Hi Pete,
"you wrote:"
I was aware of the log(T1/T2) relationship
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The contrary would have surprised me a bit. After all, you had to come up with this 1.06 coefficient one way or the other.
"you wrote:"
It's satisfying to see that I am still getting inquiries about that three-decades-old paper..
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Oh sir. I think it's not the end of the road. Far from it. You were, at the time, very far up front. What happened is that Running world picked on this concept and then Dr.Daniels et al. did wonderful things with it.
Believe it or not, some cyclic endurance sports to which this concept could apply, that are nowadays overloaded with web information, probably ignore its existence.
Late '80s, like I explained you in private a famous mathematician ended up solving the time prediction mystery applied to swimming with the same function set. However, they took a completely different approach. They worked as hard as they could to keep the formula set secret in hope of commercializing a software. As a result of that, the concept isn't wide spread in the swimming world (yet).
"You wrote:"
The price of simplicity, of course, is the necessity to limit the use of the formula to the mile-to-marathon range, thus shutting out the sprints.
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Oupsssss. This may in fact has been Dr.DeKoninck's contribution to the evolution of this concept. You can trust my word, this formula set can predict sprint performance very accurately. It has been tested against a scientifically significant volume of data gathered from elite level swimmers from around the world.
The thing he discovered though, the caveat, is that if you wanted to predict sprint performances, you had to compute your individual fatigue decay out of a few sprint personal bests. Input the 50m (roughly 25s) then 100m (roughly 1min) and it will predict anything between 50 and 800 with a fair level of accuracy.
"You wrote:"
As for originality of concept, conclude what you wish. I make no claim to being first, but I am not aware that anybody beat me to it.
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I'm coming to the same conclusion. So did Alejandro Martinez, a talented engineer that paid tribute to your concept in this article here (sorry, in Spanish)
http://www.amtriathlon.com/200...ento-en-natacin.htmlI also come to the same conclusion.
Now, the question I have been wondering about for years now:
Can this concept be further developed to use it not only to predict performances, but also to quantify training loads? That, Mr.Riegel, would be very handy!
The two best models at the time to quantify swim training loads are Banister's TRIMP and Skiba Swim Score. No need to comment on the former. The later is interesting since it uses the swim velocity (performance itself) as input. However, it tries to translate velocity into power prior issuing a session score.
If we could find a way of quantify a training load based on swim velocity alone, that could probably be far more accurate.
Thank you so much for your quick answers, your passion and availability. I will keep you posted about anything that I may publish in regards to your concept. In the meantime, if you're already aware of an application of this concept aimed at scoring a session, I would appreciate being made aware about it.
Thanks again!
Best,
Charles