Periodisation

By the Watta Team · Updated March 2026

Periodisation: Periodisation is the systematic planning of athletic training into cycles of varying volume, intensity, and focus to peak performance at specific times.

What is Periodisation?

Periodisation structures training into distinct phases (periods) that each emphasise different aspects of fitness. In rowing, a typical annual plan includes a base phase (high volume, low intensity), a build phase (increasing intensity), a competition phase (race-specific work), and a transition/recovery phase. Within these larger phases, mesocycles (3-6 week blocks) and microcycles (weekly plans) provide further structure. The most common rowing periodisation model follows a 3:1 pattern — three weeks of progressive loading followed by one recovery week. This approach prevents overtraining, reduces injury risk, and allows the body to adapt between stress phases. Block periodisation, where each phase targets one primary quality (endurance, threshold, speed), has become popular in modern rowing programmes.

How Watta Uses Periodisation

Watta's session history and Effort Score trends allow you to visualise your periodisation over time. By reviewing weekly and monthly patterns, you can confirm that loading phases show a gradual upward trend in volume and intensity, while deload weeks show a deliberate reduction — ensuring your training plan is structured rather than random.

Further Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Content

Available Now

Every erg counts.

Download Watta and start tracking your workouts today.

Download on the App Store