M2 Fuel-burning Efficiency-Food for Thought
M2 Fuel-burning Efficiency-Food for Thought
Published Thursday, June 2, 2005
Two-time Ironman Canada winner Mike McCormack has never been afraid of taking a different approach to training. In this training artical he offers an interesting look at Ironman nutrition strategies."It is my experience that during training, endurance athletes should practice eating as little as possible while not bonking," he says.
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Nutritional strategy is a popular and oft-analyzed subject in the triathlon training world. Indeed, the multi-sport world has a habit of working itself into a state of indigestion when it comes to the subject of fueling and nutrition for endurance events.
Having observed yet another Tri-forum thread on fueling for a half Ironman event and the varying exhortations of how much to eat, I thought it would be more useful to redirect the conversation to how little one should eat, while also viewing the never-ending fueling discussion within the context of better considered general training methods.
It is my experience that during training, endurance athletes should practice eating as little as possible while not bonking. Common sense tells us that the body does not enjoy ingesting and digesting large amounts of food while exercising vigorously under what are often uncomfortable weather conditions.
Energy diverted to the digestive process would be better spent if directed to the legs and arms we use to move us forward. Logical enough.
If training is a practice in bodily adaptation, then more thoughtful consideration ought to be given to teaching the body to perform without having to rely upon systemically disruptive additive fuel.
Let us consider the oft-regurgitated mantra that "we must train slow to teach the body to burn fats." Must we really?
In my opinion, traditional LSD base-training combined with what I view as excessive caloric minimum RTAs (recommended training allowances) promotes inherent fuel-burning inefficiency. To train slow while also teaching the body to ask for frequent food hand-outs is a recipe that teaches the opposite of what we wish to ultimately accomplish -- to race fast while not having to somehow eat a banquet in arduous conditions.
It is unreasonable to expect that on race day, the illogical "GSEAL" (go slow and eat a lot) training method will allow us to be efficient fuel-burning racers. After all, race day will see you racing at a harder and faster pace than the vast bulk of what all your training has been. It is axiomatic that your body will only do that which it has been trained to do.
"GSEAL-bred" athletes will either be more vulnerable to bonking because they will have trained their bodies to burn fuel inefficiently, or they will have to greatly complicate their race efforts by ingesting an even more inordinate amount of fuel than they have already practiced. I believe it is this combination of sub-optimal training and excessive RTAs that causes one to read of so many Ironman race efforts being derailed by fueling issues, gastric distress, bloated bellies, vomiting, overhydrating, etc.
M2 Fuel Burning Efficiency
Two-pronged strategy:
1. Practice controlled deprivation in training rides.
2. Unless you wish to race slow, structure training intensities that more closely resemble race pace.
Controlled Deprivation simply means waiting longer to eat during a training ride, and then eating sparingly thereafter. You are only to eat that which is necessary to avoid bonking. It is interesting to see how quickly the body adapts once it learns that there will not be early, frequent, and bountiful cheap fuel handouts.
How much one eats, and how frequently, with the controlled deprivation method is a function of fitness, practice, and the individual. Generally, it should not be necessary to fuel for rides of two-hours or less. In the early season, when your long ride might be three hours, you might take a gel or piece of bar (not the whole enchilada) but not until one-and-a-half- or two-hours have passed.
As the duration of the long ride increases, along with your fitness, you can expand the duration of no-fuel rides as well as the time you wait before taking fuel on longer rides. Three hour rides with no fuel quickly become no-brainers. Longer rides of five- or six-hours in duration should see you waiting up to two- to two-and-a-half hours before taking fuel, and you can then refuel sparingly with a gel or piece of bar every 45- to 60-minutes.
In addition to teaching your body to be more efficient in its use of fuel, you will develop a much keener sense of how far you can go on a given amount of fuel, along with better awareness of the warning signs that you are in need of more fuel. Knowledge of one's body is an integral part of being a successful endurance athlete.
The shorter interval quality based training that I advocate, in addition to being more time efficient and effecting better overall performance, also teaches the body to economize its use of existing fuel stores. Shorter focused intensity intervals (90-seconds to three-minutes) with relatively short rest intervals (15- to 60-seconds) mean that the workout is still aerobic ("enhanced aerobic," in M2 parlance), and thus muscle glycogen is spared despite the more focused work effort and faster speed.
Done properly, enhanced aerobic interval progressions can be performed for many months while improving throughout. With over fourteen years of experimenting with this type of training, I have observed the following:
· My body has become extremely fuel-efficient over the years, to the point where I can routinely perform 100-mile rides with no fuel beyond my fluid replacement drink.
· Workout time can be compressed considerably. One hour spent with "Enhanced Aerobic" interval work allows me to ride "steady-state" on the roads for 3 hours.
· Workouts are varied, interesting, and purposeful, and obviate the need for two- to three-hour indoor grind-a-thons. It continues to amaze me that so many people and coaches torture themselves with indoor sagas that are both tedious and relatively unproductive. Herd mentality, I suppose.
· Race day nutrition does not become a feared fourth event complete with complicated strategies, execution plans, and all the unnecessary worry that goes with this.
Summary
The time and effort spent devising complicated caloric formulas and ratios and then trying to figure out how to cram it all down is treating a symptom instead of the underlying issue. Endurance athletes should consider ways to make themselves more fuel-efficient warriors versus simply throwing food and calorie-counts at the problem and creating other troublesome side effects in the process.
Can the simple and logical, yet counterculture methods I describe work?
Well, if racing Ironman events is to test the limits of human performance, then I am able to reference 14 years of Ironman events and training, and say that the proof is clearly in the pudding!
Michael McCormack is a two-time Ironman Canada Winner who has coached competitive athletes since 1994. Michael resides in Mill Valley, California with his wife Etsuko, son Jimmy, and daughter Yuna.. You can read more about Michael’s background at www.triathloncoach.com.
Articles submitted to Ironmanlive.com on training-related topics represent the personal opinions of the author based on their own experience and research. Ironmanlive.com provides these for your review and consideration, but does not endorse any particular recommendations of our authors.

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