If you want to get more out of your training time by adding Training Stress (TSS) to your week, you don’t need to crank up the intensity of your workouts to do so. Add TSS to your week with adjustments that are easy to consistently integrate.
For more on nailing your training check out the Ask A Cycling Coach Ep 235.
Adding TSS Through Intensity
While many workouts might feel difficult, other workouts in your plan might leave you feeling like you could have done more. When you complete a workout that felt like it was on the easier side, you might be wondering if you should have cranked up the intensity or added some tougher efforts at the end of the workout. While it might seem like you’d want to make your workouts harder whenever you can, this isn’t always the best strategy for increased training adaptations.
Turning up the intensity during a workout can promote training adaptation and make you faster, but it’s most helpful if you can do it consistently, and it is rarely a carefully calculated approach.
Because it isn’t a prescribed training intervention, turning up intensity has the potential to add excessive fatigue to your body, making future training sessions much harder to complete. In our experience, consistently nailing your prescribed training plan is the best approach to getting faster.
So don’t worry if you feel like you could have done more. While there will definitely be workouts that are really tough to get through, and even some workouts that you can’t finish, not every workout should leave you feeling demolished. Remember that just because something feels hard doesn’t mean you are getting more training benefit by doing it. Those workouts where you feel strong are important too!
Adding Sustainable TSS
Instead of using intensity to boost training adaptation and increase TSS there are other more sustainable ways to consistently add TSS to your training week.
Here are a few things you can do to easily add sustainable TSS to your training week:
Extend Your Cool Down
A great way to get in some additional aerobic training and extra TSS is to extend your cool down in the aerobic zone. By adding ten or fifteen minutes of aerobic work to your training each week you can accumulate additional TSS and training every workout.
Doing this can be easier than adding an additional aerobic workout to your training week, and it’s an easy way to add additional TSS. As an added benefit, it gives you a little extra time to spin your legs out after a tough interval workout.
Do a “Plus” Version of a Workout
If you are completing a workout in a zone that you do especially well in and you want to add challenge to this workout, do a “plus version” of that workout instead of increasing intensity.
For example if you have Carson on your training plan, and you’ve been feeling like your sweet spot workouts haven’t been challenging enough, then you can swap your Carson workout, for Carson +1, Carson +2 or Carson +3. This gives you a chance to train in the same zone, but with the added challenge of additional intervals.
Add Strength Training
If you’re looking for alternative ways to add TSS to your training week, you can also add cycling specific strength training into your week. For the best strategies on how to integrate strength training into your training plan check out Coach Chad’s Strength Training Benchmarks For Cyclists.
Reevaluating: Are Your Workouts Too Easy?
With that said, if you are continuously making these adjustments and you feel like your workouts or your workload isn’t challenging enough, you might need to reevaluate your FTP or your training volume.
If you feel like you could consistently handle a higher level of training, increasing your training volume is a great way to promote additional training adaptation. Taking another Ramp Test to make sure your FTP is accurate is another way to double check that your workouts are appropriately challenging.
Consistently being able to complete workouts at a higher FTP, or a higher training volume will make you faster, but only if you can consistently maintain the training load. If your FTP changes or your training volume changes and you can’t maintain the training load, you are better off using the lower FTP or the lower training volume and implementing one of the strategies mentioned earlier.
Consistency Makes You Faster!
When you add TSS to your week remember that consistency is what matters in the long run. One extra hard effort isn’t going to make you faster, the same way that one bad training session isn’t detrimental to your progression.
If you want to add additional training stress onto your training week, aim for a strategy that you can consistently incorporate into your training and you will see lasting benefits.
For more cycling training knowledge, listen to the Ask a Cycling Coach — the only podcast dedicated to making you a faster cyclist. New episodes are released weekly.
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A question, the article mentions adding strength training to add tss, how much tss value do you attribute to a general strength session(low reps heavy weights)? I don’t find that other sites calculators of hr tss seem too accurate during strength sessions. Is there a way for me to set up TrainerRoad so that strength sessions show up in my career section in the weekly tss tracking?
Thanks
Hi Egan!
Thanks for your question! Unfortunately there isn’t a typical TSS value that can be attributed to any given strength workout. The actual TSS in a workout varies from person to person depending on their fitness and their level of experience with strength training. Without a precise way to measure the amount of work done, like a power meter, the estimations are the best way to get a TSS value from a strength workout.
While the estimations might not always be perfect, you can still benefit from estimating and tracking TSS. If you estimate TSS after every workout, using the same calculator, your estimations will be consistent and comparable. Over time, the accuracy of your perceived intensity should improve which should improve the accuracy of your TSS.
If you want to keep track of your strength training in TrainerRoad you can do so by adding your strength workouts as ‘Other’ activities in your Calendar. When you do this you can estimate the TSS of these workouts. This TSS will be added to the weekly TSS in your Career. For more information on how to do this check out this article: Non-Cycling Activities and Calendar
You can also set up re-occurring strength training sessions in your Calendar. If you want to set up a strength workout that repeats on your Calendar you can check out this help center article for screenshots and instructions: Repeating Workouts
I hope this helps! If you have any further questions let me know. 🙂
I am currently in the low volume plan, but would like to move to the mid volume plan. If I extended my workouts slowly to the + 1 and other variants, and added an endurance workout.] Would that safely add the volume to my TSS? I don:t want to over do it and then not be able to complete workouts due to fatigue. My plan was to increase a half hour every week until my next ramp test when I am approximately at 6 hrs a week.