Leigh wrote:Cheers mate, that's brilliant
The buffering effects of lactate - is that the mechanism at work when runners get their "second wind"?
burien top team wrote:Nice information. I compete in jiu jitsu rather than MMA and though I'don't really consider myself a slow starter in competition (mostly because I usually get the first points either with a takedown or a guard pull and sweep) it does tend to take me a while to get going after I get those points. I wonder if the point about getting the energy systems "online" in the beginning is part of the problem.
lylemcd wrote:My general rule is this: if you find that you do better later in the workout (or on the second or third set of a given exercise in the weight room), you need more warmup. Because what's happening is that the first half of your competition is acting as the final bit of your warmup. Which is a waste. You want to be 100% when you start the competition, not halfway in.
So in practice play around with some different stuff (I know know enough about jiu jitsu to say whether the issue is metabolic or neural in this case) and see what gets you ready to go at second one when you spar or whatever. When you figure it out, do that in competition.
Lyle
burien top team wrote:lylemcd wrote:Thanks. You hit the nail on the head. Even though I don't have the greatest "cardio" (it has gotten better by leaps and bounds since getting Joel's book), I always tend to do better "later in the workout." I can roll for 10-15 minutes at a pretty good pace. But those early minutes from about 2:30 to 4:30 are often very stiff and awkward or even weak-feeling.
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