John Hobbs, MEd
Senior Consultant
Many of our athletes have a history of marginally following haphazard training plans or blindly trusting current and old training fads, which had effectively prevented them from realizing most of their athletic potential. As we have learned from our clients, equally detrimental is the blanket application of scientific literature to training. Studies are frequently referenced in on-line articles, chat rooms, and sometimes discussed to some extent in group workouts. Discussion does empower the athlete that is more knowledgeable and allows them to effectively debunk obsolete methods and “back in my day” training regimens. However, often missed are the intricacies of research that lead to inappropriate application of study findings.
In reality, scientific literature can be about as dry as warning labels that come pasted to equipment. Most people don’t have the desire to stay current on the literature and really have no need to—that’s what the consultant is for. But in the event that somebody has a topic of interest or sees a reference to a journal article, it is important to be able to have a correct interpretation of what is presented and understand the limits. Below are just a few of the common caveats of studies that require attention before training methods are implemented or removed.
Population
With the nature of exercise physiology, a plethora of research designs exist. They range from molecular level comparisons of rat muscles to kangaroos on treadmills to average speed during a time trial. The articles that most people will never see involve direct measures of performance in the given sport. When looking at applying the information and questioning its relevance to your training, several issues should be addressed.
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Timing
A library of literature exists showing “interval x,” “routine y” and “exercise z” showed improvements in performance. But the context of the studies has to be questioned. As already noted, getting competitive athletes to become part of a training study is difficult at best, let alone during the race season after many hours dedicated to intensity. So a great time to herd up some road cyclists in to a lab is in the late fall or winter. However, athletes have usually detrained a bit and the typical duration of a study is usually relatively short can skew data. As a result, the training improvements may be magnified or just due to the fact that Joe Racer is doing hard intervals.
With the periodization model currently accepted as the most effective training design, the implementation of a change in training based on literature can be difficult to place. Will the athlete get the most benefit with early season work? Would it be more productive when they are stronger later in the season? Or, will it even be effective once intense structured training begins?
Study Design
With a limited number of trained volunteers and a short period to follow them, how do researchers design a study to ensure that interval x will make you faster? The honest answer is that they don’t. Numerous comparisons can be completed with just one intervention. In studies looking at diet, questions arise regarding a placebo group, the amount of benefit from the change, if the subjects are just eating more, if the percent change in another part of the diet affects the results, changes in calories burned versus calories consumed and so on. With limited resources, different studies have to be done to chip away at the different possibilities. This is one reason why it seems that some research seems redundant—it’s analyzing a different aspect. So when an improvement is shown to occur, it is important to look at the comparisons being made.
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Asking about various training ideas is vital. It keeps us on our toes and gives us new ideas. And when an athlete brings ideas to us, especially backed up by a reliable literature source, it’s important that they understand why we may be apprehensive in immediately implementing them and why we could say “I don’t see the harm, why don’t we give it a shot?”