Triathlon Training Articles
Long-form articles on training, race execution, and the decisions that move the needle for age-group athletes. No supplement reviews. No marginal gains theatre. Just the stuff that actually matters when you're training on limited hours with a real race on the calendar.
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
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.
Full Distance Race Strategy: Calm Execution Beats Chaos
Full distance racing rewards discipline, not drama. This piece covers pacing, fuelling, and the on-the-day decisions that keep you steady when the wheels start to wobble. Start here if you want a plan you can execute.
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.
Triathlon Coaching That Gets You Faster & Stronger—Without Wasted Effort
Sense Endurance Coaching offers a results-oriented triathlon coaching approach focused on efficiency and performance. Head Coach Tom emphasizes smart training to enhance athletes' strength, technique, and race execution. The process includes initial consultations, personalized training plans, and continuous communication. Athletes are guided through all phases of preparation, ensuring tailored support and optimal race strategies.
Training Through and After Illness: A Triathlete’s Guide to Recovery
Waking up at 05:00 with a sore throat may be the moment at which your season is won or lost. Most age-groupers suffer from the "Hero Complex”: the toxic delusion that training through a fever proves dedication. It doesn’t. It proves they are insecure. This is the definitive Sense Endurance guide to the physiology of the "Open Window", the truth about "Technical Theatre" recovery scores, and the strict, no-nonsense protocol for returning to execution.
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.
Unlock Unstoppable Race-Day Confidence: Beyond Physical Training
Race-day confidence doesn’t come from last-minute hype; it comes from months of consistent training, a clear plan, and a mind that’s already rehearsed the hard moments. This article shows you how to build that kind of calm, repeatable confidence so you stand on the start line knowing you’re ready, not hoping you are.
The Cost of a Frictionless Life: Losing Joy and Meaning in Life and Training
ERG mode, nutrition apps, and data systems all remove friction. Here is what gets lost when training stops requiring anything of the athlete.
Avoid These Common Triathlon Training Plan Mistakes
Most triathletes don’t blow their season with one big mistake. They bleed away progress through a training plan that doesn’t quite fit their life, goals, or body. This article breaks down the most common triathlon training plan errors and shows you how to fix them so your plan actually does what it’s supposed to: make you faster.
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.
The Secret to Endurance Success: Grit Over Gift
Most athletes secretly hope they’re “naturally gifted,” but enduring success in sport has far more to do with stubborn patience than special DNA. This article digs into why grit, consistency, and showing up on the hard, unglamorous days will take you further than talent ever will.
Why More Miles Won't Fix Your Marathon
Marathon training for triathletes is a specificity problem, not a volume problem. BAP development, fatigue resistance intervals, and why the first 6km decide the race.
Simplifying Triathlon Nutrition: The Myths and Realities
Triathletes often face nutrition myths that complicate their diet. The article clarifies that expensive products are unnecessary, real food can meet protein needs, and consuming too many carbs during races may hinder performance. Simple strategies, like homemade sports drinks and familiar snacks, are emphasized for effective fueling in endurance events, promoting efficiency and cost-effectiveness.
Fads in Triathlon: What to Ignore and Why
Triathletes often face pressure from a saturated market of gadgets and supplements promising enhanced performance but delivering minimal real value. Many of these products are overpriced and distract athletes from consistent training and proper nutrition. Instead, genuine success lies in mastering the fundamentals: smart training, balanced diet, and effective recovery practices.
How to Swim Sense Endurance Style
This guide emphasizes the importance of efficient swimming for triathletes, highlighting the Sense Endurance approach. It outlines key techniques, including maintaining a neutral head position, effective hand movements, and utilizing body mechanics to enhance stroke power and conserve energy. Regular use of tools like pull buoys and paddles builds strength and rhythm essential for 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.
What working with Brett Sutton taught me
With 15 years in triathlon, I founded Sense Endurance Coaching to simplify training, focusing on aerobic development and biomechanics. Using the Trisutto method, I emphasize manageable techniques under fatigue, low RPM cycling for strength, efficient running form, and mental resilience to build adaptable athletes. Results improve with a focus on fundamentals over metrics.