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sprint power

Power Meter Training Made Simple

April 26, 2008 by Jesper Bondo Medhus Leave a Comment

Riding with a Power Tap or SRM Crank mounted on your bike doesn’t have to be rocket science. Actually you can benefit from using a power meter without knowing much about exercise physiology. In this article I will show you how you can benefit from a power meter without knowing anything about exercise physiology.

In the Power Meter Project I used maximum power tests to get a profile of the rider’s performance at different distances. These tests represent what freaks like me would call anaerobic alactacid sprint power, anaerobic lactacid endurance power, maximum oxygen consumption power and threshold power. But it is not necessary to fully understand these terms to get a great value from a power meter.

Example: Time trialist, 25km, personal best: 40min. avg. 320Watts.
You are a time trialist that competes in competitions with a finishing time of 40 minutes. By using a power meter in a couple of these events you will know how many watts you can maintain for such a period and then you will know how you shall pace yourself in a future race or at training sessions. Whether you try to do long rides at your maximum race pace or try to split it up in shorter intervals is not as important right now. What I want you to know is that you have a great opportunity to do some really good workouts by knowing your race pace power. Also there should be some seconds to cut off from your personal records by having a better pace strategy during the time trial. This is easily achieved with a power meter.

Suggestions for interval training:
5 x (6min 320Watts + 4min 160Watts)

2 x (15min 320Watts + 10min 160Watts)

Not that difficult, right?

Short-term sprint interval rocks

August 22, 2006 by Jesper Bondo Medhus 10 Comments

How effective can a set of short-term sprint intervals compared to regular endurance training at a comfortable pace be? It is well known that interval training can be time saving, but in July 2006 there was published an interesting study in The Journal of Physiology. The scientists compared the outcome of low volume sprint training 3 times a week (4-6  x (30sec. all-out efforts / 4 min. recovery)) with high volume endurance training 3 times a week (90-120min at 65% VO2 peak).

Before they started the training programs the riders performed a 2km and 30km time trial. After the 14-days training program, they did the same tests over again. Muscle samples were taken to show molecular and cellular adaptations.

There were similar increments in muscle oxidative capacity, muscle buffering capacity and glycogen content in both groups. All these increments were significant which shows us, that the initial adaptations seem to be the same, whether you go for short intervals or long rides. The interesting part is that the sprint-group spent much less time on their training but got the same improvements in performance. Actually they only spent 7-8 minutes a week on their intervals (and 60 minutes recovery time).  The endurance group rode their bikes for more than 5 hours a week!

This report is very interesting and I look forward to read more results from these scientists. In the future I will prefer a setup with trained cyclists instead of just ”˜active men’ and let them stick to the training program for a longer period of time. Nevertheless this study shows something about how deep impact intervals can make on performance.

I´ll go for some high intensity sprints on my Principia this afternoon”¦

Reference:
Gibala MJ, Little JP, van Essen M, Wilkin GP, Burgomaster KA, Safdar A, Raha
S, Tarnopolsky MA.  Short-term sprint interval versus traditional endurance training: Similar initial adaptations in human skeletal muscle and exercise performance. J Physiol. 2006 Jul 6;

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