Month: January 2015

How to Be Useful During Winter Training

Coxing How To

How to Be Useful During Winter Training

Previously: Steer an eight/four || Call a pick drill and reverse pick drill ||  Avoid getting sick || Make improvement as a novice || Protect your voice || Pass crews during a head race

Outside of the standard “what should I do during the winter” questions I get, another one I frequently hear is “how can I be useful?”. Similar questions but not quite the same. I hate feeling like I’m not doing anything or that I’m not contributing (either directly or indirectly) to whatever I’m participating in so this was something I tried to figure out early on in my coxing career, that way I could minimize the amount of time I spent wondering what the hell I could/should be doing.

Related: “The Coxswain in Winter”

Obviously these aren’t tasks that are going to take up a ton of time (probably no more than 10-15 minutes each…) but it’s something which is always better than nothing. The key here is to remember that it’s the little things that sometimes make the biggest difference.

Keep the rowers water bottles filled

This is more of a nice gesture than anything else but it does save the rowers from using their recovery time to do it and they will (hopefully) appreciate not having to rush around doing it themselves and trying to make it back on the erg before their 30-second rest period is up.

The easiest way I’ve found to do this if you’ve got a lot to fill is to do it during the pieces and have one person filling the bottles while two other people alternate between bringing them up and carrying them back. Otherwise you can just do it whenever someone asks or you see they’re out of water. I always try to get them filled up before someone has to ask, just because I think it’s the nice thing to do and it shows them that I’m paying attention and on top of the little things. (Rowers – a quick “thank you” goes a long way here.)

Set up the ergs

While the rowers are doing their warmup run/workout or after their erg warmup, set up the ergs for whatever workout you’re doing. Varsity coxswains, take this opportunity to show the novices how to work the display screens if they’re unfamiliar with how to use them.

Having all the ergs set up before the actual workout starts is a huge help to the coaches because it means we don’t have to stand around saying “are you ready yet … are you ready yet … OK sit ready, atten-ugh, sit easy, *ten seconds goes by*, ready? OK, attention…go.”. If the team does an erg warmup and then has a few minutes to stretch, grab water, run to the bathroom, etc. there’s usually less for you to mess with since some of the rowers will set theirs up before they get off. Taking care of the leftover ones, even if it’s only two or three, saves time in the long run though and the coaches more than anyone else really appreciate that.

If there’s an erg not being used while the rowers are doing their workout or if they aren’t using them at all, that’s another good time to go over how to work the displays with the new coxswains. It also gives you a bit more time to go over things and answer questions. I think most coaches would appreciate the initiative here too on the part of the varsity coxswains simply because this is another thing that we should know how to do but no one really has the time to show us.

Clean the boathouse

By “clean” I mostly mean tidy up. Yes, I know, there are only so many times you can rearrange things to make it look like you did something (this is basically how I cleaned my room until I left for college) but if the foam rollers are all over the mess, get them in one place and find a way to corral them. If the cox box area is a tangled jungle of wires, spend some time organizing them so they don’t get twisted or broken and double check to make sure that all the chargers are plugged in and working. If there are cox boxes that aren’t working, remove them from where the working ones are (and label them as needing to be fixed) so they don’t get mixed in with them and someone ends up on the water with a dysfunctional or dead box.

Related: Katelin Snyder on winter training

If no one is using the ergs, lifting equipment, etc. spend 10 minutes or so running over everything with wipes or a cleaning solution. You can check out the video in the link below for info on the bleach-water solution you should use.

Related: How to avoid getting sick during winter training

Outside of those options, yea, I know there’s still a ton of time to kill but I’ve detailed plenty of things you can do in previous posts so you should have no shortage of inspiration when boredom strikes. As long as you’re not standing around in cliques literally doing nothing, you can pretty much do anything.

Related: Winter training tips for coxswains

When all else fails, hop on a bike and get in a quick 20-30 minute workout or go on a run with the other coxswains. As anti-activity as some coxswains are (which drives me nuts), you should consider getting a workout in anyways because it’s good for you and as any rower will tell you, they appreciate you working out with them during practice even if you’re not doing the same stuff they are.

Image via // @onthewater_amsterdam

Video of the Week

Video of the Week: Dirty Dozen Rowing Club

This is pretty cool. Eyebrow-raising, entertaining, WTF, and cool. The video goes along with this very long article from FOX Sports but it is well worth reading when you have an hour or so to kill (i.e. in the car, at the airport, etc.).

Related: Allen Rosenberg on coaching (and coxing)

The beginning of the video pretty much sums of The Dirty Dozen’s story: “If you know what a rowing crew is supposed to look like then you know this isn’t it.” Basically it’s about a group of guys who get together, decide they want to represent the US at the 1984 Olympics, and then train and compete across the world in preparation for the trials and selection in Princeton. There are a couple names that most people familiar with rowing history will recognize, including Brad Alan Lewis and Allen Rosenberg. It’s a really neat story and one you’ve probably never heard of so definitely check it out.

Erg Playlists

Music to erg to, pt. 73

Ugh, it’s that time of year where everyone’s bringing the germs they picked up at home back to campus, which means colds and the flu are starting to make their way around the boathouse. Make sure you’re taking the necessary precautions to avoid getting sick but if you’re already sick … just stay home! Your teammates and coaches will thank you.

Related: How to avoid getting sick

https://play.spotify.com/user/1241641027/playlist/0gG5E4UPnKHQFVzj5DPbWY

Rowing Video of the Week

Video of the Week: Traits of a Champion

This is a great video to watch and absorb now that we’re all in the midst of winter training. What does being a champion mean to you? It might be some of the things mentioned here, it might be all of them, or it might be none of them but whatever your definition is, repeat it to yourself before each practice and before every erg piece, run, and lift. Don’t let a hard workout or a workout you don’t want to do make you forget what being a champion means and entails.

Here’s the list of what’s mentioned in the video.

Champions focus on the end result; they train with a sense of purpose.

A champion never thinks they’re working hard enough and want to do more.

A champion trains in the moment without thought about the next practice.

Championships are earned in the winter and champions are crowned in the spring.

Everyone wants to win but there can only be one champion.

The goal of a champion is to win and it is your decision whether you wish to pursue it or not.

A champion is afraid of losing. Everyone else is afraid of winning.

A champion is someone who is bent over drenched in sweat and at the point of exhaustion when no one is watching.

A champion is someone who focuses on the process of becoming a winner rather than actually winning.

If being a champion is a choice then it is your choice to make.

If you have a team meeting where you discuss your goals for the upcoming season, that would be a good time to determine how you define being a champion and what traits you as a group need to employ to meet that definition and achieve your goals.

Erg Playlists

Music to erg to, pt. 72

We’re leaving for the airport in about 90 minutes which is kinda sad because this has been, without question, the best trip I’ve ever been on. I’m kinda pumped to get back to the cold weather and some snow though. Back to the regular grind next week though … new coxswain recordings and actual posts since I’ve been slacking majorly on that end since we left for break, in addition to a couple new things that I think you’ll like. Have a great weekend!

Coxing Q&A Teammates & Coaches

Question of the Day

So today we did some 30 second watt tests. I pulled a 305 on my first one and a 322 on my second one, and my assistant coach flipped out and is now obsessed with me becoming a rower. I guess I trust her judgement but I’m having a hard time with that idea. First of all, I hate the monotony of rowing. I’ve done it enough to hate it. The other coxes on my team are super type B and just don’t have good enough focus to make any calls. I’ve also almost exclusively coxed for two years a this is going to be a hard transition ( a junior in HS, 5’5″, 129 lbs). ALSO CAN 30 seconds really tell her anything? Really? Anyone can do anything for 30 seconds, and I’m not so sure that me being able to bang out 30 seconds will translate to a 2k very well. Thoughts? Thanks!

That does seem pretty good but like you said, anyone can do just about anything for 30 seconds. If you’re in good shape, play other sports, etc. then it’d make sense that you’d be able to pull decent numbers. I remember doing watts tests like that in high school and the novices that were swimmers, runners, volleyball players, etc. all did great just because they were super fit and had insane leg muscles. If I were you I’d probably just laugh it off and say “yeaaa … no” if she asks if you’ll consider rowing. If she presses it just be honest and tell her that you prefer coxing over rowing and feel like you’ll make a bigger/better contribution to the team by staying a coxswain.

Erg Playlists

Music to erg to, pt. 71

Hey everybody! If you’ve been following along on Instagram then you know we’re in Cocoa Beach, FL for our winter training trip. It’s been a busy week but we’ve had some really good practices despite the weather being less than ideal so far. Still, when it’s in the 70s in January you can’t really complain too much about a little bit of rain and fog.

I’m still trying to get through the emails/questions I was working on before we left but since the priority has been on Florida since last Sunday it’s been put on the backburner for a bit. Fingers crossed that I’ll have all that done by the end of the weekend though.

Hope you had a great New Year’s!

https://play.spotify.com/user/1241641027/playlist/4rEYSLQUram2eGsvac8urm