Physical Conditioning Advice for Club/Regional Coaches.

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Presentation transcript:

Physical Conditioning Advice for Club/Regional Coaches

Aims To review essential components of orienteering fitness and their development To outline the key conditioning sessions in the week – what, how and when To practically demonstrate a typical terrain session, appropriate to development of O specific fitness

Components of Fitness Dynamic Flexibility – Crossing barriers Agility/Co-ordination – Moving between trees Dynamic Balance – Maintaining form across terrain Speed – Final stages of sprint race Strength – Maintaining pace up hills Muscular Endurance – Resisting fatigue in long races Core Strength – Maintaining running form in terrain Aerobic Capacity – Maintain consistent pace for duration of race Anaerobic Capacity – Maintain high pace for duration of race EnduranceStrength Motor Fitness Power

Why aerobic capacity?

Why anaerobic capacity?

More evidence....

PRIMARY Aerobic – Development of VO 2 max Threshold – Development of AT/lactate tolerance SECONDARY Anaerobic – Development of speed/power Strength – Development of muscular endurance/offset local fatigue/strength in terrain Rest – Train hard; rest hard WHAT – THE OVERALL FOCUS

HOW – THE 3 CORE SESSIONS Aerobic – Steady state, ~70-80% max, 40-90mins AT – Tempo/long intervals (>500m), 80-90% max, 30-45mins Anaerobic – Hills/Short intervals (<500m), 90%+ max, 25-35mins Ideally – SPECIFIC, ie. in terrain, (with map & compass occasionally), esp. pre-season Other – Core, circuits, weights, flex, cross & REST

Phase Easy / Recovery (<70%) Steady (70- 80%) Tempo / Threshold (80-90%) Speed Endurance / Anaerobic (>90%) Off Season (Sept) ***** --- Pre-Season: Base 1/Prep (Oct) *** * --- Pre-Season: Base 2/Volume (Nov/Dec) ******** Pre-Season: Specific (Jan/Feb) ******** WHEN – PERIODISED TRAINING key session

TODAYS PRACTICAL Opportunity to engage in a typical terrain session, working on aerobic/anaeroic mix Show how coaches/athletes can easily devise their own sessions Practically experience current trends in warming up – cv, stretching, drills Q&A throughout! 10

Groups A-E: Intervals Intensity – 80-90% max Duration mins Work – ~2-3mins (~4-600m) Recovery – ~1-2mins 50-60% max Plan loop of 2 work and 2 recovery legs Common start shown on map Focus should be running NOT navigation TODAYS PRACTICAL SESSION

Groups T-Z: Fartlek Intensity – 70-90% max Duration mins Work – Variable legs (~ m each leg) of 2 paces (70-80 and %max) Recovery – max Plan loop of 2 work and 2 recovery legs, with pace change marked by red X Common start shown on map Focus should be running NOT navigation

INTENSITY – THE CONUNDRUM Intensity can be calculated via: – Rate of perceived exertion, ie. 70% = Conversational level – Times derived from time trial, eg. 3000m – HR monitoring (Age related max, Karvonen, Field testing) – Lab testing – gold standard

INTENSITY – DANIELS TABLES Using HR monitoring: – Take resting HR (ideally in morning) – Take max HR (ideally from max test) – Max-Rest=Reserve (HRR) – Take 10% of HRR and use to subtract from Max – Work through zones required, ie. 60;70;80 & 90%max