Ashton Eaton’s tremendous world record performance in the Decathlon just underscores how important that less is more. Less is more is almost a mantra for he and his coach Harry Marra. They live it every day! Seldom are any of their workouts over one hour. The workouts are on point and focused, no fluff, no nice to do fillers that make you tired and add undue training stress. It reminds me of one of my simple training rules – No one workout can make an athlete but one workout that is too much too soon can spell disaster and ruin an athlete. Focus on the process rep-by-rep, set-by-set, run-by-run, throw-by-throw and jump-by-jump. Recognize it takes time and that training accumulates from session to session, day to day, week to week, month to month and year to year. The temptation is to do more, but the risk is not worth the return. One less throw or jump that is quality is preferable to one more that is sloppy.
Ashton’s record does have as much to do with what he did this year as it does with consistent work over the past six years; once again it is the process. A crucial part of the process is communication with the athlete and listening to their input. Harry & Ashton know & trust each other and i are both invested in the process. Before you can ever think about winning a competition you must consistently win workouts. To win workouts demands putting each workout in context of the bigger picture. Always keeping in mind that less is more.
Michael J. Brown
Great post Vern. I’m really happy for both Ashton and Harry. But particularly Harry; he was my first decathlon coach. And really instilled the excitement to the event. And as well as directed me to Sam Adams and the cadre of decathlete’s training at UCSB.
Michael”Spider” Brown
Steve Rainbolt
Spider! Great to see your post here – I have been out of touch with most of the Sam Adams guys for so long – I hope you are doing well and I would love to see you and the other guys anytime there is a gathering – Steve Rainbolt – Wichita State University Track and Field
Claudio Donatelli
Thanks God for giving us Mr Vern!
Dave Warren
Vern thanks for posting that. I remember a few years ago asking Eaton what his most important take away from his training was. He simply said he would rather be at 80% fitness and 100% health instead of the other way around.
Love your posts. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.