MasterBlast: Quality Over Quantity

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The following is a translated and summarized from an original article by Inge Scheve. Translation and summary by Inge Scheve exclusively for AXCS membership.

Elite Norwegian racer Barbara Kvaale has learned valuable training lessons over the years perfectly applicable for "real world" skiers with a wide variety of goals and training aspirations.

Consistency and quality

While still young, Kvaale’s success is the result of a systematic and consistent effort over years. The foundation is based on hundreds of training hours, year after year. But Kvaale is just as concerned with what she does as exactly how many hours she puts in. This attention to detail is where skiers with far less training time and more modest goals can learn from her experiences.

“Quality over quantity is a piece of training advice I received years ago, and that has stuck with me. It’s something I really strive to live by,” Kvaale says. That piece of advice is her recipe for success, and something she gladly recommends for everyone, regardless of level and ambitions. Why? It works.

“My very best training year a couple seasons ago, I did not have a single bad intensity workout. I believe that’s because I focus so hard on putting quality into every single workout I do. And that is something I can wholeheartedly recommend to everyone!”

Specifically, Kvaale focuses on being present and aware. She has a plan for what she is going to do every single workout, how she plans to complete her workout and why she is doing that exact workout.

“Imagine that every single workout is one small piece of a jigsaw puzzle with a lot of pieces. If you don’t get every piece right, you never manage to finish the puzzle,” Kvaale explains.

Pushing limits

Kvaale loves everything that is hard, and she loves pushing her limits. Strength workouts are some of her favorite training sessions.

“My favorite workout it a pure max strength session followed by hurdles and plyometrics. That’s a workout where I get to push my limits to the max, and I can see the progress from one time to the next,” she says enthusiastically before thinking about it one more time. “But I also really love speed workouts, such as 9-12 intervals of 10-15 seconds each,” Kvaale adds.

The devil is in the details

Kvaale is not at all superstitious when it comes to race day rituals. She is more concerned about having all her ducks in a row, being on top of the details, and knowing exactly what the schedule is. Nothing is left to coincidence.

“I don’t have any special race day or pre-competition rituals. I just have a plan for exactly what I am going to do, from ski testing to warm up routines. Just what that is, depends on whether the event is a sprint or a distance race, skate or classic,” she says.