Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Brett Sutton: The Doc Speaks


Intuition, Nutters and the Will of Female Athletes

Brett Sutton has been a coach for all of his adult life. From the time that his father taught him to be an observer and a trainer, Sutton has applied those principles instilled in him during his formative years to a seemingly diverse range of sports.

“My father was a master in the art of coaching,” explains Sutton. “He never read a coaching manual as he couldn't read that well but he produced a constant stream of winners. His confidence in my coaching abilities was such that he sacked me as his assistant when I was fifteen. He told me that it was time for me to be my own man.”

Brett Sutton is certainly his own man when it comes to coaching. To many, he is a polarizing, even controversial figure. His detractors say that he burns out streams of athletes in an attempt to weed out potential champions. Others point to the endless stories of monumental training sessions that seemingly going against the principles of conventional wisdom. Burnout, injury and disciplinarian are but a few of the recurring terms that have peppered many an online forum discussion about Sutton over the years. Yet there many athletes who hold him in the highest esteem, seeing him more in terms of nurturer than merely that of a coach.

“Most definitely” says Sutton when asked if he feels that he has evolved as a coach over the years. “For some people I'm better and for others I'm worse – it depends on the athlete. Every individual is different though, and it takes great courage on the part of the athlete to give their complete trust to the person coaching them. For example, if somebody is under performing during training, I'll put my arm around one person and say that it is OK and be sympathetic whilst I'll stamp my feet at another ranting that this sort of behavior is totally unacceptable. While you can explain those differing responses to them while it is being delivered, it is very hard for them to process. It is a very fine line between being totally authoritarian or empathetic.”

The attributes that make a good coach can be difficult to understand. Sutton's background as a professional boxer and later in the realm of animal and swimming coaching gives him a unique perspective when it comes to endurance sports. At face value, this diverse background is difficult to compare to a sport like triathlon, but the similarities are more commonplace once rationalized.

“I first coached football and then swimming before moving on to animal training,” recounts Sutton. “Working with dogs and racehorses taught me more than any lecture that I've ever attended. You cannot talk to an animal; you have to watch and work with the animal.”

With instinct and intuition being at the forefront of successful animal training, Sutton has applied these principles to humans with amazing results. Interestingly, he returned to animal training for an extended period after the 2004 Olympics, something that he thinks benefited his coaching in later years.

“I went back and worked with horses for eighteen months. It was a great refresher course and helped me greatly in in placing more emphasis on the mental side of athletics coaching.”

Sutton lists the likes of Bernard Hinault, Graeme Obree and Percy Cerutty as but some of the influences on his coaching style over the years. Given that these three individuals were somewhat non-conforming in many aspects of their respective sports, it is perhaps unsurprising that Sutton likens triathlon with the sport of boxing, where preparation in a holistic sense is key to mere survival. One borrowed aspect would be that of teaching an athlete the art defence, likening a boxer's ability to endure a pre-determined set of rounds with that of a long-distance triathlete dealing with a bad patch in the middle stages of the marathon leg. Instead of fighting back, the athlete is prepared to deal with a setback by applying what has been practiced in training. Sutton feels that this sort of preparation cannot be quantified, as is often the case in the world of multi-sport. In fact, since his return to triathlon coaching after his post-Olympics sabbatical, he has yet to use a stopwatch.

“I have trained in other sports where measurements are necessary, but in triathlon they are not. Knowing your heart rate is about the only measurement of importance in order to move forward, but you don't need other data.

“Aerobic sports are scientifically simple to train,” he continues. “But they are made overly difficult by science. A person's power meter reading is going to be very different depending on the swimming set they did before their bike session. If they did 8x200m hard, then the cycling wattage will be baseline if they rode for four hours. However, if they swam 5x400m easy on a thirty second rest interval, then their wattage will be pretty healthy.”

Sutton goes on to distinguish between what he terms “gamers” and “nutters,” the former being those who “want readings so they go easy on the swim, whilst the nutters give it their all in the pool and then cry that night because their bike numbers were so low. In reality, their workout was gold compared to the gamer, who has the higher score, but they just don't see it that way. I don't like tough people having machines telling them that they are weak and weak people getting told they are tough when the rested three days just to get a score. Just don't see the point.”

A noticeable trend over the years has been the sheer number of world-class women athletes who have emerged out of Sutton's stable, most notably Chrissie Wellington. This fact extends back into the 1990s, where the likes of Loretta Harrop and Siri Lindley achieved stardom under the former dog-trainer's tutelage after many years of mediocre results. What are the reasons for his continued success with female athletes? Are they more coachable than males? For Sutton at least, it is a matter of attitude and mindset, as well as the fact the men and women are totally different beings.

“It still astounds me that when we look at all of the structural differences between males and females, scientific data just lumps the two sexes together. This relates to all aspects, be it diet right down to mental adaptations.

“I train men far less intensely than I do females. Women are far less likely to sulk than men; they are tougher and whilst they might be average with a road atlas, their human compass is far sharper and more focused than most men. They need less rest and when a female decides on a course of action, they are far less likely to be affected by any distractions that may cause doubt in their decision-making. Men are always re-evaluating their position in everything they do, be it physically or mentally.”

Sutton sees himself as a coach of excellence as opposed to one of lifestyle, which could go some way to explaining his seemingly old-school principles as well as favoring of a camp environment for his athletes. Whilst his intention is to make an athlete more self-sufficient, he feels that group training has some distinct advantages, particularly for those coming up through the ranks.

“Outstanding athletes tend not to have to struggle with many aspects that other less-talented athletes deal with on a daily basis. They have little empathy with other athletes as they are generally very singularly-focused in order to produce great performances. What a training group does is to help those lesser athletes that have less than brilliant self-discipline. The group environment rubs off on them.”

Having now moved away from Ironman coaching and focusing on Olympic-distance athletes, Sutton has effectively gone back to his triathlon roots so to speak. How does he view the current crop of triathlon exponents compared to those champions he coached almost two decades ago?

“I still have my notes of what the ITU athletes I coached were doing in training and racing then, so I can be the one person that is qualified to compare” he explains. “I think that the women of yesteryear ran faster with the exception of Nicola Spirig and Emma Snowsill, who are doing the same times as Jackie Gallagher, Emma Carney and Rina Hill were pre-2000 Olympics.

And what of the men?

"I think that the Brownlee brothers are maybe running a bit quicker than Simon Lessing and Mark Allen were, but not by much. When people make comparisons between different generations, they need to take into account people like Mark Allen. A champion needs to beat the best consistently and convincingly, just like Alistair Brownlee does.

"Champions are champions. Time is the only difference."