An excellent training book.
The Arthur Lydiard Phenomenon - A method of any other way could only be of a lesser standard.
Certainly no other endurance pioneer, no matter how successful, could possibly have experimented with or applied as steadfastly in their toil as Lydiard did. Not Percy Cerutty, not Emil Zatopek, nor even Bill Bowerman set research and application parameters as high as he did.
Keith Livingstone recently gave the legend full-on credit by writing the book, Healthy Intelligent Training, The Proven Principles of Arthur Lydiard. When famed Oregon coach, Bill Bowerman received a special medal from President Kennedy in honor of his contributions for spreading the concept of jogging in America, helping to fuel the initial running boom, Bowerman commented: "I am but the disciple. Arthur Lydiard of New Zealand is the prophet."
Author, Livingstone includes coaches like Nic Bideau, Barry Magee and Greg McMillan in this reiteration of the famed method throughout the pages. He wrote the book for serious middle distance runners and coaches so they can understand, in the parlance of today Lydiard’s terminology. The method importantly (and to the author’s credit) remains in-tact.
There have been no demurrals – only endorsements, most notably by Peter Snell, the most successful of all and an original Lydiard athlete. Lorraine Moller, four time Olympian and Olympic bronze marathon winner wrote: ‘Keith captures the genius of Lydiard and delivers it to athletes and coaches in a comprehensive and complete form….the Lydiard Foundation has adopted this book as it’s official text for all Lydiard coaching courses.’
This of course provides further credibility to Healthy Intelligent Training, which is now turning out to be a dog-eared resource, it continually slips in and out between the books, The Lore of Running and Once a Runner, which book-end, very literally, HIT’s space on my shelf. So what’s new with the old method then?
There has been an evolution of sorts, of the method, which began as self-experimentation, then the application of it on others, followed by the fine-tuning and finally the legitimization from the science community, which completely verified the method’s effectiveness – not that world records and gold medals hadn’t already crystallized this, but brought about physiology's confirmation in the eyes of the many who possess a distrust of anything not appearing scientific - and for those who remained anything less than awed. Healthy Intelligent Training now joins in on the evolutionary process of almost-paradoxically preserving the method yet creating acceptance by the modern day sticklers for language symmetry. Oh those wacky wordsmiths over at Let’s Run.
Healthy Intelligent Training is as thorough as it is a layman’s read from the Acknowledgements right to the Bibliography. Livingstone’s appeals to the reader to understand the holism of what they are doing, as much as sticking to the method’s non-negotiables, stays as much to the spirit of Arthur Lydiard as anything that has passed before, perhaps including Lydiard himself.
The very first time I read the book, after highly anticipating its delivery, like a Christmas Day gift opening, I sped through the pages at an alarming pace. I found myself nodding and being pleased that the very method I have learnt through ad-hoc and random online research and communications with anyone who was associated at some point with Lydiard including the energetic co-founder of the Lydiard Foundation, Nobuya ‘Nobby’ Hashizume was being confirmed with every page turn. This affirmation continued to the end and is reignited every time I feel the need to confirm a piece of the puzzle.
Breaking down the language barrier
Arthur was often referred to as being just knowledgeable enough in science to be dangerous. For example he would call anaerobic threshold, aerobic threshold. The meaning to him and the means to which one attains a greater aerobic capacity through capillarization and general cardiac development never changed, only here the meaning takes on new words. You will notice this rife through Lydiard interviews, which are scattered throughout the internet, but centralized in a cache at the Lydiard Foundation. Get past the language barrier and understanding becomes you.
Understanding and appreciating the holism
Make no mistake Lydiard’s method is all about peaking. Although he did later succumb to the masses and created a schedule for those who like to race year-round, his success is from his peaking method that he developed and perfected over nearly 50 years of work in the labratory (roads and trails of New Zealand).
There needs to be a balance of aerobic conditioning, strengthening, anaerobic training, speed work and sharpening. A manifestation of the disconnect between Lydiard and the runners who think they know what’s best reared it's head many times and showed up at a track one day, for example, where Lydiard had an Olympic athlete doing anaerobic training – not to be confused with speed training. He was asked by some students how many laps or how fast the runner was going, Lydiard didn’t know or really care, the kids were confused, expecting finite numbers from the legendary coach and his international athlete. The holism of the training, in this particular example is about trying to create oxygen debt and an acidic blood ph. Anaerobic training is anaerobic training whether you measure it or not. This point is sadly lost on many.
Healthy Intelligent Training
Understanding the holism of training is just an easy read away in the book, Healthy Intelligent Training, which is available online at Amazon. When I ordered my copy, it took a few weeks to arrive, but was well worth the wait. Although in online pictures it appears thin, it isn't. There are roughly 260 pages. As a read, it is written in a fashion that runners and coaches of any age and level of education will appreciate the near layman's reiteration on the Arthur Lydiard method of training. It contains just the right amount of scientific information, real-life examples and contributions from notable coaches and athletes to mix up the training lore. The cover displayed at Amazon doesn't look as appealing as the cover you receive. Mine has Craig Mottram on it running on a dirt road.
Certainly no other endurance pioneer, no matter how successful, could possibly have experimented with or applied as steadfastly in their toil as Lydiard did. Not Percy Cerutty, not Emil Zatopek, nor even Bill Bowerman set research and application parameters as high as he did.
Keith Livingstone recently gave the legend full-on credit by writing the book, Healthy Intelligent Training, The Proven Principles of Arthur Lydiard. When famed Oregon coach, Bill Bowerman received a special medal from President Kennedy in honor of his contributions for spreading the concept of jogging in America, helping to fuel the initial running boom, Bowerman commented: "I am but the disciple. Arthur Lydiard of New Zealand is the prophet."
Author, Livingstone includes coaches like Nic Bideau, Barry Magee and Greg McMillan in this reiteration of the famed method throughout the pages. He wrote the book for serious middle distance runners and coaches so they can understand, in the parlance of today Lydiard’s terminology. The method importantly (and to the author’s credit) remains in-tact.
There have been no demurrals – only endorsements, most notably by Peter Snell, the most successful of all and an original Lydiard athlete. Lorraine Moller, four time Olympian and Olympic bronze marathon winner wrote: ‘Keith captures the genius of Lydiard and delivers it to athletes and coaches in a comprehensive and complete form….the Lydiard Foundation has adopted this book as it’s official text for all Lydiard coaching courses.’
This of course provides further credibility to Healthy Intelligent Training, which is now turning out to be a dog-eared resource, it continually slips in and out between the books, The Lore of Running and Once a Runner, which book-end, very literally, HIT’s space on my shelf. So what’s new with the old method then?
There has been an evolution of sorts, of the method, which began as self-experimentation, then the application of it on others, followed by the fine-tuning and finally the legitimization from the science community, which completely verified the method’s effectiveness – not that world records and gold medals hadn’t already crystallized this, but brought about physiology's confirmation in the eyes of the many who possess a distrust of anything not appearing scientific - and for those who remained anything less than awed. Healthy Intelligent Training now joins in on the evolutionary process of almost-paradoxically preserving the method yet creating acceptance by the modern day sticklers for language symmetry. Oh those wacky wordsmiths over at Let’s Run.
Healthy Intelligent Training is as thorough as it is a layman’s read from the Acknowledgements right to the Bibliography. Livingstone’s appeals to the reader to understand the holism of what they are doing, as much as sticking to the method’s non-negotiables, stays as much to the spirit of Arthur Lydiard as anything that has passed before, perhaps including Lydiard himself.
The very first time I read the book, after highly anticipating its delivery, like a Christmas Day gift opening, I sped through the pages at an alarming pace. I found myself nodding and being pleased that the very method I have learnt through ad-hoc and random online research and communications with anyone who was associated at some point with Lydiard including the energetic co-founder of the Lydiard Foundation, Nobuya ‘Nobby’ Hashizume was being confirmed with every page turn. This affirmation continued to the end and is reignited every time I feel the need to confirm a piece of the puzzle.
Breaking down the language barrier
Arthur was often referred to as being just knowledgeable enough in science to be dangerous. For example he would call anaerobic threshold, aerobic threshold. The meaning to him and the means to which one attains a greater aerobic capacity through capillarization and general cardiac development never changed, only here the meaning takes on new words. You will notice this rife through Lydiard interviews, which are scattered throughout the internet, but centralized in a cache at the Lydiard Foundation. Get past the language barrier and understanding becomes you.
Understanding and appreciating the holism
Make no mistake Lydiard’s method is all about peaking. Although he did later succumb to the masses and created a schedule for those who like to race year-round, his success is from his peaking method that he developed and perfected over nearly 50 years of work in the labratory (roads and trails of New Zealand).
There needs to be a balance of aerobic conditioning, strengthening, anaerobic training, speed work and sharpening. A manifestation of the disconnect between Lydiard and the runners who think they know what’s best reared it's head many times and showed up at a track one day, for example, where Lydiard had an Olympic athlete doing anaerobic training – not to be confused with speed training. He was asked by some students how many laps or how fast the runner was going, Lydiard didn’t know or really care, the kids were confused, expecting finite numbers from the legendary coach and his international athlete. The holism of the training, in this particular example is about trying to create oxygen debt and an acidic blood ph. Anaerobic training is anaerobic training whether you measure it or not. This point is sadly lost on many.
Healthy Intelligent Training
Understanding the holism of training is just an easy read away in the book, Healthy Intelligent Training, which is available online at Amazon. When I ordered my copy, it took a few weeks to arrive, but was well worth the wait. Although in online pictures it appears thin, it isn't. There are roughly 260 pages. As a read, it is written in a fashion that runners and coaches of any age and level of education will appreciate the near layman's reiteration on the Arthur Lydiard method of training. It contains just the right amount of scientific information, real-life examples and contributions from notable coaches and athletes to mix up the training lore. The cover displayed at Amazon doesn't look as appealing as the cover you receive. Mine has Craig Mottram on it running on a dirt road.
