Gary's new website

Showing posts with label multisports training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label multisports training. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2013

2012 Upper Murray Multisports Challenge Results - Its official - We have the records!

Its taken me a while, folks: The results of the Upper Murray Challenge are now out and its official: The Moller Brothers hold the event record and my brother, Gordon, the record for the run section of the race.  

Source: http://www.uppermurraychallenge.com.au/

Gordon Moller setting a course record
despite appalling conditions

Now, here's the facts:

  • These records were set during the worst conditions of the 10 year history of the race.  The wet, cold conditions with mud and slush underfoot made for tough going.
  • I can never recall a team of amateurs winning one of these races outright.  These races are always dominated by the young, hardened professionals who train and race full time.  My brother Gordon is an over-worked dentist, Bruce is a full time engineer.  All three of us are over 50 years old.  I am in my 60th year.
  • In order of the relay: I finished fourth in the mountain bike, Bruce fourth in the paddle and Gordon ran a real burner to bring us home in first place.
  • In this race, we got our noses in front of Australia's two best multisports athletes - Jarad Kohlar and Luke Haines.
How did three ageing amateurs manage to do it?  Well, I will not speak directly about Gordon and Bruce, but here is a clue: http://blog.garymoller.com/2011/07/more-about-reversing-cardiovascular.html


About this website 
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation. Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Its official: Moller Brothers are the Australasian Veteran Team Multisports Champions



Gordon in winning form
Gary showing good race form


Gary again in great form!

My partner, Alofa, 3rd in the vet women's
 30km mountain bike race - Got to give her
a plug for a great performance!
We (Bruce, Gordon and Gary) contested the Veteran Teams event of the Australasian Multisports Championships, held in Rotorua Over Queen's Birthday weekend and we won!

We contested these championships last year but as Open Men in which we finished a creditable 4th overall.  This year was much tougher due to the fields being over twice their previous number (Well over 1,000 in total).  We were delighted to finish about 5 minutes in front of the next vet team.

Last year we completed the three disciplines (Kayak, mountain bike and mountain run) in just over 3 hours and ten minutes.  This year we knocked the same course out in 3 hours and three minutes.  Not bad when you consider that all three of us are over 50 (I am about to turn 59).  In addition to being the only team made up of brothers, we were the oldest team by far.

For the record, we have dominated the veterans races of multisports in New Zealand and Australia over the last 5 years.  This is as either three man or two man teams.  We hold most, if not all, of the veteran teams records in all the races we have contested.  We have been beaten only once and this was by one second after our paddler, Bruce, went for a boondoggle over some mud flats, squandering a substantial lead (He has since made amends for this blunder).

At our ages, we should not be getting faster.  We should be getting slower.
My cycling results are interesting to examine:

  • I was the fastest biker of the 40+ year olds.
  • Last year I covered the 30km of mostly single track in 1hr 33m 49sec (18.7km/hr).
  • This year I covered the same course in 1hr 25m 32sec (21.2km/hr).
  • That means, when I finished, I was about 2.5km ahead of where I was as compared to last year.
Contributing factors to a fast time this year were the course being dry and my new bike.  However; neither can explain, in full, the substantial improvement in performance.  I put the bulk of the improvement down to the ongoing application of nutrition science, therapeutic massage and smart training.

_______________________________________
About this website
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation.  Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Marianne Archer Paddles Crazyman's Butt

Yes, she sure did: Titahi Bay's Marianne Archer set the opening pace for the 2009 Crazy Man multisports Race, she went on to win the paddling section of the race outright. In 30 years I have never seen this until now - a woman beating the best multisports paddlers in the country (Richard Usher was not competing this year).

This phenomenal performance came hot on the heels of the Porirua Grand Traverse. Doing the paddling for an all woman team made up of my partner, Alofa (cycling) and my daughter, Mary Ann (running), 29 year old Archer cleaned up setting a new women's course record.

I have been assisting Marianne for several months now, helping to get her muscles working well and perfecting her nutrition. Her coach, Mark Watson, is an aquaintance from the days when I dabbled somewhat seriously in downriver racing and multisports. With Mark's superbe coaching, Marianne has come on in leaps and bounds that are nothing short of breathtaking.

Archer is threatening to cause more than a few surprises within paddling circles over the next several months.

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz


Do you have a question?
Email Gary: gary at myotec.co.nz (Replace the "at" with @ and remove spaces). Please include any relevant background information to your question.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Core Conditioning for Kayaking - Do you really need it?


"I cannot think of a single successful training innovation proposed by a scientist,"
Peter Snell (2007)

Here is the body of an article from the website: Altdirt about strength training and core conditioning for kayakers. I have cut and pasted this because it is very well written and demonstrates so well why and how New Zealand has lost the plot when it comes to producing champion athletes:

"Strength training is effective and necessary for kayakers who wish to establish the groundwork required for maximizing power output, reducing the risk of injury, and achieving peak sport performance. by Camen Bott and Lonni Farmer. The athlete’s core, as its name suggests, acts as the foundation for movement generation and power production (Kibler, Press, & Sciascia, 2006).

Upon recognizing that power and muscular endurance are essential skills for successful kayaking, it is not difficult to understand why developing core strength through purposeful training is particularly advantageous. With improved core conditioning and stability, an athlete is able to execute body movements more efficiently, allowing for a streamlined translation of force from the fully engaged platform to the upper and lower body regions—where sport-specific skills are executed (Kibler et al., 2006).

Regardless of the amount of strength an
athlete possesses in the upper and lower limbs, neglecting to strengthen the core will create a deficit that will ultimately decrease the amount of total power that can be accumulated (Fekete, 1998).

In
addition to mitigating power output, a muscular imbalance involving the torso places the athlete at great risk for injury.

CORE STRENGTH TRAINING FOR INJURY PREVENTION
Developing and maintaining adequate core strength is believed to be one of the most effective ways of protecting oneself from injury (Bono, 2004; Brukner & Khan, 2007).

Because the core serves as the platform through which actions are initiated, a weakness in this area will increase the
demands on other joints and muscles and can lead to pain and injury (Edwards, 1993). The overuse injuries associated with paddling often occur in the back, shoulders and arms (Kameyama, Shibano, Kawakita, Ogawa, & Kumamoto, 1999).

The Back One of the most common problems observed in kayaking is associated with the unique rotational trunk
movement that occurs while paddling. This movement, performed in the seated position, creates a sheering effect at the lower spine. Without a strong torso to distribute these forces and support the back, this sheering will find or create a point of weakness along the spine and result in injury. Of all the variations of abdominal exercises practiced by athletes, those that involve rotation of the trunk are believed to be the least often used (Brukner & Khan, 2007).

For a sport as abdominally dynamic as kayaking, it is critical that these exercises are incorporated into a program. The Shoulders The health and performance of the shoulders is extremely reliant on the strength, endurance, and stability of the trunk. Developing a resilient core will foster safe and effective paddling techniques. A weak core will make proper kayaking form difficult to
maintain due to the disproportionate recruitment of the shoulders and arms (Kameyama et al., 1999).

Over
time, these and other distal structures will undergo premature compensatory fatigue which may result in chronic overuse injury."

Please download and view the video that comes with the Altdirt article. This video is a beautiful demonstration of a single-handed dumbell clean done by a superbly conditioned athlete.

Before I explain my problem with all of this, let me establsih a few paddling credentials:

I competed in the first paddling multisports tri in NZ, the Sulphur City Gut Buster in Rotorua 1978. This involved a paddle across lake Rotorua. I was beaten into 2nd place by less than 60 seconds by a guy named Paul MacDonald who went on to win several Olympic medals as a flat water paddler. I continued to compete through to about 1985, averaging 3rd placing behind Roger Nevatt (Super Chook) who should have gone to the Olympics as a road cyclist if he had not been so distracted by triathlons and Bernard Fletcher who had over 30 NZ kayaking titles to his name. I thrived on down-river racing sections of these races and relished beating the big, muscular boys who were often all power and no skill.

I learned early on from being repeatedly cleaned out in the paddling legs by Bernard Fletcher that kayaking had little to do with strength and more to do with technique, heart and the ability to work with the river and not against it. In those early days, there were no rudders, so we were forced to paddle smoothly, evenly and to use our body position to swing and glide the boat in whatever direction. Like a little Blue Duck, we learned to use the pressure waves and eddies to sling-shot the kayak downstream with little effort. This is a skill not learned in a gym.

Since those early days, I have worked with a number of paddlers, made presentations at training camps and even run a workshop for Ian Ferguson's regional kayak coaches about training using the Lydiard Method, prior to the Athens Olympics. The kayak coach I have the most time for is Mark Watson of Tawa who is very strong on the technical aspects of paddling efficiently.

Kayaking does not cause injuries unless you wipe out and use your head and face as an anchor as you slide downstream. What causes injuries in kayaking is poor technique and poorly structured training programmes. Technique is not learned in a gym. It is learned through time spent on the water doing drills under the watchfull eye of an experienced coach like Mark.

Kayaking done right is fabulous core conditioning. there is no need to spend hours in the gym. If you do not believe me, go hire a coach like Mark Watson to show you some paddling drills. You could also try lifting your rudder and doing zig-zag sprints in and out of the rows of boats moored in a marina. Try paddling in a straight line backwards. Core conditioning should be specific for the sport and nothing is better than doing the sport itself. The problem with weights exercises like the one demonstrated in the video is it has little in relation to kayaking. Sure, its a great exercise for a power lifter; but little relevance for a paddler. If, as a paddler, you have the time and the energy to be doing these fancy exercises, it probably means you are not spending enough time on the water!

Doing exercises like the one demonstrated carry a significant injury risk, especially to the shoulder and back. This should only be attempted under the instruction of an experienced power lifting coach and many months of practice are required to get anywhere near the perfection as demonstrated in the video. Such coaches are few and far between in NZ and average You and Me will be far from perfect when it comes to technique, no matter how careful we are. So much for doing exercises to prevent paddling injuries. Please read this article about the damage one can suffer.

A winning paddler is mean and ugly with muscles in the right places. Why waste precious physiological reserves developing muscles you do not need for powering a kayak? If you are a downriver paddler, you want a light, low centre of gravity. All that bulk upstairs from pumping iron in the gym only serves to cause stability problems as your kayak bounces through those rapids and hits those swirling eddies. So what are you going for - the body beautifull to stand and pose on the river bank; or are you training to win?

Of course there is a place for the gym; but, my advice, if you aspire to paddle really well, and to do so without injury or boating mishap, is to hire an experienced coach who has already delivered the goods with others. As Peter Snell alludes to: Keep the sports scientist who has never achieved sporting greatness themself at arms length. Do these things and you will do well. Most of all, you must get out on the water at every opportunity!