From grimoire
Creates periodized aerobic training plans for running, cycling, or triathlon using polarized intensity distribution, volume progression, and zone-based pacing.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
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/grimoire:design-endurance-training-planThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Build a periodized endurance training plan using intensity distribution, progressive volume, and specificity to improve aerobic capacity and race performance.
Build a periodized endurance training plan using intensity distribution, progressive volume, and specificity to improve aerobic capacity and race performance.
Adopted by: World Athletics elite coach certification, USA Triathlon coaching frameworks, Olympic endurance programs (Norway, Kenya, Ethiopia), British Cycling performance coaching.
Impact: Seiler's research on polarized training (80% easy, 20% hard) showed 10% greater VO2max improvement vs. threshold-only training over 9 weeks; Daniels' VDOT-based pacing reduced injury rates by 30% in marathon programs vs. effort-based training.
Why best: Polarized intensity distribution maximizes aerobic base development without excessive fatigue accumulation; periodized volume progression prevents overuse injury while ensuring progressive overload; specificity ensures training transfers to target event demands.
Sources: Daniels (2014) ch. 2–5; Friel (2016) ch. 7–12; Seiler IJSPP 5:276–291 (2010); Stöggl & Sperlich Front Physiol (2014).
Assess the athlete — collect: current fitness (recent race times, VO2max test or field estimate), training history (average weekly volume last 3 months), injury history, available training time (hours/week), and target event with race date.
Calculate VDOT or FTP — for runners: use Daniels' VDOT tables from recent race performance; for cyclists: FTP = 95% of 20-minute power test; these benchmarks define all training paces/powers.
Set training zones — define 3-zone model: Zone 1 (easy/recovery, <75% HRmax), Zone 2 (aerobic threshold, 75–85% HRmax), Zone 3 (high intensity, >85% HRmax); or use 5-zone model for more precision.
Establish base volume — start at current average weekly volume; increase by ≤10% per week during base phase; 70–80% of total volume should be Zone 1.
Plan intensity distribution — polarized approach: 75–80% easy (Zone 1), 0–5% moderate (Zone 2), 15–20% hard (Zone 3). Moderate zone ("no man's land") accumulates fatigue without training the extreme adaptations needed for performance.
Structure the microcycle (week) — include 1 key long session (aerobic base), 1–2 quality sessions (intervals, tempo, race-specific work), and remainder as easy/recovery. Never place two hard sessions back-to-back.
Periodize macro phases — Base (8–16 weeks): high volume, mostly Zone 1; Build (4–8 weeks): add race-specific intervals, maintain volume; Peak (2–4 weeks): reduce volume 20–40%, race-specific intensity; Taper (1–2 weeks): volume drops 50–60%, maintain intensity.
Prescribe long run/ride — long aerobic session should be 25–30% of weekly volume, performed at Zone 1 pace. For marathoners: longest run 28–35 km; for 70.3 triathlon: longest ride 120–130 km.
Design interval sessions — VO2max intervals: 4–6 × 4–5 min at Zone 3, 2–3 min rest; threshold: 20–40 min continuous at Zone 2 top; race-specific: simulate target event pace/power for progressive durations.
Monitor training load and recovery — use TSS (Training Stress Score) or RPE to track chronic training load; enforce recovery weeks (reduce volume 30–40%) every 3rd–4th week; monitor resting HR and HRV for overreaching signals.
npx claudepluginhub jeffreytse/grimoire --plugin grimoireStructures a sport season into progressive training phases that build fitness systematically and peak performance for key competitions, following Bompa and NSCA periodization guidelines.
Applies exercise science knowledge to program design, periodization, biomechanics, injury prevention, and evidence-based training methodology.
Provides evidence-based training guidance using 2025 research on hypertrophy, progressive overload, and biomechanics for designing strength and muscle development programs.