because we set up a 15-20 minute loop...
... then chase each other all out for an hour.
Not easy.
Because the site lines are pretty good...
... there's always someone to chase, or be chased by.
The reason this is so insidious is it's always after a challenging ride the day before.
So, back to back hard days.
Crazy?
Stupid?
Maybe, but check out this confirmation bias.
The Fast Talk podcast just released an episode detailing how the small country of Norway is so relatively...
... dominant at endurance events.
If you follow track, and I do, then you know Jakob Ingebrigtsen has been blasting the record books...
... and wondering how?
One of his methods involves back to back hard training.
He does the two sessions on the same day.
The rest of his 100+ miles of running per week are done in Zone 1 and 2.
This allows him to be fresh and go really deep on the hard day(s), while still building all kinds of aerobic capacity the rest of the week.
Will it work for you?
I don't know.
It has, however, worked for me.
Quite successfully.
Am I really going to completely resurrect the training now,
at the end of the season,
in the off season?
No.
Not all in.
But, since a few of are willing to commit to the concept,
we're going to keep the structure in place for next year.
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162.5 lbs
8ish hrs sleep
Pull Ups, Push Ups, Squats & Stuff
30 minutes recovery
120 minutes reading + Journaling