Triathlon Training with an Endless Pool
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ITU World Cup Women's Winner, Cancun 2001 (photo courtesy: Triathlon.org) |
One indication of Sheila Taormina’s
athletic prowess is apparent in her only apprehension
about trying the Endless Pool in the first place.
"I was afraid that the water propulsion system
wouldn't generate enough resistance for the training
program I had in mind," Sheila now laughs in
recalling her original trial run in Philadelphia.
"But I was pleasantly surprised. The Endless
Pool’s flow is enough for me to do all of my
aerobic and endurance training."
And that is a lot of training: A member
of the 1996 team that won the Gold and set an Olympic
record in the women’s 800-meter freestyle relay,
Sheila switched her focus to the triathlon two years
later. She is currently preparing for the triathlon
competition at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, the first
time it will be a medal event. She placed sixth in the
first Olympic triathlon, a "demonstration"
event in Sydney in 2000. Last June, Sheila placed third
in the inaugural JDS Uniphase Victoria International
Triathlon, in British Columbia.
One of nine triathletes sponsored by Endless
Pools (including Ken Glah, Jan Wanklyn, Tim
& Nicole DeBoom, Nina Kraft, Barb Lindquist, Heather
Fuhr and Heather Gollnick), Sheila finds the convenience
factor at least as important as we non-triathletes do.
"Most triathletes have jobs and have to squeeze
in their training regimens around their other obligations,"
notes Sheila, who also teaches swimming, and who trains
primarily in the cold-weather climate of her hometown,
Livonia, Michigan.
Sheila says she will install an Endless Pool in her
home for both personal training and conducting coaching
clinics. "Instead of bending my entire schedule
to adapt to the hours at a public pool, my training
routine can be much more flexible. I'll even do, say,
3,000 yards of aerobic training on the spur of the
moment."
Compared to big convenience and water propulsion, though, her favorite Endless Pool feature is relatively
subtle: the mirror on the bottom of the unit.
"Not only is the mirror invaluable for correcting
the stroke production of students," says Sheila,
who began her competitive athletic career purely as
a swimmer, "the constant feedback is still great
for the things I want to work on in my own technique.
It’s a never-ending process."
Sheila's Strokes
We asked Endless Pools user Sheila Taormina for some of the workouts she does in her pool. As an
Olympic swimming gold medalist in the ’96 Atlanta
Games and the first woman out of the water at the 2000
Sydney Olympic triathlon, we figure she knows a thing
or two about what makes a good stroke workout. She has
three key Endless Pools workouts that are ideal for
Olympic-distance triathletes: technique, transition
training and endurance.
Technique. Her favorite drill is the
technique work. “There are too many triathletes
just hammering our miles, and not understanding technique,”
Taormina says. In her eyes, being able to watch firsthand
the effects of your technique is invaluable. “Before
the ’96 Olympics, I swam with a snorkel a lot,”
she says. “I still have three or four things I
play around with on technique, so I bought a mirror
for my pool, swim with a snorkel and do a lot with the
pitch of my hand, body roll and tempo.” The benefit
is tangible feedback; since the water flow and your
swimming speed will stay current. Exertion, either perceived
or actual through the use of a heart rate monitor, provides
instant feedback. “The speed will always stay
the same, and I can see the effects,” she says.
“I can try different holds on the water and see
if it was harder or easier.” Swimmers can use
a heart rate monitor, or even just perceived exertion,
to tell if they’re pulling themselves through
the water efficiently.
Transition Training. “I’d
been dragging my bike and rollers to the pool before
getting the Endless Pool,” Taormina says. Now,
from home, she does a good swim-to-bike workout, “because
when you get out of the water with Loretta (Harrop)
and Nikki (Hackett) and Barb (Lindquist), you gotta
be ready to go hard with them.” So after a short
15-minute warm-up, she does three sets of 15 minutes
of sub-race-pace effort in the pool, then hops on her
CompuTrainer and does a hard 20-minute time trial effort.
“In the end I get about 4,000 meters of swimming
and an hour on the rollers,” Taormina says. “It’s
a great way to simulate a sprint, and after the first
set and you’re warmed up, you can turn up the
current a bit and do hard kicking for fatigue.”
Endurance. “In a pool, flip
turns give your back and legs a break, and I want to
keep my body in the prone position that I see in a open
water race,” Taormina says. So she pulls on her
wetsuit and goes an hour nonstop at her race pace to
build the nonstop endurance the only open water workouts
in temperate conditions provide.
For more about Sheila, check out www.sheilat.com
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