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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 12
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To the Performance Manager Guru's
I'm a new cyclingpeaks & PT user and was curious as to the relationship between TSS and TSB and overtraining? I'm sure allot of this will be covered in Hunters and Andys webinars Here are my questions: 1. It appears to be totally normal for TSB to be mostly negative in the off season but how low should you let TSB get ? Is there a bottom ? 2. How long can you or should you let TSB remain in the cellar ? before overtraining ? 3. While preparing for an A event how long before the event will you start to taper your TSS in order to raise TSB ? 2 weeks out 1 week ? Or does it depend on how low you are before the taper ? Since I'm new to training with Power (Only 1month) It seems that the only thing that raises my TSB is taking a zero day or an L1 ride.. Is this normal ? So far my TSB has been hovering around -25 to -50 The rides that have pushed my TSB in the toilet are L2-SST and some 1x20 L4 intervals.. Mainly for testing and for me to have a good starting point. Thanks in advance ![]() |
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#2 | ||||
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 1,383
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Rob,
For starters I wouldn't put to much faith in your exact PMC numbers with only a month of data. I see you seeded the ATL/CTL values which helps and you seem to have chosen your seeds well since you stabilized near those values quickly. But still with the default CTL time constant of 42 days the data will become more meaningful when you've got a bit more of it. Quote:
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-Dave Last edited by daveryanwyoming : 20-11.-2007 at 04:38 AM. |
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#3 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,017
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Quote:
I think you can pretty much stay at a slightly - TSB indefinitely. As you start to get very low (for me, much below -20) the quality of your workouts goes downhill so you're pretty much forced to pop back up pretty quick unless you force the issue with lots of long, easy rides. I also thing it's really hard to overtrain: any time my TSB drops to low I either get too tired to train effectively, or get sick, both of which force a little break, allowing TSB to rise before you I training again. Quote:
Taper length has a lot to do with the nature of your event and how high you want your tsb (the two are very related, of course). For example, if I were targeting a 4k pursuit I'd start tapering 4-6 weeks out by very gradually trading CTL for TSB, while gradually increasing the intensity and specificity of my workouts. By race day I'd hope to be at +15-20 tsb with the previous 4-6 weeks consisting of mostly l5 and l6 work along with a smattering of l3-4 maintenance. On the other hand, if i were tapering for a long road race or a 40k tt, I'd just take 2 or so days easy, followed by an "opener" day, then race with a TSB of somewhere around +5. |
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#4 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Japan
Posts: 432
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Quote:
http://www.cycleiwakuni.com/blog/ch...MC.php?id_bit=7 My last "transition" period was back in June right at the beginning of the chart, but since then it has been regular training. Quote:
Quote:
Remembering that CTL is your training load - I like to think of CTL as "generally" the training stress I should be able to handle on about a neutral TSB at any given time without increasing the fatigue. That may not be what the technical definition of it is, but if you think about it - it makes sense. If your TSB is 0, CTL is 100, and you do a 100 TSS workout, your CTL will remain 100, TSB remain 0, and ATL (fatigue) not increase. (Remembering that more than your aerobic/FTP fitness determines performance on game day) Welcome to the world of power training. Be patient and read, read, read. It will take a bunch of months to get a good feel for your fitness/abilities in relation to the PMC concepts. Once you get a good handle on it though, it will be invaluable.
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Cycling in Iwakuni Blog |
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