Endurance Events and Lactate Testing

With Emphasis on the Triathlon

What leads to a peak performance in the triathlon? It may surprise you. This page is for readers who are interested in optimizing training for the triathlon or for any endurance event. If you are using the popular approach that estimates a threshold through a timed test, usually running, cycling or swimming for 30 minutes and then taking an average heart rate or power reading, you are not getting the proper information to train correctly. As you read on, your basic understanding of training will be challenged. Physiological training is mainly training your energy systems. Your energy for each discipline comes from two places, the aerobic and anaerobic systems. So in a way it is just a question of what type of training will change each and in what direction. One of the important parts of the triathlon site is where our four essential principles of training are outlined. These are based on the expereinces of some of the top coaches and sports scientists in the world.

Just knowing a threshold number will not tell you this.

It is not so simple because the two systems interact with each other and this affects performance. Also each workout affects each system in either a positive or negative way. This might sound confusing but we hope this page and the rest of the triathlon section will make this clearer. And when it does, you will train smarter and know best how to increase your three thresholds.

The use of power and heart rates and all the technology that accompanies each of these measures have revolutionized training in a lot of ways. They have improved performance, certainly. But the simplicity of each technology has masked a true understanding of the physiology of energy systems and what makes for optimal training. Consequently training based only on them is missing an essential element.

The ideas of Jan Olbrecht - Are we pulling this out of the air? No, the basis of what we discuss here is in the academic literature and is based on a model of energy metabolism that was developed at the German Sport University Cologne. More importantly it is used in the real world, training world-class athletes. At least one of the top teams in the Tour de France is using it. The specific ideas here are based on the training and testing philosophy of Jan Olbrecht, the training adviser for Luc van Lierde and other world record holders such as Pieter van den Hoogenband who broke the 100 m and 200 m freestyle world records in the Sydney Olympics. They are the ideas that have guided the Dutch rowing team to Olympic medals in the last two Olympics. They have proven themselves in the marketplace of training, generating world class results for events as short as 40 seconds up to ultra-endurance events such as the Ironman.

What is this missing element that we referred to and Olbrecht finds so important? It is the anaerobic energy system. Nearly everyone ignores the anaerobic system for endurance events because they believe that all it does is provide a small amount of energy, roughly about 5% of the total. Why worry about it? They fail to understand that the anaerobic system has two other very important functions in an endurance event.

  • First, the anaerobic system determines the lactate threshold for a specific aerobic capacity. This is how much of your aerobic system you can use. The more the better, right? That is what everyone is telling you. So you had better pay attention to what is actually controlling your lactate threshold. When asked what causes the level of your lactate threshold, most exercise physiologists say it is a mystery. It is no mystery; it is the strength of your anaerobic system relative to the strength of your aerobic system that determines the lactate threshold.

  • Second, the anaerobic system supplies most of the fuel for the aerobic system during a race. If it isn't functioning at the right level the aerobic system will use fats instead of carbohydrates. This is much slower. If the anaerobic system was not operating at all, your race pace would be about 40% slower and your final time would be almost twice as long.

The main function of lactate testing is to measure aerobic endurance. But it also helps the coach and athlete find the impact of the anaerobic system on the threshold. Without this type of testing, it’s all guesswork. Lactate testing is certainly not a cure-all. Like all testing procedures, it has its limitations. But there is no more valuable tool for guiding the training of endurance athletes. This does not say to abandon your power meter or your heart rate monitor. They are valuable too, so use them with lactate testing. But it is lactate testing that reveals what determines how powerfully and how long you can race.

Click here for examples of what lactate curves can tell the coach that he will not get from any other source.

A triathlete completes three separate endurance efforts in one event. And the information that lactate testing provides is relevant to each activity. We have placed an ad about the relevance of lactate testing for the triathlon on several triathlon web sites.

The ad indicates that performance on race day depends primarily on how high the speed or power is at the lactate threshold for each of the three disciplines (e.g. 400 m swim time, running speed in meters/s or cycling power.) Performance in a distance event correlates highly with the lactate threshold for that event. Thus, the value of the effort at the threshold will be the best indicator of a subsequent performance. The race pace will be lower than the threshold pace but in general the higher the threshold is the faster the pace an athlete can sustain during a race.

importance of
lactate testing for the triathlon for measuring the lactate threshold  importance of lactate testing
for the triathlon for measuring the lactate threshold   importance of lactate testing
for the triathlon for measuring the lactate threshold

Knowing your power or speed at the threshold is not enough - Even more important than knowing the threshold is knowing what is behind it. Two athletes with identical power at the threshold can have different energy system combinations producing that result and these will require different training approaches to reach a peak performance.

What causes the threshold to be what it is? - It is interesting to know a certain power number or a specific pace that elicits the threshold; it is quite another to know how to make these numbers better. A cookie-cutter approach that uses pretty much the same training workouts for the same threshold power will not get the same results when what is behind the power number is a different combination of the two energy systems. Do you really believe that if two athletes both have a threshold of 275 watts, that they should train identically and if they train identically they will get identical results? Athletes with the same threshold number can be quite different. Yes, they will have similar race results if they were racing that day. But they will not respond to the same training stimulus the same way. If they use the same training program, one may get faster and the other slower. Lactate testing, when used correctly, will ensure that both get better.

So while a TT power reading, a 10k time or a T30 is very useful, it is only a start. - Behind the power reading or running or swimming pace are two energy systems, and each is very important. This is what the coach and athlete should be interested in. It is good to know that an athlete needs "x" watts/kg to finish the bike split in a certain time; it is even better to know what factors are determining how many watts/kg the athlete can generate and how to train these factors to get it higher. And that is what lactate testing is about, training both the energy systems. When you do that correctly, the body will be optimally trained for the event. It is about finding what works for each athlete individually, not treating them all alike.

Thresholds correlate well with performance, with very rare exceptions. Some exceptions are the mini-sprint triathlons, but even here the threshold value is of importance. This does not minimize the value of proper technique, nutrition, hydration, the use of heart rate monitors and power meters and many other factors that affect performance. But the reason a triathlete spends so much time in the pool, on the bike and running has to do with improving all three thresholds and training the energy systems to be correctly balanced. The ad above indicates that many triathletes are unaware of just what their thresholds are. They are even more unaware of the levels of the aerobic and anaerobic systems which determine the thresholds.

The rest of the triathlon section is meant to inform and educate the coach and athlete on just what contributes to an optimal performance and in the process illustrate the values of lactate testing and how it can help the athlete reach the desired performance. The site is quite extensive and in fact would provide the material for a small book on the use of lactate testing for the triathlon. It is not meant to be a comprehensive training manual for the triathlon but it covers in detail one of the most important aspects of triathlon preparation, making sure the athlete is optimally trained.

Relationship between Lactate Threshold and Performance

The following chart was developed using the ideas of Jan Olbrecht. Jan was the training adviser to Luc Van Lierde when he set the course record at Kona (October 1996) and completed the fastest Ironman ever until July 2011 (7:50 in Ironman Germany 1997) and when he won again for a second time at Kona in October 1999. This chart indicates how important one measurement, the lactate threshold, is for success in any endurance event and especially the triathlon since it includes three endurance events in one race. One factor that is easily measured will tell triathletes how well they will do in their next race. Measuring it during the training cycle will tell them how well their training is working to reach the desired threshold for the race.

Model of performance in endurance athletic events by Jan Olbrecht

This model is thoroughly explained on our lactate threshold page as each of elements is discussed in detail. For a triathlete, it is essential that he/she optimize the threshold for each of the three disciplines for success in the race. On our two triathlon sites there will be long discussions of what leads to a good performance physiologically in the triathlon. It is what all those training hours and miles are mainly about.

Click here for a brief description of each of the elements that determine the lactate threshold

There are two triathlon sites on this web site. One was started in 2010 and now consists of 19 separate pages on various topics that are relevant to the use of lactate testing for triathletes. The other site was written in 1998 by Jan Olbrecht and reflects his philosophy of testing and training with elite triathletes.

Site 1 - is the more recent of the two sites and is based on Jan Olbrecht's and some other's ideas. The menu on the left will take you to any of the 19 modules in this site. There is a flow to the presentation of the information so reading some out of sequence may miss some ideas presented in earlier sections. Click here for the first page for this site.

Site 2 - written by Jan Olbrecht in 1998 and focuses on elite triathletes. Nothing written then is any less applicable today. Click here for the home page for this site.

Jan Olbrecht presented at the First World Conference on Science in the Triathlon in Alicante Spain. Here is a link to his bio that was used for this conference.