What is Maximal Power Available?

Maximal Power Available (MPA™) is a measurement of the maximal power that can be produced by an athlete for a given exercise, factoring in fatigue. Simply, MPA establishes at every given instant, exactly how much power you have.  It is a concept that is well understood by sport scientists and coaches, since it establishes the upper limits for activities like running, swimming, cycling, rowing, etc. In the simplest of terms, it is the upper limit of athletic performance for a given activity, at a given time. MPA forms the foundation of performance and training, albeit indirectly at the moment since before Xert, there have not been convenient ways to measure it. Interval training, for example, can be thought of as exercise that reduces and recovers MPA over a series of repetitions.  Coaches will often prescribe high-intensity interval workouts with specific intensity, durations, and recovery periods to use as part of a training plan.  Knowing what workouts are suitable for the athlete that will enable them to achieve their training goals has been considered part of the art of coaching as it requires experience and a deep understanding of the athlete in order to do well. However, by determining MPA during bouts of exercise where fatigue has been accumulated, Xert has introduced a revolutionary way of viewing performance and training. It provides coaches and athletes with direct, real-time feedback on the how close an athlete is to their limit.  This provides numerous benefits as will be explored here.

Review of Power-Duration

In our last blog , we explored the relationship of power-duration and how one’s fitness signature is represented by a power-duration curve. Each point on the curve represents a point-of-failure – in other word, the athlete was unable to generate the target power, because of the fatigue accumulated by the fatigue. At precisely the point-of-failure, the target power is exactly equal to the athlete’s MPA and any power output beyond this duration is below their MPA, by definition of the power-duration curve. If the athlete wishes to return to riding at that steady-state target power, the athlete first requires recovery. During a steady-state, fixed power effort above threshold, from fresh to failure, an athlete starts with an MPA that is equal to their peak power and MPA reduces until it eventually becomes equal to the fixed, steady-state power value.  MPA represents their limit at any given moment and at the point of failure, their power equals their limit.  Thus a point of failure can also be viewed as a point of maximal effort. The duration at a given point in time to the point of failure, is often called time-to-exhaustion (TTE) and it represents the time it will take the athlete to reach failure. (Note that the use of the word exhaustion may cause confusion with efforts of short duration since failure will be achieved before the feeling of exhaustion.  Exhaustion in this context means failure to produce the target wattage). Steady-State to Failure The affect on MPA is a function of the total amount of energy consumed.  (It is also a function of cadence and this will be explored in a future blog.  For the moment, we’ll assume that cadence is optimal during the effort).  As the athlete fatigues, MPA reduces.  As the athlete rests, MPA rises.  At any point in time, MPA can be determined.  Plotting MPA and power vs. time, we can compare power output with MPA to see how the athlete is performing relative to their MPA: MPA We can now visualize the affect on MPA due to accumulated fatigue and recovery.  We can also compare power output with MPA at a given moment.  When MPA equals the athlete’s power output, we have a point of maximal effort / point-of-failure, by definition.  Also similarly, if the power output crosses the MPA line, the athlete’s signature used to derive the MPA is too low and the athlete has achieved a fitness breakthrough.

Intermittent Power-Duration

An an athlete’s power-duration curve provides a representation of steady-state, fixed power, fresh-to-failure efforts  where MPA reduces from peak power to the fixed power.  When partially fatigued, a intermittent power-duration curve can be determined from MPA since it represents the athlete’s fatigue-adjusted peak power at that given instant: Fast-Recovery FatigueThese intermittent curves show the power-duration of an athlete in a fatigued state.  One can consider these as fatigue-adjusted power-duration curves.  What this means is that we can not only determine an athlete’s MPA at a given moment but also establish their TTE  for any given power output above threshold from the partially-fatigued state.  Similarly, we are also able establish the highest power that the athlete can sustain for a given duration while in a fatigued state.  We’ll explore these concepts in a future blog on real-time applications of MPA. When the athlete recovers and MPA rises, the time to recover can be determined.   Generally this means full recovery, but importantly, the time to recover to a reach a given target MPA can also be determined.  Establishing the target MPA recovery duration is a key component of workout design and we’ll be covering this topic in our next blog: Training Applications and MPA.

Analyzing MPA Data

Reviewing data from an MPA Analysis provides the following information:

  1. Shows where an athlete was at their limit during a race, ride or workout,
  2. Shows how well they were able to manage fatigue in preparation for the final sprint,
  3. Shows how well they were able to manage fatigue during a time-trial,
  4. Shows how a winning/failing attack was executed,
  5. Determines if they “emptied the tank” at the appropriate time,
  6. Shows how difficult an activity was to perform for the athlete,
  7. Shows wattages in context such that efforts near threshold for example, can be assessed in terms of their difficulty,
  8. Exposes other limiters should the athlete have given up or wasn’t able to output the needed power. Examples are heat/dehydration, feeding and others,
  9. Highlights fitness breakthroughs,
  10. Exposes potential PED use, where fitness breakthroughs that are outliers may suggest potential infractions.

Similarly, an athlete’s power output and ability to perform fluctuates due to many reasons:

  1. The athlete may be subject to temporary, day-to-day reduction in fitness as the result of previous training or illness.  This long-term fatigue may impact the ability for the athlete to achieve the same performance level as compared to a recent activity,
  2. The athlete may be subject to other limitations to performance such as overheating, poor nutrition, dehydration, altitude, etc. that may also play a role in reduced performance in comparison to recent activities,
  3. The athlete may have had a fitness breakthrough where their fitness has improved over previous activities,
  4. The athlete may be tapering such that fitness is increasing in preparation for an important event,
  5. The athlete may have benefited from either legal or illegal substance use before or during the activity,
  6. The athlete may have detrained and have reduced fitness due to lack of / improper training,
  7. The athlete may have never had points of maximal effort.  Many rides, particularly lower intensity or recreational rides, do not have the athlete ever reaching a point-of-failure.  These activities will not provide an accurate measure of an athlete’s fitness signature at the time of the activity even though one may obtain it from the data.

When a fitness breakthrough is achieved, it generally means that the athlete’s signature can be adjusted upwards such that training workout targets and MPA analysis will now use the updated signature.  Providing feedback on fitness gains and breakthroughs is a great motivator and one could argue that, outside of competitive athletic pursuit, is the main reason why recreational cyclists track and manage their performance data.

Signature Extraction

Just as a fitness signature can be obtained with three best-effort power-duration pairs, using regression, the athlete’s fitness signature can be extracted from power data containing points of maximal effort. This signature represents the athlete’s fitness at the time of the activity.  Obtaining a fitness signature from an activity in this fashion provides numerous benefits:

  1. Athletes no longer need to perform specific fresh-to-failure tests, sometimes multiple tests, to determine their fitness.
  2. Measuring fitness from races, rides or workouts enables faster feedback on progress.
  3. Detraining and fitness losses can be discovered and addressed.
  4. Other limiters can be discovered.

Signature extraction can also be performed intra-ride to determine how one’s signature has been affected by other slow-recovery fatigue factors, fatigue that can’t be recovered during the activity. Based on these types of time-variant analyses, patterns in the variation of an athlete’s signature can be seen and measures to address the decline put in place: Slow-Recovery Fatigue

MPA Analysis with Xert Online

XertTM enables athletes to perform MPA Analysis on activity data.  Power data from an uploaded activity file can be analyzed and information about the athlete or the performance can be assessed.  An example MPA Analysis from Xert Online is shown below: MPA Analysis - Entire Activity In this activity, the athlete performed a series of intervals including sprints and short hill climbs.  Highlighted on the chart are yellow markers indicating points of maximal effort based on the fitness signature: TP = 315W, HIE = 30kJ and PP = 1210W.  As a coach reviewing this analysis, the athlete’s workout was successful as they had intended to reach points-of-failure based on their current signature. Zooming into the area of the activity where the greatest difference between power and MPA was achieved (indicated with green triangles), we can further examine specific occurrences and locations associated with the breakthrough: MPA Analysis - Fitness Breakthrough Using the Extract Signature button, the signature for the activity can be determined: MPA Analysis - Extract Signature This establishes the athlete’s fitness at the time of the activity.  The new signature can be saved to the activity for future reporting or saved to the athlete’s profile such that all future activities will use this signature as their default. In our next blog, we’ll examine how we can train with MPA.