Periodization Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 phases of the General Adaptation Syndrome model?

A
  1. Alarm phase - temporary decreased performance; soreness, fatigue, reduced energy stores
  2. Resistance phase - adaptation occurs, performance returns to normal or slightly increases. Sometimes an additional Supercompensation phase is included after this.
  3. Exhaustion phase - symptoms seen in first phase return, performance drops, may lead to overtraining/over-reaching
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2
Q

What is the fitness-fatigue paradigm?

A

High intensity training that elicits high fitness gains also causes high fatigue, low intensity training reduces fatigue but minimizes fitness gains

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3
Q

Name the cycle: several months to a year

A

Macrocycle

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4
Q

Name the cycle: 2-6 weeks

A

Mesocycle

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5
Q

Name the cycle: several days up to 2 weeks (most commonly 1 week)

A

Microcycle

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6
Q

What are the 4 periods in an annual training plan and what seasons do they correspond to?

A
  1. Preparatory period (off-season)
  2. First transition period (pre-season)
  3. Competition period (in-season)
  4. Second transition period (post-season, rest)
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7
Q

What are the training goals of the preparatory period?

A
  1. General preparatory: hypertrophy/strength endurance; low to moderate intensity, high volume, 3-6 sets of 8-20 reps, 50-75% 1RM, not sport specific
  2. Specific preparatory: basic strength of sport-specific movements; high intensity of moderate-high volume, 2-6 sets of 2-6 reps, 80-90% 1RM
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8
Q

What are the training goals of the first transition period?

A

Strength/power; low to very high intensity, usually low volume, 2-5 sets of 2-5 reps, 30-95% 1RM

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9
Q

What are the training goals of the competition period?

A
  1. Peaking - very high to very low intensity; 50-93% 1RM, very low volume, 1-3 sets of 1-3 reps; peaks athlete for 7-14 days

OR

  1. Maintenance - moderate intensity, moderate volume, 85-93% 1RM, 2-5 sets for 3-6 reps, best for longer competition periods
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10
Q

What are the training goals for the second transition period?

A

Active rest, recreational activities of low-intensity, may include some light cross training or non-specific activities

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11
Q

The second transition period or post-season should last no longer than ____ to help prevent excessive detraining

A

4 weeks

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12
Q

Describe the daily undulating periodization model (nonlinear periodization)

A

Involves large daily fluctuations in load and volume of assigned core resistance exercises within the microcycle

Ex. Monday: 4 sets of 6RM (strength focus), Thursday: 3 sets of 10RM (hypertrophic focus), Sunday: 5 sets of 3RM (power focus)

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13
Q

Describe the traditional periodization model (linear periodization)

A

Athlete performs the same number of sets and reps across the training days and varies the load; “heavy to light training”

Ex. Monday - 4 x 6 @ 85%
Thursday - 4 x 6 @ 75%
Sunday - 4 x 6 @ 65%

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