Originally Posted by
Mark Rippetoe
This is a pretty good paragraph. Let's look closer:
by helping with training the Aerobic metabolism. I wonder to what extent this helps in their sport (but don't be fooled this isn't my question) because I regularly note athletes who can run at a pace of a 6 or 7 minute mile for five miles plus go into an intense sparring session or a high heart rate session, or during competition, become gassed in sometimes as short as 1 round.
A boxing round is a series of anaerobic bursts, despite the fact that boxing coaches somehow cannot see this. "Road work" is for the coach's satisfaction, not the athlete's performance. Pushing a weighted sled is a much better idea.
I do believe that the effect that long distance running (steady state cardio) is negligible in an athletes performance in specific sports. I think the time that is spent running could be much better used in practice, skill acquisition, study, strength training, drilling, and anaerobic training (sprinting, aerodyne bike, high heart rate sessions, etc)
How many very good boxers are gassed by the 11th round? They cannot see the problem, I suppose.
In other words, the stimulus of long distance running and its adaptations are so vastly different from a grappling match, a Football game, an MMA fight, a basketball game, that the benefit gained from it is unremarkable, and that an athlete playing these sports would better develop their capabilities while practicing and preparing in that sport.
True, and this could be aided by the judicious application of the sled or other anaerobic work, remembering that recovery MUST occur.
However, if you play a sport that does involve long distance running, like soccer, I can see a lot of transition with this.
Soccer does not involve long distance running, since it is conducted in short anaerobic bursts like most sports. And soccer practice 4 days/week provides all the conditioning specificity that could be obtained for soccer. Recovery could be enhanced by the rather novel approach to recovery available through good diet and sleep.
But the stress of a Judo, Boxing, Wrestling match, or a Football, Basketball or Hockey game is a much different stress, and the more time one spends preparing in that stressor is time spent well. If you play these kinds of sports I actually think long distance running (lets say, regularly running 5 miles a day, like Tyson did) is actually a negative during training camp because it takes away both time and energy in an athlete to perform during practice, which means everything in performance on competition day.
It is so often the case that the best athletes in a sport are the best because of other factors besides their idiotic approach to training and conditioning. Tyson was born big, strong, and very fucking mean, and that will get you a long way. So will a 495 x 10 squat. Someday this will be demonstrated, but it will be a while because of the ascendancy of "Functional Training."