feature extreme training
Transcription
feature extreme training
feature extreme training Extreme Training 52 Triathlon Magazine Canada May & June 2008 feature extreme training How hard can you push to be a champion? left Faris Al-Sultan at the 2006 Ford Ironman World Championship, Kona by Kevin Mackinnon W hile standing on the podium after my first Ironman, I asked the race winner, Scott Molina, considered one of the world’s premier triathletes of his era, what I should be doing in order to recover after such a hard race. “I have no idea,” Molina said. “I’m never going to do another one of these. You shouldn’t, either.” Two years later, when he won the Ironman World Championship in Kona, Molina claimed the one win that had eluded him through his amazing career. For years Molina had struggled in the heat on Hawaii’s Big Island. For years he’d folded during the marathon. In 1988, though, he was supremely prepared to handle the rigours of the race. At the press conference, he was asked what sort of training he’d done to prepare. “I’d like you all to think of me as a sane human being,” Molina joked, “Which is why I’m not going to tell you about those workouts.” When I asked him about his comment to me in 1986, Molina just laughed. “Never talk to me the day after an Ironman,” he said. Then he quickly followed with: “Did I really say that?” o what is extreme when it comes to preparing for an Ironman? S How much training can a body endure to prepare to race an event that, at best, lasts seven hours and fifty minutes? I figured I would ask a few of the world’s best Ironman athletes what their most memorable training days have been over the years. I wasn’t looking for Lisa Bentley Computrainer-during-a-cruise feats of mental tenacity. I was in search of multifaceted challenges, such as keeping your eyes open as you struggle to get home after a 300 km day on the bike. Here are a few of the answers I got: Norton’s Epic Eight Days photo davidmccolm.com I nstead of discussing his extreme training regimen, Molina has joined forces with Gordo Byrne and New Zealand triathlon coach John Newsome to let people experience it all themselves. The trio created an elite series of camps, aptly named Epic Camps, in 2002. The camps include an insane, sorry, a large amount of training over eight painful days. Here’s how Canadian pro Tara Norton (who graced the cover of our March issue), described her last day at the Epic Camp in New Zealand: “Today was the uphill triathlon,” Norton wrote on her website earlier this year. “We swam across Lake Hayes and back … Onto the bike and up Coronet Peak again. That is some climb, especially after the hours upon hours of training over the last seven days. But I just rode steady and made it to the top. The run up to the summit was pretty interesting as parts were so steep I was even having trouble walking.” Over the eight days of training, Norton would swim 42 km, bike 1,090 km and run 125 km, all in 62 hours. Yes, that works out to just under eight hours of training a day. May & June 2008 www.triathlonmagazine.ca 53 feature extreme training Over the eight days of training, Tea at Everest, anyone? Norton would W swim 42 km, bike 1,090 km and run 125 km, all in 62 hours – just under eight hours of training a day. hen I asked Chrissie Wellington, last year’s Ford Ironman World Champion from England, what was the toughest workout she had ever done, she didn’t describe a traditional triathlon set at all. Wellington is coached by Brett Sutton, considered by many to be the coach who expects more from his athletes than virtually any other, which is why it comes as some surprise that Wellington’s toughest day came long before she’d met the Australian. Wellington’s challenging day came during a bike tour in Nepal. Things were so cold that when she woke up, her chain had frozen. To thaw it she used the simplest, quickest and most direct method available. She peed on it. That was the beginning of a 125-km ride over dirt trails through a snowstorm. The ride included a climb up to 5,200 m. A descent down to 4,300 m. Then another climb to 5,200 m. Since the frozen chain and the climbing wasn’t enough of a challenge, Wellington also found herself dealing with a f lat tire, too. “I finally arrived exhausted, but blessed by the sight of Chomolungma (Everest),” Wellington said, “Then came a cup of warm tea, along with pain and pleasure in equal measure.” Long, fast riding with Faris aris Al-Sultan did his first extreme day of training as an 18-year-old. “I did a lot of crazy workouts when I was younger,” the German said. “One of them was a 70-km run when I was 18. It was a loop that I usually did on my mountain bike and I tried to see if I could run it or not.” He could and he did. It’s not just running workouts in which the 2005 Ironman World Champion has been pushed to the limit, though. Since 1999 he’s done a yearly training day on the bike from Al Ain to Abu Dhabi and back. For those of you not up on your United Arab Emirates geography, that’s 337 km. “Of course, you have to stop to get water and food, but you do it all in one session,” Al-Sultan said seriously, to make sure that I realized he did actually stop a few times over the eight-an-a-half hour ride and wasn’t some sort of type-A training addict. Last December, Al-Sultan did the ride with two German training partners, Werner Leitner and Swen Sundberg. Together they averaged 41.8 km over the distance. Many stages in the Tour de France are ridden much slower, and that’s with a pack of 180 riders to keep things moving. “This is fun,” Al-Sultan said. “I definitely think it’s something that no one wants to miss.” above Tara Norton at the Epic Camp in New Zealand 54 Triathlon Magazine Canada May & June 2008 photos left to right Tara Norton Collection, davidmccolm.com F feature extreme training It was a 65 km running day for Biscay, including a marathon on a treadmill. A 30-minute warm up jog, the treadmill marathon, then a 90-minute run through the mountains in Switzerland. above Hilary Biscay at the 2007 Ford Ironman World Championship, Kona May & June 2008 www.triathlonmagazine.ca 55 feature extreme training “Never talk to me the day after an Ironman,” Molina said. “Did I really say that?” Canadian power M arilyn McDonald, Calgary’s 2004 Ironman Malaysia Champion, offered two examples of extreme training sessions. For some reason the softspoken but fiercely competitive 30-year-old likes to pair her challenging days, even just before a major competition. Take, for example, these two rides she did leading up to Subaru Ironman Canada last August: “On the Wednesday Chris (her husband, Ford Ironman Louisville champ) and I did an eight-and-ahalf hour ride, all above 7,000 feet. We climbed up to 14,000 feet at the top of Mount Evans, the highest paved road in North America, and then rode back. On the Saturday we did a 200-km ride which was like a bike race.” Did it work? “It set me up for the fastest bike split at Ironman Canada,” McDonald said with a smile. Those rides were likely quite easy compared to the two sessions she did three days apart during her lead up to Ironman Malaysia in 2004. To prepare for the heat and humidity, she set up a wind trainer next to a treadmill at her local fitness club in Calgary. Wearing a tracksuit, she rode the trainer for 90 minutes, then ran on the treadmill for an hour. Then it was back to the trainer for an hour, and the treadmill for 30 minutes. “I just kept swapping clothes as they got too wet and increasing the intensity as the workout went on,” McDonald remembers. “I was in there for five-and-ahalf hours – I went through an entire shift of staff.” A marathon on the treadmill Fitness or fanaticism? M olina has returned to both Kona and other Ironman events over the last few years, finishest you think only one Sutton athlete might not ing as the top age group competitor at the inaugural be represented in this story, forget it. Athletes Ironman Arizona race in 2004 as a master. He confrom his Teamtbb team were the easiest source for tinues to push his Epic Camp athletes through the extreme sets. intense and immense training volume and isn’t afraid Hillary Biscay’s toughest workout came during the to swim, bike and run side by side with his star pupils. summer of 2006. So are workouts like these the key to Ironman great“Actually, it was more of a whole day of training,” ness? A few years ago, just minutes after she finished the Californian said just days before competing in fourth in Kona, I asked eight-time Ironman World her second Ironman of 2008 (of eight planned) in Champion Paula Newby-Fraser if her performance Malaysia. “It was a 65 km running day, including that day made her want to start training hard enough a marathon on a treadmill. A 30-minute warm up to go after the win in Kona. jog, the treadmill marathon, then a 90-minute run “I look back at those days and wonder how Paul through the mountains in Switzerland.” [Huddle, her husband] put up with me,” she said. “I What, only mountains? Nothing epic like, say, would come in after an eight-hour training day and put Everest? According to Biscay, the workout was my feet up and just wait for him to get dinner.” tough enough. “Maybe that’s what it takes to win the World “I hurt pretty much everywhere for a few days, but I Championship eight times,” I suggested. had my best Ironman marathon a few months after that, “If that’s what it takes, and it had wrecked our relaso I think it must have done something,” she said. tionship, it wouldn't have been worth it,” she replied. L 56 Triathlon Magazine Canada May & June 2008 photo davidmccolm.com above Marilyn McDonald at the 2007 Subaru Ironman Canada, Penticton