Guest guest Posted September 11, 2002 Report Share Posted September 11, 2002 I have two questions based upon the " Supertraining " book: 1) After my last training cycle I took six days off prior to my meet and had better success than I had anticipated. Following this I was reading 'Supertraining' with the goal of attempting to divine what the ideal amount of time off would be prior to a meet. In doing so I came across two, seemingly, contradictory statements: From Supertraining p. 201 " An increase averaging 18-25% in speed-strength for a controlled movement was noted after a 10 day rest from intense specialised strength training (Nyeniskin, 1974). It may be assumed that this phenomenon is connected with the well known adaptive inertia of the body and supercompensatory restoration (adaptive reconstruction) after strength work. " Reading on to p.202 " Muscles can lose up to 30% of their strength after a period of total (bed) rest of only one week (Muller, 1996). The loss of strength caused by complete cessation of resistance training occurs at approximately the same rate as it is increased by training (Hettinger & Mueller, 1995; Ravick & Larsen, 1959) " So, now I'm confused. Is the difference the bed rest component or am I taking the latter statement out of context? I certainly observed results that supported the former. [The issue is bed rest, the total cessation of any physical activity to stress the body. The very large loss of muscle and bone mass and strength produced by total bed rest is well konwn to the medical profession, and is a major reason why doctors try to avoid having patients totally inactive for any prolonged periods. Mel Siff] The second question is: 2) Is there a means to objectively tell what the ideal rest period is so that one can tell when the supercompensatory effect is at its peak. [No precise objective method exists to make this determination, though the Omega Wave system appears to offer some useful information in this regard. To the average athlete, the use of subjective ratings and feelings still appears to be the most useful method. In all cases, however, the term " rest " means active rest, not the passive rest of total inactivity (such as bed rest or lolling around watching TV!). I also would not rest from ALL weight training for 10 days - that Russian research which you cited refers to a decrease in the volume and intensity of loading, especially the volume. Thus, most lifters decrease the volume significantly of all training and the intensity to just a few attempts with heavy (e.g. 90%) but not circamaximal loads. Other competitive lifters here might like to add their comments. Mel Siff] Regards, Kerr Littleton, CO * We Remember 9-11: All those thousands of innocent people lost and all the families whose lives were changed forever by the hand of evil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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