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Cardio in my day

42-Colrath

Don Juan
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I am on the tennis team, so I had to to play tennis almost every day of the week for about 2 hours after school and then I would go and lift weights at the gym. However, tennis season is over now. So, what kind of cardio workout should I put into my day to replace tennis? I think I need cardio b/c i'm trying to eat more for weight lifting.
 

Just because a woman listens to you and acts interested in what you say doesn't mean she really is. She might just be acting polite, while silently wishing that the date would hurry up and end, or that you would go away... and never come back.

Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.

flippinfreak

Master Don Juan
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I'd say plyometrics...

It would improve your game as well as maintain your cardio requirements... I'd say even exceed what you get from tennis...

Too bad you won't have any emotions so you can break through the mental barriers;)
 

Un-Aru

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Plyometrics are NOT a cardio activity, in fact done correctly (and if you're fit) you'll barely break a sweat. I'm not saying they're bad, because they will in fact improve your performance on the court as flippinfreak suggests, they're just not an adequate replacement for your tennis CARDIO requirements.

I would go for some nice long runs, maybe building up to 45 min runs for endurance, interspersed with cardio-vascular threshold training sessions (if you can hit 5km in 20 mins or less you're doing quite well) Of course, running can be quite boring so you may want to mix it up a bit with some swimming and cycling as well, anything to get that heart-rate right up. Basically you want to increase your cardio-vascular endurance (ie fitness) for the next 8-12 weeks, then start throwing in some sprint and agility work (shuttle sprints etc) to increase your lactate threshold (ie your 'burn' tolerance) and improve speed and agility over short distances as is necessary in tennis. This is also the period in which plyometrics should be done as well... the reasoning? You will have built up a bit of a strength base which is ideal preparation, plus it is a natural partner to sprint-type exercises. By the way, don't neglect the cardio-vascular stuff during this period, just scale it back a bit. This will last probably 6-8 weeks which should transition nicely into pre-season which is where skills work should become the primary focus.

It's called 'training periodisation'...
 
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