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How to Scale Your Week
The first and most time-efficient option to scale your workload is to utilize the Today’s Plan Toggle Feature to show only the priority sessions for the week. This will take your workload to under 12 hours weekly. To use this feature and learn more, visit this article.
How to Scale a Single Workout
Being able to scale a workout is an important aspect of your training. Some workouts will have different numbers of intervals and distances depending on your level and ability, although the general theme of the training will be the same.
If you see a workout that asks you to run 75 to 100 minutes, it isn’t because it lacks specificity. We have built scalability into the sessions to enable you to manage heavy and fatigued legs or to have the ability to cut duration on those occasions when you are time-crunched. Success does not always mean hitting the longest session.
Scaling a workout: If you happen to be time-crunched or have a need to shorten a workout, there is a specific way we recommend you go about it:
- Trim the Additional Set: The first thing to shorten or drop would be the additional set at the end of the workout.
- Scale the Warm Up: Next would be shortening the warm up and/or the pre-main set. Don’t cut them altogether and ideally, you would complete enough of each to ensure you’re ready to go for the main set.
- Adjust the Main Set: If you still need to carve out more time, then cut back on the number of intervals and not the length of the interval.
Example: A main set of 20 x 100
Correct: Scale to 12 x 100 or 15 x 100
Incorrect: 20 x 75 or 20 x 50
Choosing an interval distance when offered a range: It will be common to see a range of interval duration options, particularly if you are reviewing a swimming workout (which are prescribed in distance). Let’s imagine you are given intervals as:
8 x 200 to 300 with 45-sec rest
The obvious question is: what shall I do?!
This case study is exactly as Matt writes his workouts for the San Francisco crew -- and fits for you also. The way this might work if:
Lane 1 (who can hold 100’s on a 1:10 per 100 yards send off): 300
Lane 2 (1:20 / 100 yards): 275
Lane 3 (1:30 / 100 yards): 250
Lane 4 (1:40 / 100 yards): 225
Lane 5 (1:40-1.50 / 100 yards): 225
Lane 6 (2:00 / 100 yards): 200
The global ‘duration’ stress is the same across lanes -- with different distances. Feel free to use this as a gauge.
Remember: Seldom is a swim designed to extend beyond 90 minutes, and most are mapped to be 60 to 75 minutes in duration.
Here is a video from Matt where he explains how to scale workouts based on fatigue and time.