by Brodlach » Mon Jan 23, 2017 6:48 pm
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by The Dark Knight » Mon Jan 23, 2017 7:19 pm
Brodlach wrote:Faulkner batting way out of his league
by The Dark Knight » Mon Jan 23, 2017 7:22 pm
by amber_fluid » Mon Jan 23, 2017 7:44 pm
The Dark Knight wrote:Brodlach wrote:Faulkner batting way out of his league
Faulkner has the hottest missus folllowed by Usman Khawaja's missus.
by Q. » Mon Jan 23, 2017 7:47 pm
am Bays wrote:Trader wrote:bennymacca wrote:I got an apple watch for christmas, and wore it on the weekend whilst i played a 40 over per side one day game.
I am a fat bloke playing country B Grade cricket. in 2 hr 45 mins, which included 7 overs of medium pacers, I burned nearly 10000kj and covered 12km for the day (would have included a bit of walking before and after the game), average heart rate of 145, and peak 191.
would love to see numbers like that for Starc when he bowls 20+ overs in a full day in the field.
According to this site: http://content.bemagazine.com.au/bemaga ... alculator/
That makes you 180kgs, which we know you're not.
I suspect your watch is giving you higher figures than the truth.
Or, and with the greatest respect BM but using your description of your kinanthropometry, your lack fitness means you have to work harder for a given intencity than say MW who does a lot of running (based on his posts over the years. Higher the HR for a given workload the more unfit you are.
Starc would probably have the same average HR as you for the same time period (~75% MHR - Z1) Interspersed with ave HRs of 170-180 BPM for an over. Much higher workload required though!
I suspect the watch is accurate.MW wrote:145 average over 2 hours 45 is more like a marathon runner!
I would expect elite top level marathon runners at the front to sit at 88-92% MHR (zone 3/transport work) zone where they are just on the verge of their Lactate threshold (LT) so for for a 30 yo runner (170-180 BPM) for the race. Their average HR would be interspersed by surges up to 190 whilst they attempt to burn break their competitors by putting them into their "hurt zone" (above LT) , then recovering again at the 170 BPM before trying to break.
Recreation marathon plodders (good luck and on them I say) may sit at the 145 (75% MHR) for a 3-4 hrs.
by The Dark Knight » Mon Jan 23, 2017 8:09 pm
amber_fluid wrote:The Dark Knight wrote:Brodlach wrote:Faulkner batting way out of his league
Faulkner has the hottest missus folllowed by Usman Khawaja's missus.
Watto's missus still goes alright.
How come Maxwell left his boyfriend at home and went solo........
by The Dark Knight » Mon Jan 23, 2017 8:13 pm
by Booney » Tue Jan 24, 2017 8:04 am
Q. wrote:am Bays wrote:Trader wrote:bennymacca wrote:I got an apple watch for christmas, and wore it on the weekend whilst i played a 40 over per side one day game.
I am a fat bloke playing country B Grade cricket. in 2 hr 45 mins, which included 7 overs of medium pacers, I burned nearly 10000kj and covered 12km for the day (would have included a bit of walking before and after the game), average heart rate of 145, and peak 191.
would love to see numbers like that for Starc when he bowls 20+ overs in a full day in the field.
According to this site: http://content.bemagazine.com.au/bemaga ... alculator/
That makes you 180kgs, which we know you're not.
I suspect your watch is giving you higher figures than the truth.
Or, and with the greatest respect BM but using your description of your kinanthropometry, your lack fitness means you have to work harder for a given intencity than say MW who does a lot of running (based on his posts over the years. Higher the HR for a given workload the more unfit you are.
Starc would probably have the same average HR as you for the same time period (~75% MHR - Z1) Interspersed with ave HRs of 170-180 BPM for an over. Much higher workload required though!
I suspect the watch is accurate.MW wrote:145 average over 2 hours 45 is more like a marathon runner!
I would expect elite top level marathon runners at the front to sit at 88-92% MHR (zone 3/transport work) zone where they are just on the verge of their Lactate threshold (LT) so for for a 30 yo runner (170-180 BPM) for the race. Their average HR would be interspersed by surges up to 190 whilst they attempt to burn break their competitors by putting them into their "hurt zone" (above LT) , then recovering again at the 170 BPM before trying to break.
Recreation marathon plodders (good luck and on them I say) may sit at the 145 (75% MHR) for a 3-4 hrs.
I jizz in my pants when you write this stuff
by Lightning McQueen » Tue Jan 24, 2017 12:30 pm
Booney wrote:
That would cause your heart rate (HR) to spike from somewhere near 60-70% MHR ( The read post zone ) to closer to 85-95% MHR ( The nad explode zone ). Typically after such an event you'll drop back to somewhere near 40-50% MHR ( The off to sleep zone ).
by stan » Tue Jan 24, 2017 2:39 pm
by bennymacca » Tue Jan 24, 2017 8:35 pm
stan wrote:I think the problem is clearly bennymacca is as he said a fat bloke.
Case closed.
Sent from my SM-G900I using Tapatalk
by Ron Burgundy » Wed Jan 25, 2017 11:47 am
Trader wrote:bennymacca wrote:I got an apple watch for christmas, and wore it on the weekend whilst i played a 40 over per side one day game.
I am a fat bloke playing country B Grade cricket. in 2 hr 45 mins, which included 7 overs of medium pacers, I burned nearly 10000kj and covered 12km for the day (would have included a bit of walking before and after the game), average heart rate of 145, and peak 191.
would love to see numbers like that for Starc when he bowls 20+ overs in a full day in the field.
According to this site: http://content.bemagazine.com.au/bemaga ... alculator/
That makes you 180kgs, which we know you're not.
I suspect your watch is giving you higher figures than the truth.
by Trader » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:24 pm
Ron Burgundy wrote:Trader wrote:bennymacca wrote:I got an apple watch for christmas, and wore it on the weekend whilst i played a 40 over per side one day game.
I am a fat bloke playing country B Grade cricket. in 2 hr 45 mins, which included 7 overs of medium pacers, I burned nearly 10000kj and covered 12km for the day (would have included a bit of walking before and after the game), average heart rate of 145, and peak 191.
would love to see numbers like that for Starc when he bowls 20+ overs in a full day in the field.
According to this site: http://content.bemagazine.com.au/bemaga ... alculator/
That makes you 180kgs, which we know you're not.
I suspect your watch is giving you higher figures than the truth.
Back when i was playing cricket i wore my Garmin GPS watch for a few matches.
On one example -
Opening bowler (slow-medium), bowled 10 overs - innings went for 37 overs - 2hrs and 31 minutes
I was the skipper so fielded in the slips.
i completed 8.31km.
1hr and 31 minutes of moving time. (10:56min/km ave)
I did once wear it for an 80 over game and did somewhere in the vicinity of 18km but cant find the data file - bowled around 20 overs.
Edit - I dont have a heart - hence no heart rate recorded.
by Ron Burgundy » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:32 pm
Trader wrote:Ron Burgundy wrote:Trader wrote:bennymacca wrote:I got an apple watch for christmas, and wore it on the weekend whilst i played a 40 over per side one day game.
I am a fat bloke playing country B Grade cricket. in 2 hr 45 mins, which included 7 overs of medium pacers, I burned nearly 10000kj and covered 12km for the day (would have included a bit of walking before and after the game), average heart rate of 145, and peak 191.
would love to see numbers like that for Starc when he bowls 20+ overs in a full day in the field.
According to this site: http://content.bemagazine.com.au/bemaga ... alculator/
That makes you 180kgs, which we know you're not.
I suspect your watch is giving you higher figures than the truth.
Back when i was playing cricket i wore my Garmin GPS watch for a few matches.
On one example -
Opening bowler (slow-medium), bowled 10 overs - innings went for 37 overs - 2hrs and 31 minutes
I was the skipper so fielded in the slips.
i completed 8.31km.
1hr and 31 minutes of moving time. (10:56min/km ave)
I did once wear it for an 80 over game and did somewhere in the vicinity of 18km but cant find the data file - bowled around 20 overs.
Edit - I dont have a heart - hence no heart rate recorded.
Yeah I don't doubt Benny covered 12kms in the day, its more that that converts to 10,000 kj that I think the watch might be overestimating.
by bennymacca » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:33 pm
by Ron Burgundy » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:34 pm
bennymacca wrote:maybe i just cover the ground like a gazelle
by am Bays » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:38 pm
bennymacca wrote:maybe i just cover the ground like a gazelle
by Ron Burgundy » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:40 pm
am Bays wrote:bennymacca wrote:maybe i just cover the ground like a gazelle
Then you would've used less energy given the elongation and flexibility of their spine and length of levers for a relatively small muscle mass of their limbs.
Gazelles, Dear, impala etc are very biomechanically efficient i.e. use less energy for a given speed, movers across the ground....
by Booney » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:48 pm
bennymacca wrote:maybe i just cover the ground like a gazelle
by Booney » Wed Jan 25, 2017 2:48 pm
Ron Burgundy wrote:am Bays wrote:bennymacca wrote:maybe i just cover the ground like a gazelle
Then you would've used less energy given the elongation and flexibility of their spine and length of levers for a relatively small muscle mass of their limbs.
Gazelles, Dear, impala etc are very biomechanically efficient i.e. use less energy for a given speed, movers across the ground....
Why did i just read this in a David Attenborough voice.
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