Tri coach or run coach or ....?
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Moderators: k9car363, alicefoeller | Reply |
2008-11-26 2:17 PM |
Subject: Tri coach or run coach or ....? I've done all right just making up my own plans the last four years, even up through IM (based on others' plans), but I think it's time to directly address the elephant in the room I call my "run," and thinking maybe a coach is a way to go I don't need swim coaching, bike coaching maybe at some point, but I am pleased with where the bike is right now. Although I am also pleased with my run progression in the last 4 years, it's time to do more. Should I be looking for a run specific coach and jsut add my own S/B? Or is there enough interplay between S/B and run that I should be looking at a tri coach, and have them focus on running? Or something else entirely? |
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2008-11-26 2:25 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Expert 810 Southeast | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? I have lots of experience with various levels of run coaching, none with tri. My experience suggests that you might encounter some difficulty (not impossibility, just difficulty) finding a run-only coach who is sympathetic to your 'other' pursuits. If you can find one who is willing to take your swimming and biking into account when developing a plan, and has some experience with runners who are not 100% committed to running only, then I don't see a compelling reason not to go with one. But if it were me, I'd look for a tri coach who has a serious background in running. |
2008-11-26 2:31 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Coach 10487 Boston, MA | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? If you are focusing on Tris *I* would get a tri-coach. I good and experienced one who undestands the sport and who will be to help you improve yes in running but in all the 3 sports. |
2008-11-26 2:32 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Cycling Guru 15134 Fulton, MD | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? As an aspiring tri coach I am actually going the well rounded route and getting certifications in running, cycling and eventually tri with the different parent organizations. I'm doing that so I can work with people specifically with running or cycling if that is their only sport but also to offer triathletes a slightly different perspective than someone who focuses on just tri concepts (not that there is anything wrong with that at all!!). What I would recommend though is if you want to pursue a coach, I would still suggest going with a coach that works with triathletes (whether that is a USAC or USATF coach that works with more tri clients or a USAT coach it really makes no difference). Getting someone who is more familiar with the all around demands of the sport would be a more beneficial in my opinion than a single focused coach as they may prescribe training that doesn't suit your overall goals with the sport or put too much of an emphasis on one aspect and neglects the others. I would also recommend against getting a specific sport coach and then trying to create your own schedule for the other two around theirs. A good coach will work within your time limits and training needs and at times will push you to your limit with workouts in an effort to make progress in certain areas. If you work out your own schedule for the other sports in a week where your sport specific load is really high from the coach, you may do something that is detrimental to the coached training or even worse, risk injury/overtraining to yourself. Just my thoughts! |
2008-11-26 3:58 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Not a Coach 11473 Media, PA | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? Unless you are going to "give up" swimming and biking for awhile (not that this might not be a very good approach) then you should go with a tri coach. |
2008-11-26 3:58 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Expert 1023 Malvern, England | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? I am in exactly the same position as you. My swim and bike are strong (cf with rest of my age group) but my running needs attention. I have made good improvements over the last few years with a tri coach but need to kick it up a notch. I considered a run coach but after a bit of research decided that it would be too hard to balance the rest of the tri training, so if you go with a coach I'd say tri coach. However, I have taken it into my own hands and am spending the winter focusing on running to get faster. Probably at the expense of a bit of biking and swimming fitness but I am confident I can get that back in the Spring. Have you considered doing this? I am using one of the run specific plans to improve your running from Jack Daniels and they are much harder than any run training I have done before - 2 "hard" workouts a week and running 5+ days. I swim with a masters to keep that going (2x/wk) and jump on indoor trainer when I can. Can't tell you if it will work yet but since you have successfully trained yourself up to now maybe worth some thought. Good luck |
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2008-11-26 6:45 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Champion 9407 Montague Gold Mines, Nova Scotia | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? Chris, Congratulations on your performance at AZ; glad to see you go back and be successful! As far as the coaching, as a tri coach and a run coach, I would suggest that you would be better served by working with a tri coach. The program that I would use for a triathlete and a runner are quite different due to the balancing the total training load required by the athletes. Good luck, Shane |
2008-11-26 9:26 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Extreme Veteran 680 Boulder, CO | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? Chris, I would recommend "one" coach -- I have had good experience with sport-specific consulting, rather than having them take a head coach role. For triathlon, my best coaching relationships have been with triathlon coaches with sport-specific experience. The other two sports change the load that you can tolerate -- generally, this is under appreciated by single sport coaches. Hope this helps, g |
2008-11-26 10:21 PM in reply to: #1827785 |
Champion 5781 Northridge, California | Subject: RE: Tri coach or run coach or ....? Have you considered reducing your swim/bike training load for a period and working with a coach toward a specific marathon (or half mary) goal? Just something to think about...I've certainly benefitted from carryover from my annual winter marathon training into tri season. You could look at it as "catchup" work on the run...if you feel you're far enough behind in that discipline, even if your swim/bike fitness falls off slightly, you'll be better prepared in the end. Having said that, you do have a sub-2 hr. half mary within the last 12 months, so I don't know that you really need that aggressive a strategy. The run is clearly your limiter, but you're a lot farther along there than alot of people on this board. Getting a tri coach with solid running background probably would serve someone in your specific situation just fine. |