No, that model is more about alternating volume and intensity. It says nothing baout biomotor capacities per se.
Issurin’s block training is a hybrid though, you do blocks of accumulation (i.e. volume oriented) with blocks of intensification (i.e. intensity oriented) but he also addresses how to deal with activitie with multiple biomotor capacities.
People get misled with sports like PL’ing, Ol’ing and bodybuilding that have at most one biomotor capacity (strength output). The models tend to be simpler because you only have one thing to really improve.
Even the 100m has speed, power, starts, accel, SE, etc. Much more complicated and much more balance to be found in the training model.
Out of interest does anyone know where Poliquin got his periodization model from? I think he draw’s from Schmidtbleicher’s work but I may be wrong.
The idea of using volume to build potential to intensity to realizes it is as old as the hills. Think about the original Bompa-esque periodiation model
6 month GPP (volume oriented)
3 month SPP (intensity oriented)
Comp period (racing oriented)
Just squeeze that into shorter periods and you get Issurin’s block trainign (4-6 weeks volume, 2-3 weeks intensity, peak, repeat) or Poliquin’s acc/int (3 weeks volume/3 weeks intensity).
The volume builds performance potential and the intensity realizes it through sports specific means.