home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT1741>
- <title>
- Aug. 03, 1992: Engineering the Perfect Athlete
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 03, 1992 AIDS: Losing the Battle
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OLYMPICS, Page 58
- 1992 SUMMER GAMES
- Engineering the Perfect Athlete
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The pulsating industry of sports science is pushing the outer
- limits of human performance. The new formula: less pain, more
- gain. But beware of the hype and the hokum. Sweat still counts
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--With reporting by Ann Blackman/
- Washington, Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles and Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn
- </p>
- <p> From the time he took up the long jump at age 11, Mike
- Powell showed great potential. But in his first 15 years of
- competition he had trouble making it to the far end of the
- sandpit. His jumps consistently measured in the 7.6 m-to-7.9 m
- range, more than a meter short of record-breaking territory.
- Then in 1988 he began improving rapidly. At the world
- championships in Tokyo last August, Powell came into his own.
- He bounded down the runway, hit the board and soared 8.95 m,
- eclipsing by 5 cm the "unbreakable" record set by America's Bob
- Beamon 24 years ago. A believer in nonstop improvement, Powell
- thinks he could set another record in Barcelona.
- </p>
- <p> What accounts for his amazing metamorphosis from also-ran
- to world-beater? Powell, 28, gives credit to a five-year
- scientific training plan devised by his coach, Randy Huntington,
- who goes by the nickname "Mr. Gizmo" and leaves almost no
- technique untried in his exhaustive approach to training. Among
- the elements of Powell's regime:
- </p>
- <p>-- To increase the explosive power of his legs, Powell
- runs on the track with an open drag parachute trailing behind
- him. For variety, he sometimes tows a sled.
- </p>
- <p>-- In the garage at his home in Southern California, he
- builds strength by working out on pneumatic weight machines,
- which precisely control the velocity of his movements to prevent
- damage to his joints.
- </p>
- <p>-- To avoid injury and reduce the recovery time between
- workouts, he performs dozens of water exercises in his pool. He
- also stimulates his muscles by applying electricity to them with
- a battery-operated microcurrent device.
- </p>
- <p> Powell is caught up in the brave new whirl of sports
- science. Fast disappearing are the days when an elite athlete
- was simply the product of hard work, a gruff coach and a little
- luck. Today science has become an indispensable part of the
- formula for more and more world-class competitors, who find that
- the margin between gold and silver is often a centimeter or a
- hundredth of a second. Helping mold athletes today is a growing
- army of specialists--from physiologists and psychologists to
- nutritionists and biomechanists. Result: athletes who are
- training not just harder but smarter. With some players already
- working seven hours a day, six days a week, "it is physically
- and socially irresponsible to increase the volume of training
- any more," says Gerd-Peter Bruggemann, a professor of
- biomechanics at the German University of Sports Sciences in
- Cologne. "Science must think of ways to make training more
- efficient."
- </p>
- <p> One of the biggest changes brought about by sports science
- is the increased use of resistance training, which includes
- workouts with weights as well as sessions on machines employing
- everything from hydraulic cylinders to rubber bands. Such
- training has spread even to the more skill-oriented sports,
- including archery and target shooting. The reason is that
- scientists have learned that muscle strength produces not only
- power but also stamina. At the National Sculling Center on the
- Occoquan River in Woodbridge, Va., Igor Grinko, a former Soviet
- rowing coach who now trains the U.S. team, has had American Keir
- Pearson doing 400 pulls on the oars with 200-lb. weights
- attached. "When we slack off," says Pearson, "Igor screams at
- us that Russian women can lift more weight than we can." Says
- Jonathan Smith, 31, a two-time Olympic medalist who is pushing
- for a third prize this summer: "The volume and amount of weight
- we're lifting is two to three times more than I did before."
- </p>
- <p> The goal in most cases is to increase strength without
- adding bulk. "We're trying to make runners and jumpers, not body
- builders," says Dave Ash, weight-training coach at George Mason
- University in Fairfax, Va. One technique is to do many
- repetitions at low resistance, which takes longer to increase
- strength but vastly improves endurance. As part of her
- pre-Olympic regimen, Jamaican long jumper Diane Guthrie has been
- doing 250 leg curls every day wearing 10-lb. ankle weights. The
- 20-year-old Guthrie, who trained at George Mason, notes that
- when she slacked off on weight training, she hurt some of her leg
- muscles.
- </p>
- <p> In resistance training, athletes focus on the muscle
- groups now recognized as vital to their sport. Grinko's rowers
- are spending one day a week concentrating exclusively on arms,
- another day on legs and a third on the back. Swimmers are
- working on building up their arms because about 80% of their
- propulsion through the water comes from the arms' movement.
- Cyclists now give more attention to their hamstrings, a group
- of muscles in the back of the thigh. "The hamstrings stabilize
- the knee and transfer mechanical energy between the joints,"
- explains biomechanist Robert Gregor of the University of
- California, Los Angeles.
- </p>
- <p> Even individual muscles contain different fibers that
- respond to specialized training. The two primary types are
- so-called fast-twitch fibers, which contract rapidly to produce
- large amounts of power, and slow-twitch fibers, which generate
- less force but don't tire as quickly.
- </p>
- <p> People are born with different proportions of the two
- fiber types, and athletes tend to excel in events for which they
- have the best muscle endowment. Sprinters, such as track star
- Carl Lewis and swimmer Dana Torres, have muscles containing a
- large majority of fast-twitch fibers. So, surprisingly, do shot
- putters and weight lifters, who need not only strength but power
- too. "They have to move a heavy weight very quickly," explains
- U.S. Olympic Training Center physiologist Steve Fleck. "Weight
- lifters in the clean-and-jerk event can move as fast as a
- sprinter." Distance runners and swimmers, on the other hand,
- have mostly slow-twitch fibers.
- </p>
- <p> Heredity has a lot to do with the muscles' makeup, but
- training can play a part as well. "You can't convert slow-twitch
- into fast-twitch fibers," says Fleck, but you can speed them up
- a bit. Middle-distance runners who want to improve their final
- kick can go through drills of bounding, jumping and sprinting to
- condition their muscle fibers to contract more quickly.
- </p>
- <p> Since muscles can perform only if they have fuel,
- scientists have deeply probed the role of body chemistry in
- generating energy. They have developed various conditioning
- programs to enhance the two basic types of energy production.
- One is the well-known aerobic system, in which muscles rely on
- oxygen to release energy from carbohydrates, fat and some
- protein. Athletes in endurance events--as well as fitness
- buffs who run or do aerobics--draw primarily on this system,
- which functions for a long time. Breathing supplies oxygen
- indefinitely, but eventually the stores of carbohydrates run
- out.
- </p>
- <p> The other system is anaerobic, in which muscles use
- reactions that do not depend on oxygen to produce energy from
- carbohydrates and other chemicals stored in the muscle.
- Sprinters--as well as nonathletes dashing from the shower to
- grab a ringing phone--rely to a large extent on this system,
- which provides lots of quick power but can operate for only a
- short time. The reasons: depletion of the necessary chemicals
- and buildup of a chemical by-product called lactic acid, which
- inhibits muscle contraction. Middle-distance athletes depend on
- a delicate balance of both aerobic and anaerobic systems.
- </p>
- <p> To help determine how well energy production is going,
- scientists and trainers collect air exhaled by athletes during
- workouts and take blood samples to test for chemicals such as
- lactic acid. Speedy computer analysis enables the trainers to
- get information in time to make adjustments in subsequent
- workouts.
- </p>
- <p> At the U.S. Swimming Federation's International Center for
- Aquatic Research in Colorado Springs, more than 10,000 swimmers
- have been tested on a swimming treadmill called a flume, in
- which their oxygen intake is measured and evaluated as they
- exercise. Sessions in the flume showed that Dara Torres, a
- specialist in the 100-m freestyle, needed to enhance her
- anaerobic system with more sprint repetitions. Such evaluations
- are also helping athletes settle on the right amount of
- training. Swimmers reach a peak after 12 weeks of intensive work
- and then need a tapering-off period.
- </p>
- <p> Just as important is the raw material the body uses to
- produce the energy. Only a generation ago, when protein was the
- breakfast of champions, athletes were chowing down on steak and
- eggs. Now every morsel is evaluated. At the U.S. training
- center's cafeteria, each food item is labeled with its
- carbohydrate, protein and fat content. Large amounts of
- carbohydrates, as much as 60% to 70% of daily calories, are the
- mainstay of athletes' diets, because a storehouse of such foods
- helps maintain stamina. Nutritionists advise players to limit
- fat intake to 30% of calories, protein to about 15%.
- </p>
- <p> While athletes require more protein than do most people to
- build new muscle and repair damaged tissue, they usually fulfill
- their needs by eating more food rather than increasing the
- proportion of protein. The typical American consumes 2,000 to
- 4,000 calories of food a day; a male basketball player or
- long-distance runner may take in 8,000. Many athletes also
- supplement their diet with capsules of amino acids, the building
- blocks of protein, though there is no convincing scientific
- evidence to support their use.
- </p>
- <p> Since top athletes constantly go for broke and wind up
- straining or injuring themselves, physical therapy has become
- a vital part of training science. Kinesiologist Linda Huey of
- Santa Monica, Calif., devised a water exercise program to help
- keep long jumper Powell in shape after he had an emergency
- appendectomy just six weeks before the Olympic trials in 1988.
- "On land, he could not have trained," explains Huey.
- </p>
- <p> Never getting out of condition is the best way to maintain
- an athletic career. Top athletes now train year-round instead
- of seasonally. "It's not advancing age that necessarily hurts
- performance," says American physiologist Steve Fleck, "it's
- deconditioning." Experts believe that swimmer Mark Spitz, 42,
- whose technique in the butterfly stroke is still regarded as
- ideal, failed in his comeback bid earlier this year in part
- because he had been out of condition for 17 years and did not
- do enough resistance training. Nonetheless, notes Fleck, "the
- trend is in the direction of the better performances coming from
- older athletes."
- </p>
- <p> Athletes are complex machines going through complicated
- motions. Even a power event such as the discus throw involves
- an elaborate, spinning choreography. The richness of the
- variables has provided a fertile field for biomechanics experts,
- who use infrared lasers, force plates, high-speed video cameras
- and computers to isolate the motions and moments that make a
- difference. Scientists have analyzed every type of athletic
- movement, from a diver's twist to a runner's stride, from a
- weight lifter's lunge to a rower's stroke.
- </p>
- <p> The success of American hurdler Edwin Moses shows how
- critical changes in technique can be. Before the 1976 Games,
- Moses, a physics major in college and a strong proponent of
- sports science, analyzed his stride and discovered that it was
- longer than most hurdlers'. That, he figured, could enable him
- to shave a step from the traditional 14 that most competitors
- took between vaults in the 400-m hurdles'. Moses won the gold
- and wrote a paper on the biomechanics of running 13-step
- hurdles. Four years ago, at the U.S. Olympic trials, backstroker
- David Berkoff set a new world record in the 100-m race by
- swimming more than two-thirds of the first 50 m underwater using
- the dolphin kick. Today nearly everyone employs the maneuver,
- which cuts drag, but only for 15-m, the maximum allowed by newly
- set rules.
- </p>
- <p> In preparation for Barcelona, German hammer thrower Heinz
- Weis, with his trainer and a biomechanist, have been poring over
- video data on Yuri Sedykh, the Soviet thrower who set a world
- record in 1986 that still stands. One element of Sedykh's
- success, they believe, was his ability to generate maximum power
- by keeping both feet on the ground as long as possible during
- the three or four preparatory spins. Scientists at the U.S.
- aquatic center, working with swimming coaches, have suggested
- changes to American backstroker Janie Wagstaff and freestyler
- Matt Biondi in their underwater pulling patterns. Biondi was
- urged to keep his wrist cocked for one-half to a full second
- longer at the end of the stroke to maximize his propulsion.
- </p>
- <p> At Pennsylvania State University, sports-science
- researcher John Shea has developed the "Leaper Beeper" for
- divers. The system uses sensors connected to a laptop computer
- to measure elements of an athlete's dive; during practice, a
- beeping noise code tells the diver in the air how high he has
- jumped and how far down he pushed the diving board. "We want to
- give the diver immediate and precise information about the dive
- so a change can be made for the next attempt," says Shea.
- </p>
- <p> For fencers, German specialists have devised a
- steel-plated dummy that examines competitors' attack moves. The
- mannequin has a helmet-shaped head containing a high-speed
- camera mounted behind Plexiglas. Its torso is wired at strategic
- locations with tiny bulbs. When a hit is scored, a red, green
- or white light goes on. Tests with the dummy have shown that
- speed alone is not the crucial factor in a fencer's prowess.
- Athletes are more accurate when they take time and move
- deliberately in the moments preceding attack.
- </p>
- <p> The most ambitious technique-enhancing device yet may be
- the robot that is helping prepare America's table-tennis team
- for Barcelona. Dubbed R-4 and costing $50,000, the robot can
- simulate the styles of the best Ping-Pong players in the world.
- A computer-driven motor that spins at 6,000 r.p.m. can shoot a
- ball at up to 60 m.p.h. "The robot eliminates the need to travel
- to China and Japan to practice against the best players in the
- world," says Olympic hopeful Sean O'Neill. "This is a training
- tool that allows you to practice against them every day."
- </p>
- <p> Sports science undeniably contains some hype and hokum.
- Even its advocates are wary of excessive claims and complexity.
- Alois Mader, a professor at the German University of Sport
- Sciences in Cologne, points out that the highly successful
- Kenyan running program is as simple as can be. "It goes: run
- every day from youth on. And run so that you still enjoy it the
- next day. Everything else will follow automatically."
- </p>
- <p> No one is sure just how much further science can help push
- performance. In most events, improvements will get smaller and
- smaller. "It's clear the curve of progression is flattening
- out," says biomechanist James Hay of the University of Iowa.
- </p>
- <p> Yet some areas show immense possibilities for improvement.
- "By 2054 we'll see a mile in the 3:30s [current record:
- 3:46]," predicts physiologist Jay Kearney, head of sports
- science for the U.S. Olympic Committee. In swimming, "we're not
- near the physiological limit," says John Troup, director of
- sports medicine and science for U.S. swimming. "A fish is 80%
- to 90% efficient in water, a world-class swimmer only 8% to 9%.
- It's not out of the realm of possibility that in six to 10 years
- we could get a drop of one or two seconds in the 100-m race. In
- distance events, we could take 15 seconds off." Some of that
- progress will be the result of athletes who were simply born
- with greater natural talent. But it will also be science that
- is pushing them to be faster, higher, stronger.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-