After missing Saturday due to rain, we got a beautiful day Sunday for our outdoor team practice. In the past couple weeks I have gotten back into my P90X routine in addition to doing my back and core exercises from my doctor. I think these are starting to pay some early dividends, I feel more fit and strong and my back has been a bit better.
Last week I also did two days of the Tabata / HIIT interval training from Barry Publow. Those are some insane intervals! The first time I could only complete 6 repeats. The second time I made the 8, but man it felt like I just skated a marathon. I don’t really have the time a pro skater would to do this 5 times a week, but I hope that a couple times a week in the early season will pay some dividends. For the next month I plan on doing mostly Tabata intervals with very little distance training during the week. Then I’ll do the distance stuff with the team on the weekends.
A quick word on how our outdoor practices work. We gather at the parking spot and suit up, and generally take off mostly as a team. The only folks that don’t skate with this larger group would be beginners who are learning other some other members and some members who cannot or don’t want to train at a more advanced pace. After a couple of warm up laps on Trillium Blvd (3.7 miles) we take a turn into the main areas of the complex where there are some pretty challenging hills. At this point the pace picks up to what our top skaters (pro-level skaters) skate. Then it’s hang on as long as you can. We generally do two laps out in the big area followed by a cool down lap at the beginning section. This ends up being a hour or so workout in the 18-22 mile range on average.
My goal at this point is to stick with the “fast pack” as long as possible, then skate the rest of the way with whatever group ends up forming after it breaks. Last year my best day got me over the main hill and then another mile or so. I should be able to extend that this year (well, that’s the plan anyway).
Sunday I was feeling halfway decent. As we turned out into the main section, we made a right turn into a section we had been avoiding. There has been a lot of construction in the complex, and honestly the roads are really bad right now. Tar snakes, rocks and just bad pavement all over. You’ve got to watch every setdown.
By the time we made a couple turns and got to the downhill portion on the East side of the Sears Centre, I was already starting to get in trouble. The next right turn is a slow incline (deceiving, but tough) leading up to a parking lot (yet another climb). We turn around and head for the big hill. The big hill is generally trouble!
In any event, I dropped off for a moment at the parking lot and cut across diagonally to grab onto the back again. This got me on briefly up to the hill, and then I was dropped on the hill. All in all, about 6.5 miles with the fast pack.
After that, I joined up with Guy (a good training partner for me since we are fairly close right now in fitness level) and later Lance and Bob and Bill for awhile. We finished up the first lap and skated another, keeping it pretty much in the 16-18 mph range. I finished up at just a hair over 18 miles, which was very satisfying for me. It’s the first long skate I’ve done since the Squiggy race in March.
My form was so sloppy at that point, and I had developed 6 blisters (forgot to use skin glide for one, sloppy skating for another). I just had to stop. But I felt good at the end.
I’m still dealing with my left skate which I found to be canting inward, causing me to hit my inside edge too often. I’m working on fixing that. Hopefully this is a workout I can build on for next week. My goal is to skate one full lap with the fast pack by the end of this year. That would be something like 12 miles, close to a half marathon.
But first, I gotta get back over that hill.



4 responses so far ↓
1 Cor // Apr 23, 2008 at 7:47 am
I always wanted to try that P90 program but I don’t think I would be able to commit to it. With Skating and Tennis etc., I would fear overtraining. How do you manage?
2 Tom // Apr 23, 2008 at 8:08 am
Well, I do it first thing in the morning, right when I get up before work. The first couple weeks are tough for sure, but then you get into the swing. You do want to be careful about overtraining. On Plyometric and Leg days, I generally won’t skate. I make sure to take one day off, which is usually Thursday, normally Yoga X in P90X day. It’s actually a really tough workout and 1.5 hours. I hate to miss it but the body needs to rest.
The arm/chest/shoulder days don’t affect your legs so I don’t think it’s any big deal. Now I don’t do any other sports like Tennis, so you’d have to figure out what works best for you.
And key is getting proper sleep - I can’t stress that enough. The program is 90 days, it will take me right into the heart of the season. At that point I will go into a maintenance mode training that is not as intense and focus completely on skating. Then when the season winds down, I’ll probably restart the program again.
So mainly planning and listening to your body is the way to deal with it. When your body tells you that you need rest - it’s most likely overdue and make sure you listen.
I can tell you that the workouts helped me immensely last year and have already benefited me this year, and I’m only 2 weeks into it.
3 Cor // Apr 24, 2008 at 5:37 am
I think I will wait til skating off season (fall/winter) and do it then. Summer is just too busy. I skate and play tennis everyday. I can’t imagine working out to that level as well. God knows I need the ab work though!
4 Tom // Apr 24, 2008 at 7:32 am
Makes sense - do what’s right for you. I actually don’t do much of his ab workout, it’s too hard on my back. I do my own ab exercises though.
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