Sandford Gareth N, Laursen Paul B, Buchheit Martin
School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Canadian Sport Institute-Pacific, 4371 Interurban Road, Victoria, BC, V9E 2C5, Canada.
Sports Med. 2021 Oct;51(10):2017-2028. doi: 10.1007/s40279-021-01523-9. Epub 2021 Aug 16.
Many individual and team sport events require extended periods of exercise above the speed or power associated with maximal oxygen uptake (i.e., maximal aerobic speed/power, MAS/MAP). In the absence of valid and reliable measures of anaerobic metabolism, the anaerobic speed/power reserve (ASR/APR) concept, defined as the difference between an athlete's MAS/MAP and their maximal sprinting speed (MSS)/peak power (MPP), advances our understanding of athlete tolerance to high speed/power efforts in this range. When exercising at speeds above MAS/MAP, what likely matters most, irrespective of athlete profile or locomotor mode, is the proportion of the ASR/APR used, rather than the more commonly used reference to percent MAS/MAP. The locomotor construct of ASR/APR offers numerous underexplored opportunities. In particular, how differences in underlying athlete profiles (e.g., fiber typology) impact the training response for different 'speed', 'endurance' or 'hybrid' profiles is now emerging. Such an individualized approach to athlete training may be necessary to avoid 'maladaptive' or 'non-responses'. As a starting point for coaches and practitioners, we recommend upfront locomotor profiling to guide training content at both the macro (understanding athlete profile variability and training model selection, e.g., annual periodization) and micro levels (weekly daily planning of individual workouts, e.g., short vs long intervals vs repeated sprint training and recovery time between workouts). More specifically, we argue that high-intensity interval training formats should be tailored to the locomotor profile accordingly. New focus and appreciation for the ASR/APR is required to individualize training appropriately so as to maximize athlete preparation for elite competition.
许多个人和团体体育赛事都需要在高于与最大摄氧量相关的速度或功率(即最大有氧速度/功率,MAS/MAP)的情况下进行长时间运动。在缺乏有效且可靠的无氧代谢测量方法的情况下,无氧速度/功率储备(ASR/APR)概念(定义为运动员的MAS/MAP与其最大冲刺速度(MSS)/峰值功率(MPP)之间的差异)增进了我们对运动员在该范围内对高速/高功率运动的耐受性的理解。当以高于MAS/MAP的速度运动时,无论运动员的特征或运动模式如何,最重要的可能是所使用的ASR/APR的比例,而不是更常用的相对于MAS/MAP百分比的参考值。ASR/APR的运动结构提供了许多尚未充分探索的机会。特别是,运动员潜在特征(例如纤维类型)的差异如何影响不同“速度”、“耐力”或“混合”特征的训练反应,现在正在显现出来。这种针对运动员训练的个性化方法可能是避免“适应不良”或“无反应”所必需的。作为教练和从业者的起点,我们建议进行前期运动特征分析,以指导宏观(理解运动员特征的可变性和训练模式选择,例如年度周期化)和微观层面(每周每日的个人训练计划,例如短距离与长距离间歇训练与重复冲刺训练以及训练之间的恢复时间)的训练内容。更具体地说,我们认为高强度间歇训练形式应相应地根据运动特征进行调整。需要对ASR/APR有新的关注和认识,以便适当地个性化训练,从而最大限度地提高运动员为精英比赛的准备程度。