PicoBlog

Capacity, Volume and Their Implications

With the success of Norway’s elite athletes, there’s been a lot written about the Norwegian approach. I decided to study one of their leading coaches, Olav Aleksander Bu.

I found a man with a similar outlook to my own. I recommend you study his methods. Apply them for yourself, and your team. Like Olav Aleksander, I hope you are generous with sharing your understanding.

Today, we explore two topics:

  • Capacity

  • Volume

  • If I ask you to explain your capacity then what comes to mind?

    Bu warns that we should be careful when choosing benchmarks. It’s easy to fall into the trap of optimizing for test performance.

    Our understanding of physiology is limited. We don’t know many mechanism that cause important adaptations.

    Having helped redefine the limits of human performance, Bu’s OK with the limits of understanding. His main focus is achieving the desired adaptation.

    You should adopt his attitude.

    If we asked a physiologist to define your capacity then what might they test?

    • VO2max

    • 5 and 20 minute best power or pace

    • 3, 12 and 20 minute bests to derive Critical Power

    • A 40-minute best effort for a “long” look

    What if we asked Scott Molina?

    G-man, there’s a reason we have races

    I like Scott’s approach. Specific Capacity is race performance.

    So where should we start? We start with General Capacity.

    In every interview, Bu refers to:

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    Listen to Bu’s advice:

    • Sprint Distance - every athlete can build to the point where they handle a sprint distance triathlon, daily

    • 70.3 Distance - elites can build to the point where they handle four hours, daily

    • Ironman Distance - the historical drop off in run times is due to a lack of run volume

    Testing the limits of chronic daily load has been a focus for the Norwegian Team.

    Volume provides a measure of General Capacity.

    The daily average of:

    • Your Last Month

    • Your Last Season

    • Your Last Year

    • Your Last Olympic Cycle

    As this long term daily average increase, so does your General Capacity.

    Look at what great endurance athletes do.

    • They Do A Lot

    • They Do It for A Long Time

    • They Prepare For The Specific Demands Of Their Race

    • They Minimize The Energy Cost of Race Pace

    I managed to get a question into Sean Seale’s interview with Olav Aleksander.

    Q: What is the #1 metric for tracking athlete performance?

    A: The Velocity:Duration Curve

    The ability to train specific velocity depends on our General Capacity.

    Every interviewer wants to know The Secret.

    Each time, Bu answers with a variation of:

    Volume links most closely to performance

  • Volume leads to General Capacity

  • General Capacity supports Specific Training

  • Specific Training results in Specific Capacity

  • Volume => General Capacity => Specific Training => Specific Capacity => Race Performance

    Rich Roll’s interview with the Bergen Boys digs into their recovery protocol:

  • Sleep Lots

  • Don’t Go To Bed Depleted - Useful Insight From CGM

  • Live A Simple Life - Complexity Creates Consequences

  • Health benefits start, and end, below the level required to race well.

    Be cautious, as you move towards high-performance sport, you may move away from health.

    If you aspire to race well then you’ll need to:

  • Train Daily

  • Simplify Your Life

  • Sleep More

  • Extend Your Time Horizon

  • As a package, what do the above imply?

    • Aim to maximize volume the next 1000 days.

    • Then, do the same for the following 1000 days.

    • Only then, will you have the General Capacity to support Specific Training.

    …and yes, I’m saying you need a six-year apprenticeship before you will have the capacity to train “properly.”

    Along the way, you should:

    • Try a range of protocols - keep what works, try something new each year

    • Learn technical mastery - reduce the energy cost of movement

    • Race various distances and disciplines

    • Record your data - narrow your say-do gap

    • Benchmark your performance

    Our bodies are capable of more than we can imagine.

    At the 32-minute mark of the Sean Seale interview, Bu talks about genetic potential. His thoughts mirror my direct experience. If I’d listened to others then I never would have started.

    • There Is No One Size Fits All

    • Genetics Are Adaptive Across Our Lifetimes

    • Maximum Performance Arises From Smart Individualization

    The only way to reach your potential is to undertake the endurance journey.

    Brad Culp’s piece on Kristian Blummenfelt

    How They Train Podcast with Jack Kelly (4 hours of material)

    Scientific Triathlon Interview

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    Delta Gatti

    Update: 2024-12-03