Triathlon Training Articles
Practical, no-nonsense advice for the age-group triathlete. From time-crunched scheduling and race strategy to mindset and technical skills, this is where I share the "why" and "how" behind training smarter.
New here? Start with these guides:
• The Time-Crunched Triathlete: Maximising Limited Training Hours
• Why You’re Not Getting Faster: The Forgotten Role of Technical Skills in Triathlon
• Full Distance Race Strategy: Calm Execution Beats Chaos
• Strength Training for Triathletes: Build Strength and Crush Races
Signal over Noise
The endurance industry is crawling with Fixers: people with a surplus of opinions and a total deficit of skin in the game. They will sell you a ceramic pulley wheel, a ketone ester, and a wind-tunnel-tested aero bottle before they ever suggest you just ride your bike consistently. The hardest part of modern performance isn't the physical load. It's the mental discipline to say "no" to the noise.
The Myth of the Bleeding Hero: Redefining Greatness for the Age-Group Triathlete
The endurance world loves the romance of suffering, but pushing through pain doesn't make an amateur athlete great. It just breaks them. A breakdown of the biological toll of 'toughing it out' and why the ultimate competitive advantage is leaving your ego at the door.
Beyond the Numbers: The 3 Durability Benchmarks That Build Real Performance
We have more sensors than sense. The modern triathlete is drowning in data yet becoming more fragile. Why? Because we are optimising for vanity metrics like FTP and VO2 Max, numbers that only matter when you are fresh. But the race doesn't happen in the first hour; it happens in the fourth. This manifesto challenges the "ceiling" mindset and introduces three benchmarks to measure your true Durability. Stop chasing the peak. Build the floor.
What To Do in Winter – Off‑Season Triathlon Training Principles
Winter is not a five month hiatus or a time for aimless base miles. Here we treat the off-season as a strategic reset, building discipline-specific strength, sharpening skills, using indoor and outdoor sessions intelligently, and avoiding the common winter mistakes that leave triathletes flat by spring.
Big-Gear Done Right: A Triathlete’s Guide to Low-Cadence Strength
Many triathletes benefit from low-cadence strength training, which involves pedaling at a lower RPM in a higher gear to build muscular endurance and fatigue resistance. This training enhances power, efficiency, and neuromuscular coordination, helping athletes perform better during races, especially in challenging conditions. Consistent, structured workouts are key to gaining these advantages.
You 're Not a Norwegian Triathlete — And You Shouldn't Train Like One
The Norwegian Method in triathlon emphasizes high-volume training, double-threshold sessions, and precise data monitoring, leading to Olympic success. While effective for professionals, age-group athletes risk injury and burnout if they mimic this approach. Understanding the principles and personalizing training within real-life constraints promotes sustainable improvement without unnecessary complexity.
Why You’re Not Getting Faster: The Forgotten Role of Technical Skills in Triathlon
Triathletes often focus solely on fitness for performance but neglect technical skills, which are equally crucial. Technical deficiencies manifest under fatigue, leading to efficiency loss. This article emphasizes prioritizing technique alongside endurance training to improve race performance and prevent injuries. A mindset shift from ego-driven training to efficiency is essential for true progress.
Why Your Training Isn't Boring—You Just Don’t Understand It
Ironman training may seem monotonous, but effective preparation relies on consistent, purposeful repetition rather than constant novelty. Athletes often misinterpret boredom as a flaw in training, neglecting its significance. Embracing a disciplined approach fosters adaptation, strength, and endurance, transforming perceived dullness into a pathway for achievement and improved performance.
Stuck in No-Man’s-Land: Why Triathletes Plateau and How to Break Through
Triathletes don’t plateau because they’re lazy. They plateau because almost everything they do sits in the same grey zone: not easy enough to truly recover, not specific or hard enough to force real adaptation. This article unpacks how that “no-man’s land” creeps into your swim, bike, and run, and shows you how to restructure training so you finally move the needle again.
Slow Doesn’t Mean Safe: Why Conservative Training Can Still Get You Injured
Triathletes often mistakenly believe that training at low intensity prevents injuries, yet overuse injuries frequently occur during these supposedly safe sessions. Smart training involves a balanced approach that includes purposefully increasing intensity, incorporating strength work, and focusing on biomechanical efficiency. This promotes resilience, ultimately reducing injury risk and enhancing performance.
Indoor vs Outdoor Triathlon Training: What Actually Helps You Race Better?
Balancing indoor and outdoor training is crucial for triathlon success. Indoor sessions provide consistency and structure, enhancing technique and mental toughness, while outdoor training builds adaptability and resilience. Both environments complement each other, enabling athletes to refine their skills, boost endurance, and prepare effectively for race day. Utilize each wisely.
Stop Treating Swim, Bike, and Run Like Separate Sports
Many triathletes approach training as three separate sports: swimming, biking, and running. However, effective triathlon training must integrate these elements into one continuous event. Success lies in managing cumulative fatigue and performance under stress, emphasizing race-specific workouts. Adopting a triathlete mindset is crucial for improved race-day performance.
Zone 2 Obsession? Here’s What You’re Missing
Zone 2 training is widely embraced by triathletes but may hinder real progress by encouraging a static approach to endurance. While essential for building a base, exclusive reliance on it can stifle strength, speed, and race readiness. A more dynamic strategy, emphasizing strength and varied intensity, fosters true development for races.
Ironman Training the Sense Endurance Way: Maximise Gains in Minimal Time
Training effectively for an Ironman doesn’t require excessive hours; instead, focus on structured, quality workouts that build endurance and strength efficiently. The Sense Endurance principles emphasize purposeful training, consistency, and strength work while avoiding junk miles. Proper planning ensures athletes manage fatigue and perform well without overwhelming their lives.
Sense Endurance’s Approach to Triathlon Periodisation: Smarter Triathlon Training
Most periodisation models look clever on paper but fall apart the moment real life intervenes. This article breaks down the Sense Endurance approach to triathlon periodisation: simple, time-crunched friendly blocks, clear priorities, and a flexible structure that still gets you properly strong and ready to race when it counts.
Strength Training for Triathletes: Build Strength and Crush Races with Sense Endurance
Strength training in triathlon isn’t a side hobby or a winter accessory. It’s how you hold form, keep producing force, and stop the late-race fade becoming your personality. This piece covers what to do, how to fit it in, and what actually carries into racing.
Why Lab Testing is a Waste of Money for Triathletes
Endless lab tests make you feel “serious” about your triathlon, but most of the time they give you numbers you don’t really use and training advice you don’t really follow. This article explains why lab testing is usually a poor investment for age-group triathletes and where your time, money, and energy are far better spent if you actually want to race faster.
Why Triathletes Overcomplicate Their Training
Triathletes often overcomplicate their training with gadgets and conflicting advice, leading to confusion and insecurity. Sense Endurance advocates for simplicity, focusing on fundamental training, reducing cognitive load, and trusting the process. By setting clear goals and limiting metrics, athletes can improve performance and enjoyment while developing confidence in their capabilities.
The ebbs and flows of athlete development
Progress in sport is rarely a straight line. Some phases feel fast and exciting, others slower, heavier, or simply flat, and all of them are part of becoming a better athlete. This article looks at how to recognise those natural ups and downs, adjust your training, and keep moving forward without losing your head or your motivation.
Triathlon vs Regular Running: Key Differences Explained
In triathlons, running requires a different approach than standard races due to pre-fatigued muscles from swimming and biking. Emphasizing muscular endurance over speed, training focuses on sustained efforts and managing fatigue. This involves workouts like build runs and hill training, essential for optimizing performance and maintaining pace throughout the race.