By monitoring Readiness with TritonWear, you’ll have an insider look into how your body adapts to things like stress, work, nutrition, training, and more. Readiness tracks load change over time and shows your injury risk and status (safe, overtraining, or undertraining).
The majority of the training activities will hit a 90 score. Scores 90 or higher mean you are increasing training at an optimal rate. The goal is to keep the Readiness Score between 90-100, where you are maximizing improvement while staying ‘Safe.’
Scores under 80 will require your attention. The further your score is from the optimal score (90-100), the further you’ll be from keeping your body ready and injury risk-free. A score under 80 may mean you are either overtraining or undertraining.
How much you train (duration, frequency and intensity) influences your body’s response to training. If you are increasing load or intensity faster than your body can adapt to, you leave yourself vulnerable to injuries. In this case, both your RPE (rate of perceived exertion) and load monitoring will be affected. You will feel sore and tired, and you’ll need to support your body through recovery.
On the other hand, undertraining will affect the load monitoring that is part of the Readiness calculation. If you are not hitting a steady increase in frequency, duration or intensity, then you’ll struggle to see improvements. The Readiness will reflect that by showing a low score and alerting you with a status of undertraining. The Intensity Score will also appear low.
Emotions can impact performance both positively or negatively, depending on how they are internalized. Positive emotions can help sustain motivation and enable you to approach training with enthusiasm and high energy.
Negative emotions, by contrast, are linked to training avoidance and a decrease in performance. Many things personal to an individual, school or work stress, relationships with other people, thoughts and memories can trigger emotional reactions.
Skipping workouts/meters or not performing well during practice will affect your Readiness and Intensity Score. One thing you can do is focus on technique. Readiness and Intensity may be low for these practices, but Focus can be high.
The best thing you can do to maintain a good Readiness Score is to adopt habits that support recovery and injury prevention.
Nutritional recovery can help with your body’s readiness for the following practice and between races. Failure to replenish fluids and fuel your body can quickly result in sore muscles, fatigue and underperformance.
Next, learn: Adjusting Your Training to Keep Your Body Healthy.