Abstract
The present study aimed at comparing a high-volume, low-intensity vs. low-volume,
high-intensity swim training. In a randomized cross-over design, 10 competitive swimmers
performed two different 4-week training periods, each followed by an identical taper
week. One training period was characterized by a high-training volume (HVT) whereas
high-intensity training was prevalent during the other program (HIT). Before, after
two and four weeks and after the taper week subjects performed psychometric and performance
testing: profile of mood states (POMS), incremental swimming test (determination of
individual anaerobic threshold, IAT), 100 m and 400 m. A small significant increase
in IAT was observed after taper periods compared to pre-training (+ 0.01 m/s; p = 0.01).
Maximal 100-m and 400-m times were not significantly affected by training. The POMS
subscore of “vigor” decreased slightly after both training periods (p = 0.06). None
of the investigated parameters showed a significant interaction between test-time
and training type (p > 0.13). Nearly all (83 %) subjects swam personal best times
during the 3 months after each training cycle. It is concluded that, for a period
of 4 weeks, high-training volumes have no advantage compared to high-intensity training
of lower volume.
Key words
swimming - aerobic endurance - anaerobic capacity - POMS - individual anaerobic threshold
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Dr. PhD Oliver Faude
University Paderborn
Institute of Sports Medicine
Warburger Str. 100
33098 Paderborn
Germany
Phone: + 49 (0) 52 51 60 35 87
Fax: + 49 (0) 52 51 60 31 88
Email: oliver.faude@uni-paderborn.de