At the most fundamental level, our training zones help us Do Work so we Get Better.
But, what is better?
Faster To The Finish Line - achieve our maximum human potential
Healthier Over Time - a greater number of finishes
Enjoy Our Training - how we feel while exercising
Enjoy Our Bodies - how we feel when we are NOT exercising
Increase Our Capacity - to explore the world and do cool stuff
As you use this book, keep your goals in mind. It’s easy to get wrapped up in the details of training and lose sight of the bigger picture.
…and the biggest picture of all is learning how exercise feels.
Everything you learn in this chapter is designed to teach your mind how different training intensities feel. These lessons don’t come naturally. Our in-built programming will push efforts upwards.
As you apply the lessons that follow:
Skew Errors Left - undershoot expectations
Back It Up - today should not compromise tomorrow
Beware Of Zone Creep - the tendency to gradually lift effort
Always Finish Strong
This chapter is going to flow from simple to complex. We will start with the most straightforward method of setting zones and build from there.
Let’s take a quick walk through the terminology.
Start with three zones: Green, Tempo and Red.
The Green Zone, containing Zones 1 and 2 - Builds Us Up
Tempo, containing Zone 3
The Red Zone, containing Zones 4 and 5 - Breaks Us Down
Some principles when interpreting “zones”
Zones Overlap
Zones Change Over Time
Zones Change Due To Conditions
More Training At Higher Intensities Is Not Better
Every athlete, even the newest of newcomers, can understand subjective perception. This is the basis for the five zone system.
Easy
Steady
Moderately-Hard
Hard
Very Hard
Consider the above as five gears available to every athlete. How long each of us can sustain our gears is determined by our fitness, fuel supply and fuel economy.
These gears are also described as “levels,” as in levels of intensity.
Warm-Up
Endurance
Tempo
Threshold
VO2
Combining the above terminology we end up with:
Zone 1 / Easy / Warm-Up
Zone 2 / Steady / Endurance
Zone 3 / Moderately-Hard / Tempo
Zone 4 / Hard / Threshold
Zone 5 / Very Hard / VO2
As we move up the intensity scale, we “pay” a greater price in terms of recovery.
The rest of this article covers:
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