Scientific Reports (Aug 2021)

The integration of training and off-training activities substantially alters training volume and load analysis in elite rowers

  • Gunnar Treff,
  • Robert Leppich,
  • Kay Winkert,
  • Jürgen M. Steinacker,
  • Benjamin Mayer,
  • Billy Sperlich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-96569-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Training studies in elite athletes traditionally focus on the relationship between scheduled training (TRAIN) and performance. Here, we added activities outside of scheduled training i.e., off-training (OFF) contributing to total training (TOTAL) to evaluate the contribution of OFF on performance. Eight elite rowers recorded OFF and TRAIN during waking hours for one season (30–45 weeks) with multisensory smartwatches. Changes in performance were assessed via rowing ergometer testing and maximum oxygen uptake ( $${\dot{\text{V}}}$$ V ˙ O2max). Based on 1-Hz-sampling of heart rate data during TRAIN and OFF (> 60% maximum heart rate (HRmax), the volume, session count, intensity, training impulse (TRIMP), and training intensity distribution were calculated. OFF altered volume, TRIMP, and session count by 19 ± 13%, 13 ± 9%, and 41 ± 67% (p 89% HRmax during OFF amounted to 21 min·week−1 (95% CI [4, 45]). No effect of OFF on changes of performance surrogates was found (0.072 > p > 0.604). The integration of OFF substantially altered volume, TRIMP, and session count. However, no effect on performance was found.