The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Tuesday, 11.26.13. “Modder’s Day”

Howdy folks,

Yup.

It’s Tuesday.

You probably won’t be surprised with today’s workout if you’ve been following along for a while.

‘Cause it’s Tuesday.

2×20 Tuesday!

The 2×20 is one of the primary building blocks of your fitness, and it is a great default workout. Short on time? Not sure what to do? Do a set of these.

The 2×20 isn’t just a staple workout, though. It also doubles as a test session, a regular, oft-repeated gauge of your fitness.

That’s really what we’re after today; setting a baseline for your fitness for all the workouts you’ll do as the season rolls on.

Keep track of your performance in this, and in all of the 2×20′s you do! 

Ideally, you want to keep track of your performance in all your workouts, but it’s extra-special super-duper important on these. You’re going to do them on a pretty regular basis, and if you keep track of ‘em, you’ll find that you’ve left a really good trail of bread crumbs behind you all season.

It doesn’t matter how you do this keeping-track-of.  Wattage, heart rate, what gear you’re pushing on the trainer; don’t really care.  Just figure out some way of measuring your performance during the workout, and write it down/download it/whatever.

Every time.

Yes, it’s great if you have a wattage measuring device, but it isn’t critical. If you do these intervals on a trainer, you can keep track of the cadence used, and the gear ratio, and you can track your progress that way. Works great.

It’s all about establishing some kind of metrics to keep track of, dig?

We will be referring to these metrics throughout the season, and your level of output in the 2×20 will form the basis for determining your target output in most of the workouts we do from here on out.

So, hey… what the heck is this 2×20 thing?

Pretty simply, the 2×20 looks like this:

– Warm up.

– Go as hard as you can for 20 minutes.

– Recover for 2 – 5 minutes.

– Go again for another 20 minutes.

That’s the basic version. Success on this is,  however,  all in the details.

The idea here is to go as hard as you can for the duration of both intervals without being forced to go easier at the end of the second interval.  If you run out of gas before you finish the second interval, you went to hard. If your vision isn’t blurry at the end of the second interval, you went too easy.

If you’re doing this with a powermeter, you want your wattage output to be as close to constant as possible. How constant?

Can you keep it in a 10 watt range?

Probably not.

15 watts?

More likely

20 watts?

Try.

Keep it steady.

These take practice to do well, and the better you get, the harder they get (you’re welcome.) This is a workout that’s a natural for the turbo trainer, and that’s how I do ‘em.

This is a good thing, because I always wind up flat on my back on the floor trying not to puke after the 2nd interval.

I’m really not kidding about the blurry vision thing. You should aspire to seeing-spots level of output on these.

 If you can learn to push through your limits, really push, you will get better and you will get better fast.

It’ll be painful, though.

I promise.

As always, if you’re still reeling from the weekend, if you did yesterday’s workout and feel hammered, or if you’re just having one of those days…

…don’t feel bad about backing down the intensity today.

If you just can’t get your 2×20 numbers up where you’re used to seeing them, that’s a clue, eh?

 

Enjoy!

M

 

~ by crosssports on November 26, 2013.

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