
![]() | ATHLETE OF THE MONTHExperience what is going on inside an elite athlete’s mindEric Murray - March 2008
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| Part II 20 March 2008 As the month has progressed Eric, our Athlete of the Month, has been immersed in rigorous trials to secure his spot in the men’s four for the Olympic Games. Read on to see how Eric did, what the trials were all about and why Rob Waddell will be along side him. 3 March 2008 World Rowing: Are you a full-time athlete? Eric Murray: We do train close to full-time, but there is normally a few hours during the day when we have the chance to work. I work for the New Zealand rowing boat company Kiwi International Rowing Skiffs LTD, working on development and repairing boats. When we are in full-time training in our winter (European summer) before we head overseas, we train three times a day twice a week, so there is even less time. WR: You have just finished the New Zealand National Championships. Are these races that you peak for? EM: We do like to rest up a little bit for them as we race with people from clubs that have been training just for the New Zealand Champs. So they are peaking and we need to have done a bit of speed work to keep up with them and see how we can go against each other. WR: How do you fit the New Zealand season into also rowing the international season? EM: We pretty much do endurance work all year round. New Zealand has a good programme and it seems to be paying off. So we do hard work all the time, but also do team piece work twice a week to compare times and prognostic percentages against one another. It’s not an easy programme but I guess that’s why New Zealand has been producing some good results across the board. WR: This month is the Olympic team selection trials. How have you prepared for them? EM: There isn’t much you can do apart from eat well, get good rest, and not get too drunk at our Nationals after-party! WR: What do you think is the hardest part about trials? EM: The whole trials process is pretty hard and you can never rest and be complacent. We have to go out and prove that we are the fastest four guys in New Zealand and they will continue to keep us together as a four so we can continue to develop and hopefully get faster. The erg test is probably the killer for most people, as they normally do a cut of people after the erg test if you don’t go fast enough. New Zealand does weight a little bit on ergs and so we have to make sure we really hammer home the erg and pull a good score. WR: Does it feel different this year than when you trialled for the team in 2004? EM: Yes. In 2004, I was the outsider as I was not in the pair or the four in 2003 but in the coxed four, so I was very nervous. Everything I did I had to go out and prove that I was faster than some of the other guys to make it into either the pair or four. There were eight people at trails that were fast enough but only six seats. So eight into six didn’t go very well! WR: What kind of training are you doing at the moment? EM: We are training twice a day, a long row in the morning and a technique/faster workout in the afternoon. We have been doing weights twice a week. And we have been getting Saturday afternoon and Sunday off. WR: Do you prepare with the men’s four? EM: We have tried to stay together as much as possible. We have been training just the four of us all summer and doing a lot of pairs work. We didn’t do a lot before Christmas as James (Dallinger) had an injury and then Hamish (Bond) got hit by a truck out cycling and spent six weeks out of the boat. But we have been working hard in the pairs to get our four going faster. It was good because we have been staying at the top of the ladder in the pairs. WR: What do you expect to be doing at trials? EM: Ergs first, then most probably seat racing, and then later on time trials. We won’t know 100 per cent what the go is until we find out who misses out on the men’s single between Rob (Waddell) and Mahe (Drysdale) and whether or not they will be seat-raced for the four. WR: When do you get some time off from rowing? EM: Hardly ever! We got a month off after the Worlds and then did a lot of cross training including a 160km bike race. We got a few days off at Christmas and New Year, but have been full-on since. After the team is selected on the 7th March, we are straight back into training on the 10th. So two days off to get ready for the build-up to the Games. WR: How do you choose to relax in your time off? EM: I spend time with my wife and her sport, equestrian, so I help her out. Otherwise I spend time with my dogs or playing computer games, or working on our website www.kiwi4.co.nz . WR: Why do you think the men’s four were able to step up to gold in 2007? EM: We changed the way we were rowing and training and found a good crew dynamics with James coming into the boat. We worked hard to not repeat our stupid dead heat from 2006! We worked out a few things with Chris (coach Chris Nilsson) and we found better ways to train to hold our boat speed. WR: Do you have a nickname? EM: I have a lot of nicknames, but at the moment I have been known as Fid-git as I can’t sit still and I’ve always got a lot of energy. WR: New Zealand rowing has been very successful in the last 3 years. What do you think has helped this success? EM: We have seen a programme of training work from Rob Waddell to the Evers-Swindell twins and then as everyone joined in on the programme we started to get the results like in 2005. As we got faster, all the younger people below us got faster and people started to train harder to keep up with the ever-increasing level. Also with having top level international coaches like Dick Tonks and Chris Nilsson. WR: What country do you think will be your biggest threat in the four at Beijing? EM: Everyone. There isn’t one country that can’t do what we did. We were 9th in 2006 and won in 2007. So there is not one crew out there that you can’t count out. This is the year that everyone will be at the best of their game. What we achieved in Munich was such a great effort but we know that to do it again, it’s going to take another step up. We have always been the crew chasing down the others to try and make it into the final, and try to beat them into a medal spot. And I know now we will be the ones that other crews are aiming at. Every year starts from scratch. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
OTHER ATHLETES OF THE MONTHBrowse below to discover athletes who have been previously featured as World Rowing Athletes of the Month. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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