How Supercompensation Training Improves Your Workouts
Written by MasterClass
Last updated: Jun 7, 2021 • 3 min read
Whether you're a runner aiming to increase your endurance or a bodybuilder implementing a strength-training program, consistent hard work is the key to successful athletic development. In addition to high-intensity workout sessions, it’s also important to include recovery days that allow you to benefit from the supercompensation effect.
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What Is Supercompensation?
In sports science, supercompensation theory asserts that an athlete who pairs their training load with the proper recovery time will not only return to their performance base level, but will develop the capacity for a higher level of performance. In other words, the body prepares itself for a more intense next training session. Within the standard training cycle, the period of supercompensation is when an athlete becomes capable of performing at a higher level the next time they train.
How Supercompensation Works Within the Training Cycle
Athletic training boils down to how you apply stress to your body (training stimulus) and the degree of stress you apply to your body (training load). Applying the right amount of training stress to your body, then recovering over the ideal time period results in supercompensation. To understand the supercompensation process, it's essential to comprehend all four elements of the training cycle.
- 1. Training load: All athletes begin a training program at their own unique fitness level, so there's no one level of training intensity appropriate for everyone. A good training program has hard training sessions, but if your training load is too high, your body will struggle to return to a state of homeostasis (your fitness baseline). On the other hand, if your training load is too easy, your body won't adapt and grow stronger.
- 2. Recovery period: In order to reach the supercompensation period of the training cycle, it's crucial to completely recover from your training stimuli. If you begin your next workout too quickly after a hard training session, your body may fail to supercompensate due to overtraining. Inadequate recovery time leads to fatigue and a decline in your baseline performance level.
- 3. Supercompensation: A suitable training load and recovery period provide the conditions necessary for your body to enter the supercompensation window. In the supercompensation window, your body responds to prior training stimuli by growing stronger in order to handle future stress. When your body is in the supercompensation phase, you start to feel stronger or faster, and your baseline performance level increases. Supercompensation lasts for up to a week before your body moves on to the next phase of the training cycle. Common signs of supercompensation include an increase in athletic performance, a decrease in your resting and training heart rate, and an overall increase in energy.
- 4. Detraining: If you wait too long after the supercompensation phase to start your next training session, you will enter the detraining phase. In the detraining phase, your baseline performance stays the same or declines, making your workouts less effective.
How Supercompensation Can Improve Your Workouts
Understanding supercompensation is necessary for properly planning and executing your workouts. Structuring your training around the supercompensation effect allows you to avoid hitting a performance plateau. In a good training program, supercompensation serves as a checkpoint in your training cycle that you can aim to hit as you progress through the program. Your body shouldn't supercompensate after every training session, but if you're training and recovering correctly, you should notice the positive effects of supercompensation about every two weeks.
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