Restarting from zero – When coming
back from injury, take it slow
(Originally published in
Velonews)
by Kendra Wenzel
Athletes often get sidelined in the early season, whether from
overtraining, an overuse injury or a crash. Most miss a week or two,
then get back in the game after a week of rebuilding. The unlucky ones
— or the obstinate ones, trying to rush their comebacks — may end up
being off the bike a month or more. Whatever the case, eventually it
becomes time to start training again. But where do you begin?
Recovering from a major break of three weeks or more will take some
preparation, not unlike your approach to the beginning of the season.
A good rule of thumb is that for every week you weren’t training, you
will need one to two weeks of training to return to competition.
During that time, you’ll need to gradually build intensity and
specificity before you attempt to race again.
EASY DOES IT
The first guideline during a
rebuilding period is to start slowly. This seems rudimentary, but it
takes self-discipline to do an easy hour-long spin on a Saturday when
all your teammates are either racing or doing a four-hour group ride.
You might be able to survive your normal group ride in your first week
of training, but whether you should try to is another story.
Unless you have an absolute goal in the next few weeks after returning
to training, always choose the easier road when rebuilding. You may
have to go out of your way to avoid your usual challenging routes, or
even seek out a nearby bike path to slow yourself down for the first
few rides. If you absolutely need the company of group rides,
configure your rebuilding rides so that you start out with the group,
then go your own way when it gets fast, or meet up with the group
toward the end of the ride, when the pace is winding down.
During those first rides you should feel slow but fresh. That is, you
will likely feel lousy and out of shape, regardless of how healthy you
feel, but your heart rate should rise quickly and responsively when
you ride and fall just as fast when you stop.
As the days progress, if you start to feel weak, can’t raise your
heart rate or power to your normal endurance-zone level, or have
injury pangs, you should back off and ride more slowly, over less
distance, or wait until the next week to restart again. It sounds so
simple, but it’s easy to ignore when you’re eager to get training
again. A coach or mentor is an indispensable resource to help analyze
your feedback and keep you from going insane from impatience when you
are working through a comeback.
BUILDING UP
In the early stages of your comeback, you should follow a condensed
version of what you would normally do during the fall and winter
months. Include some strength and endurance work, ramp up to the
moderate and intensive interval work you would normally do in the
early spring, and then top it off with race simulations during group
rides.
A midseason recovery program after a six-week break might look like
this:
·
1-2 weeks: recovery rides, or until you can ride several days in a row
with no fatigue.
·
2-3 weeks: endurance pace work, gradually building in time, until you
can strongly complete the length of your average road race three times
within one week.
·
1-2 weeks: moderate intensity work, until you can strongly complete
the length of your average criterium at tempo pace twice during the
week.
·
2-3 weeks: hard intensity work, until you can strongly complete
intervals totaling 30 minutes during one session.
·
1 week: race simulation. Do one or two days of tough group riding
before racing.
Those who have gone over the overtraining edge may need to start with
as few as 10 to 30 minutes a day of very slow exercise and will likely
require an even longer, slower rebuild period.
Many riders will lose patience with a program like the one above after
a couple of weeks and jump directly to intervals and racing. Such an
approach may allow them to be able to finish races and improve for a
while. However, it will most likely result in a relatively quick and
abrupt fall in well-being in which the rest of the season might be
spent trying to climb out of the hole dug by skipping the essential
base-rebuilding period.
You don’t have to be a phenomenal natural athlete to recover from a
major pause in your season. But you do have to exercise the same kind
of commitment to your comeback plan that a pro would.
Lots of athletes have made it back from nearly “impossible” breaks and
pauses. If you ask around, you are likely to find that you know
someone who learned the hard way about returning to fitness in
midseason and will be happy to share stories of how to avoid the
pitfalls. The thing you’ll most likely hear again and again is that,
when it comes to returning from overtraining or injury, it’s always
better to underdo than overdo.