Welcome to the Tried out podcast.
Speaker AOn the show today, we have Ironman world champion Mirinda Carfrae and Ironman champion Tim o' Donnell joining us to share their six tips for longevity in triathlon.
Speaker AThey both enjoyed long professional careers and now coach athletes through Team Salty Bears.
Speaker AThey are the perfect coaches to teach us about how to enjoy a long, healthy journey in triathlon.
Speaker AI'm Andrew, the average triathlete, voice of the people and captain of the middle of the pack.
Speaker AAs always, we'll start off with our warmup question, settle into our main set conversation with Tim and Rennie's tips, and then wind things down by having our coaches answer an audience question on the cooldown.
Speaker ALots of good stuff.
Speaker ALet's get to it.
Speaker AThis is the Tridot podcast, the triathlon.
Speaker BShow that brings you world class coaching with every conversation.
Speaker ALet's get started with today's warmup.
Speaker ATim and Rennie, for our warm up question today, I want to know, if you were to register for a triathlon relay event and could have any two professional triathletes as your teammates, who are you choosing?
Speaker AAnd they can be currently in the pro field, they can be retired, they can be alive or dead.
Speaker AAnybody in the history of triathlon, who would you want on a relay team with yourself?
Speaker ACoach Rennie, what do you think?
Speaker CI would pick a couple of old friends, retired triathletes.
Speaker CI go for the fun factor.
Speaker CI'd probably pick two of my biggest training partners over the years, Julie Dibbons and Laura Bennett.
Speaker CJust because, I mean, I think it'd be just a lot of fun if I'm picking myself on that team.
Speaker CWe're not going to win anything.
Speaker ASo would you do the run, Rennie, Would you do the run?
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CI don't do anything else anymore.
Speaker CI would probably drown if I had to swim.
Speaker CSo yeah, I'd do the run.
Speaker CI'd have Julie do the bike because actually she's in really great bike shape.
Speaker BAnd always in great bike shape.
Speaker CSwimming more, but she was a great swimmer, so I think we'd still do pretty good.
Speaker AYeah, I, I, I'm confident you probably would as well.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, those are, yeah, you, do you think Rennie legitimate, like, let's say you call them up after this podcast recording and talk them into it.
Speaker APick it, pick a raise, register.
Speaker ADo you think you guys would, like, be able to unplug and just like, have fun and do your best but not like, or do you think you would be competitive and like, try to win?
Speaker AFemale masters division?
Speaker CI think Laura and I would have fun, but Julie is a competitive person and she's still extremely fit on the bike, so I feel like she would be maybe pushing us forward, but I, I feel like we could just get the, you know, the fun factor going and I certainly could just have fun with it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AVery, very good coach.
Speaker ATim, same question over to you.
Speaker BI'd go for the win.
Speaker BI would, I would take Cam Wharf on the bike and then Christian on the run for sure.
Speaker BAnd then I know I can.
Speaker BI'm not swimming much, but I know I can still swim faster than Cam, so he wouldn't mind having me as a swimmer.
Speaker ABut he obviously is a professional on the bike, right?
Speaker ALike not, not just professional track, professional cyclist as well.
Speaker ASo yeah, Tim, that's a good way to stack your team for a win right there.
Speaker AI'm gonna take, I'm going to take the Rennie route and try to make this fun.
Speaker AAnd I, I am a mid pack athlete, so I'm, I do this for fun anyway.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AI'm not, I'm not gonna.
Speaker AIf I'm on a relay team, that relay team is not winning.
Speaker AWe will do okay at best.
Speaker AAnd I, I saw a thing years ago where a professional marathoner at the time, MEB Kaflesky, who now coaches athletes with Run dot.
Speaker AHe.
Speaker AHe did a, a race where they intentionally.
Speaker AIt wasn't like he wasn't in the professional field.
Speaker AIt, it was a, a local race and he started in the very back and the whole bit for like, for this local race was like, how much of the field could MEB pass before the finish line if he started dead last?
Speaker AAnd I, I don't remember how well he did.
Speaker AI'm sure he did very, very well.
Speaker ABut I would take that approach.
Speaker ASo, so let, let, let's say, let's say I do the swim.
Speaker AI'm a mediocre swimmer.
Speaker AI would be curious to see how my two professional triathlete teammates, how, how far through the field could they get us before the finish line?
Speaker AAnd so the first approach is I could do this with the two of you and that would be a blast.
Speaker AI could swim.
Speaker ATim, you could bike.
Speaker ARennie, you could run.
Speaker AAnd I'm confident y' all would pass quite a few folks on your way to the finish line.
Speaker AIf I'm picking two current pros, same concept, let's throw same long on the bike.
Speaker ALet's throw Chelsea Sadaro on the run and let's see how many people they could pass with Andrew giving them a mediocre start.
Speaker ASo that's my pick here.
Speaker AI think it'd be loads of fun.
Speaker AIf the two of you ever want to do that with me, just let me know.
Speaker AYou got my phone number.
Speaker AWe're going to throw this question out to our audience.
Speaker AMake sure you're on.
Speaker AYou're following us on the socials.
Speaker AWe'll throw this question out on Instagram.
Speaker AWe'll throw it out to the I am trying to Facebook group.
Speaker AWe will throw it out in the Trident community hub.
Speaker ATons of places for you to find this fun.
Speaker AWarm up question and let us know if you were doing a relay with any two professional triathletes, past or present.
Speaker AWho are you relaying with?
Speaker ALet's go on to our main set where Coach Tim and Coach Rennie will talk to us about how to enjoy this sport for a long time.
Speaker AIf you love this sport enough to listen to a triathlon podcast, you're probably hoping to do this, you know, more than just one or two races and be done with it.
Speaker ASo soak in their wisdom today.
Speaker AThey're both still very much plugged into the sport of triathlon.
Speaker AAnd Tim Rennie, just to kick us off here, I saw on the socials recently that the two of you had your very first team Salty Bears training camp.
Speaker AIt looked super fun.
Speaker AYou had a ton of athletes there, very engaged, some great pictures on the Instagram.
Speaker AWhat kind of adventures did you and your team get into?
Speaker AHow did your camp go?
Speaker CIt was a really good success, I think.
Speaker CWe were not sure.
Speaker CI mean, obviously it's our first one.
Speaker CTim was not confident that we had everything sorted out together.
Speaker CI think mostly because I was taking the reins on most of the things.
Speaker CHe wasn't sure that I was buttoned up.
Speaker CBut yeah, it was wonderful.
Speaker CIt was really great to have you.
Speaker CWe, the athletes we coach are all remote and so we've seen a few of them here and there at races.
Speaker CBut to get them here in person for basically almost five days, we started it off with the Boulder 70.3 and we had some teams race.
Speaker CWe had four Salty Bears teams race and then a couple of athletes did the whole event.
Speaker CAnd then Sunday the camp officially kicked off with the little run clinic and then barbecue at our house and.
Speaker CAnd then from there we really just wanted to showcase some of the iconic rides and runs here in Boulder and like, give them the opportunity to feel what it's like to like sort of be a pro for a few days.
Speaker CWe threw in some educational stuff with Aaron Carson.
Speaker CYou know, we did some bike maintenance, bike maintenance and things like that.
Speaker CSo we tried to really just give them as much information as possible and great training opportunities and like, experiences.
Speaker CSo they had, like, kind of a good mix of both.
Speaker CAnd I think the, the best part for me or the highlight for me was just seeing, like, athletes that we coach meet each other.
Speaker AYeah, great point.
Speaker CMake sort of friendships that way.
Speaker CSo that was sort of the best.
Speaker BYeah, I've seen the interactions of the athletes when you take us out of the equation was, was pretty cool.
Speaker BBut, you know, we were talking about relays, Andrew.
Speaker BAnd that's how we kicked it off.
Speaker BYou know, we.
Speaker BWe had four salty bears racing relay teams at the 70.6.
Speaker AWere you too tempted to jump in on one or did you, did you make it clear?
Speaker AWere you?
Speaker BSo I swam on one, rainy ran on another.
Speaker BBut it was just a really cool way to bring everybody together, get everybody to know each other a little bit more before we kicked off camp.
Speaker BSo by the time, you know, we started off Sunday with our, you know, drill session, run and barbecue, everybody was already best friends.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI mean, not every athlete could come in early for the Saturday, so we, you know, had a smaller portion of the team that came for the, the relays.
Speaker CBut yeah, so then it was just kind of nice that, that was sort of a nice but.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker BSo the year before Andrew, I was on.
Speaker BI put together a relay team at Boulder.
Speaker BIt was a bunch of retired pro dads, so I swam.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAt Butterfield road and Patrick McEwen ran.
Speaker BAnd I mean, we, we, you know, one by long, one by long shot.
Speaker BSo this guy comes up to us and he's like, hey, I just want to let you know you inspired me to put together a relay team to beat you guys this year.
Speaker BLike what?
Speaker CYeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker CAnd then we were like, oh, we just were having fun here.
Speaker CBut we, we did have one fast team.
Speaker CAnd now was basically Tim on the swim.
Speaker CBrett, one of our coaches, did the run and my athlete, Kristen Yax, did the bike and she biked like a 220, but yeah, she crashed it.
Speaker B21 bike.
Speaker CBut technically they came in second to an all male team, so I feel like they kind of won the mixed category.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd the mixed relay teams could be all guys, which I don't know.
Speaker BYeah, we need another category.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CBut it was still a lot of fun and a great way to kick off camp.
Speaker AYeah, I'm glad to hear that.
Speaker AThat's, that's such a fun way to do it, for sure.
Speaker AAnd I think something that we, I'm trying to mention More and more on these podcasts.
Speaker ALike I don't think people realize when you hear a coach on the tryout podcast like that they could become your coach.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike we're not, you know, we're here giving information and you know, I love how with your camp you were able to make it very hands on, you know, working on bike maintenance, working on some things, you know, you know, run form and in, in person stuff that you, you can remotely coach these athletes and talk about the training and talk about the racing, ask them how they're fueling.
Speaker ABut hey, we're all in person together.
Speaker ALet's really get hands on with our, with our coaching here.
Speaker AAnd it sounds like you guys did a great job of that.
Speaker AI'm sure the athletes loved it and benefited greatly.
Speaker AIf anybody listens today and wants to be a part of Team Salty Bears in the future, how would they go about plugging in with your, with your team?
Speaker BYeah, just go to saltybears racing.com or timandrinney.com either from work and you'll find out all the information about the team.
Speaker BWe of course are optimized by Tridot, so we have a lot of great training program options on the TR plat platform and we have pretty cool community as well.
Speaker APretty cool community, pretty cool coaches, pretty cool camps.
Speaker ASo yeah, go Team Salty Bears.
Speaker ANow when you're coaching and working with your Team Salty Bears athletes, obviously you're talking through race strategy, you're talking about training sessions, you're helping them dial in their, their nutrition, all the works.
Speaker ABut do you find the conversations ever turning to being in this sport for the long haul?
Speaker CI think generally it depends on the athlete.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker CLike for the most part when you're working with an athlete, they're focused on a single race or like I want to qualify for something in the future and I'm, I generally take it back to, well, let's think about the healthy way to go about this and improve and when you know it might be a new athlete, they want to do an ironman next year.
Speaker COkay, that's a great goal.
Speaker CLet's like plan that out and build up to it.
Speaker CBut yeah, it really depends on the athlete and some athletes are in it for the long haul and they like love, you know, the lifestyle and the three sports really goes well with overall body strength and being healthy later in your life.
Speaker CSo I think they kind of go hand in hand.
Speaker CBut yeah, for me it really depends on the athlete and the goal and where I come from.
Speaker CAnd the way I coach is always looking at the 365 degree view, like, of all aspects of their life.
Speaker CAnd you know, yes, there's a goal here, but I want to get them to that point feeling strong, feeling healthy, and all of the, you know, the ways we get them there lead into longevity in the sport, whether they, you know, want to do an ironman once and then move into something, something else.
Speaker CI think for us at Salty Bears, it's really about enhancing their life through athletics and in this case, triathlon.
Speaker CAnd yeah, health is front and center, the most important part of that.
Speaker AYep, yep.
Speaker AAnd, and we'll talk about that quite a bit today in terms of how to do this sport for a long time.
Speaker ASo the, the, the two of you have brought to us your personal six tips for how to just have longevity in this sport, the multisport lifestyle.
Speaker ASo let's go through them and just, just soak up the lessons, learn from you.
Speaker AI'll learn how to do this better for longer.
Speaker AWhat is Tim and Rennie's longevity tip?
Speaker ANumber one?
Speaker BYeah, number one for us is always be able to reevaluate your goals and redefine your why.
Speaker BAnd that is something that really played a big role for us in our careers, especially as our family grew and life changed.
Speaker BYou want to be focused on the future, not just what you've done in the past or goals you've had in the past.
Speaker BAnd it really, that all starts with being able to be honest with yourself, have an open and honest conversation.
Speaker BWhere am I at in life?
Speaker BWhat do I really want to get out of this?
Speaker BAnd you know, am I doing this for the right reasons?
Speaker BHas.
Speaker BHave my reasons changed?
Speaker BYou know, one of the things we actually talked about with our campers at camp is 2018 was our first season racing with, with a child.
Speaker BYou know, so, yeah, you know, Rennie had already done everything in the sport.
Speaker BI mean, she'd won everything, right.
Speaker BAnd now she's a mom.
Speaker BAnd you know, we've been in a long time.
Speaker BWe've been in that Kona grind every year for, geez, almost a decade.
Speaker BIt was focused on October and it starts to wear any mentally and we just said, you know what, let's forget it.
Speaker BLet's just like, just have a good time.
Speaker BLet's travel the world and like, like, let's, you know, we started the YouTube channel, a Tim and Rennie show and like, let's just document this adventure of a family that does Iron man going around the world.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd really revitalized our careers.
Speaker BBut it, it, you know, we had to sit down and, and have a conscious shift and, and you have to be strong enough and willing to step away from what might have defined you in the past.
Speaker BBecause we're always defined by our results.
Speaker BBut when you can kind of shift the narrative, you can make big changes.
Speaker AYeah, I, I absolutely love this, and it very much mirrors my journey.
Speaker AObviously, I'm not a, I'm not an ironman champion, like, like the both of you.
Speaker ASo it's a little bit different.
Speaker ABut, but from the middle of the field, right?
Speaker ALike when I first got in the triathlon in 2014, you know, my.
Speaker AI just wanted to be fit, right?
Speaker AAnd I wanted some variety in my fitness journey.
Speaker AI was running a ton and, oh, hey, if I do triathlon, I can kind of vary it up more.
Speaker AAnd then it went from that to like, oh, how well can I do in these races that I'm starting to do locally around Dallas Fort Worth?
Speaker AAnd then it became, well, now I want to do a half ironman and an ironman.
Speaker AAnd then it went to, how well can I do at a half ironman and an ironman?
Speaker AAnd very much like the two of you once my daughter was born.
Speaker AShe's almost two and a half years old now.
Speaker ANow it's just like, oh, I need to keep my body moving and stay healthy while most of my time goes to being dad, right?
Speaker ASo I want to show up at the races and have a good time.
Speaker AAnd, you know, maybe in five to ten years it becomes, how well can I do at the races again?
Speaker ABut, yeah, I, I would not still be in the sport if it wasn't doing exactly what you're talking about, sitting down and saying, what.
Speaker AWhat is, what is all this for in this season of my life?
Speaker ASo I love that you started with this and led with this.
Speaker AIt's so easy to get in the sport on day one and, and try to be the athlete 10 years later that you were.
Speaker AOr not even just the athlete, the person you were 10 years later that you were when you started.
Speaker AYou know, you gotta evolve, right?
Speaker AYou gotta evolve.
Speaker AAnd that's what this tip is all about, for sure.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I, you know, I look back to being young, right, Andrew, and you're starting to race pro, and all you wanna do is win a race.
Speaker BYou wanna validate you being a professional.
Speaker BYou want to validate not getting a real job.
Speaker BAnd in having a paycheck, you want to validate your.
Speaker BYour career, right?
Speaker BAnd then you do that and like, oh, I just want to make money and I want to get Sponsors, and you start doing that and it's like, well, that, you know, that doesn't always drive you, right?
Speaker BAll of a sudden, you know, you can buy a house or, you know, you, you know, life changes and you're.
Speaker BYou're sitting pretty like, okay, well, now what's going to drive me?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker ANo, Very, very interesting.
Speaker AAnd it's also interesting hearing you point out just that, you know, I think we, as amateurs, you know, we, we watch the pro field, right, and, and every single year, just, just the mini soap opera of who are the contenders, who's going to win this, who's going to win that.
Speaker AYou know, Who's.
Speaker AWho's Racing T100 vs.
Speaker AWho's Racing Iron Man Pro Tour vs.
Speaker AWho's Racing Super Tri.
Speaker ALike, you know, we, we follow it all.
Speaker AAnd just hearing you express, like, it's awesome.
Speaker AIt's our career, it.
Speaker ABut it can be a grind in, in a certain way.
Speaker AAnd, and to hear that even while still in the pro field, you were trying to unplug from that a little bit and vary what your experience was as professionals in the back third of your career is very, very interesting to hear for sure.
Speaker AWhat is longevity tip from Tim and Rennie, number two?
Speaker CYeah, longevity tip number two for us is respect the recovery sessions and, and to periodize your training.
Speaker CSo, you know, if you're on trident, your training's periodized beautifully.
Speaker CWhat we learned, or what I learned very early on in my career, was that I needed to segment it into sort of preseason main season and championship season.
Speaker CAnd I would take breaks throughout the year, and this was not something that was regularly done.
Speaker CPeople basically trained year round.
Speaker CThey took maybe a few days off after a big championship and got straight back into it and kind of still happens.
Speaker CBut for me, I knew that I wanted to be in the sport for the long term.
Speaker CI didn't want to win Kona once.
Speaker CI wanted to win Kona multiple times.
Speaker CI wanted to race it 10 times, and I wanted to.
Speaker CAnd I knew that the burnout rate could be fairly high if you didn't, you know, respect the recovery, take some downtime.
Speaker CAnd so with my coach Siri, we sort of came up with a plan, and Kona was always our big goal for the year.
Speaker CSo whatever your big goal is, kind of work back from that.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CAnd that big goals.
Speaker COctober, basically November, December is very light or, you know, few weeks off after Kona preseason starts in sort of January, sort of December, really.
Speaker CJanuary.
Speaker CAnd you're kind of grinding through to, you know, Spring races in March, you race a, you know, a few races and then take like a, you know, a little bit of a down period.
Speaker CAnd then we also had like a mid year down period where I'd take a week off where I wouldn't swim, bike or run, where Tim and I would go on a holiday.
Speaker CWe would pick a cool hotel and we'd sit by the pool and eat french fries and drinkers or whatever.
Speaker CAnd, and for us that was kind of a reward for the, the grind that we were in in the preseason.
Speaker CAnd also like a taking a breath before it really got real with the championship season approaching and that, you know, big training block coming up.
Speaker CSo not only the weekly built in recovery sessions, and for us, they were more like every week and a half, two weeks, we'd actually have a day off.
Speaker CTaking those days off, doing the easy session, spinning your legs very easily, sitting on the couch like those things.
Speaker CBut having dedicated, I am going to take this time off and just do nothing to do with sports.
Speaker CAnd so I think when you're trying to be excited about races, like, I always found that I'd take three or four days off and I would be, we'd be strict about it.
Speaker CWe would not swim, bike, or run.
Speaker CLike, we didn't bring our swimsuits.
Speaker CIf we're swimming, it was in a bikini up to the poolside bar.
Speaker AYou know, like, even for Tim Best.
Speaker AYeah, even for Tim.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BLooks good.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd you know, inevitably two or three days in, we'd be like, I kind of want to go run again.
Speaker CI kind of, I want to get back into the routine.
Speaker CI want to get back into the grind.
Speaker CI want to eat healthy again.
Speaker CAnd so for us, that was enough to keep us motivated and excited.
Speaker CAnd I think, you know, every athlete can take a little bit of advice from that and just be, Treat yourself from time to time.
Speaker BTreat yourself.
Speaker BThat should be the entitlement.
Speaker CThat's, that's tip number two.
Speaker CTreat yourself.
Speaker BTreat yourself.
Speaker ADid you guys just, just this is a total aside and we'll see if, if our editor cuts this or keeps this, but did you guys ever watch Parks and Rec, the, the American television show?
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI was assuming that's where the treat yourself concept came from there.
Speaker ABut yeah, in this context, totally on board.
Speaker AAll of our Parks and Rec fans will, I'm sure their heads were already there.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThey didn't need my, my reminder.
Speaker ABut no, I, I, I love this.
Speaker ARennie and I, you know, we actually did a podcast episode a few months back with A few.
Speaker AThe concept of do you need an offseason?
Speaker ABecause the, the, the dat tr when ath's training on trot, it will not just give you a week off, a month off, a couple weeks off here and there.
Speaker ABecause it's really, it's a personal thing.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThe data shows us your body, like the, the way the, the training is.
Speaker AThe training stress is spread out throughout the week allocated, you know, seasonally.
Speaker AYour body doesn't have to have that break.
Speaker ASometimes it's mental, sometimes physically.
Speaker AYes, physically, but so, yeah, that's what.
Speaker CI think the mental side of it, like physically.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CLike, yeah, you can keep grinding and you can probably keep showing up and, and keep progressing year and year out, but the mental thing is so huge, so important.
Speaker CI think that that's the big piece that we're kind of talking about, like being excited to race, being excited to like beat yourself up in an ironman every October for 10 years, which we were.
Speaker CTakes like planning and downtime and time to regroup and having a really strong.
Speaker CWhy, like, I think, yeah, both of us had.
Speaker CAnd it's, you know, there are a few athletes that had very long careers that genuinely loved sport, but there are a lot that burnt out.
Speaker CYeah, just again, like as a professional, little different.
Speaker CWe could chase races year round.
Speaker CLike we would go down to Australia, we could race in December, we could race in January, like, and I, I've seen race athletes do that and they do it fantastic for a couple of years and then they're done.
Speaker CAnd so resisting that temptation, taking the downtime, being disciplined about actually resting really paid us off for us in the long run.
Speaker CAnd I think it's definitely something anyone can sort of emulate in a, an age grouper and figuring out where their big races are and then working back from there.
Speaker BI think that's a big benefit we bring to our athletes that we coach on Tridot as well is that we bring in that kind of human aspect that like, you know, managing the mental side of the sport and, you know, helping them mold it all together with great training.
Speaker AYeah, it's very hard to open up the app and see here's the training sessions I have this week.
Speaker AAnd maybe you need to unplug for a variety of reasons.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AYou know, most type A triathletes, it's very hard to make yourself do that.
Speaker AAnd that's where a gifted coach, right, can really come in handy or, or just, just a great, a great life partner or family member or training buddy who can remind you to kind of Take that mental break.
Speaker AUnplug.
Speaker CYeah, we just delete those sessions.
Speaker CDelete, delete.
Speaker AYou do not have a session today.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, you don't have the option.
Speaker BI did that for an ATH a couple weeks ago.
Speaker BHe did, he did a, he had a really great emotional race.
Speaker BAnd then I'm like, hey, you're taking a mini break.
Speaker BFour or five day mini break.
Speaker BAnd he was so happy, you know, and he's like, actually this is great.
Speaker BYou know, I'm going camping with my wife and you know, and like, yeah, I might go, I might go for, you know.
Speaker BYou might, you, you still might go.
Speaker BLike you might go for a run or whatever.
Speaker BBut there's not that mental strain of just have having to follow a program, right?
Speaker BLike saying, hey, you know what I mean?
Speaker BFeel like going for a 20 minute jog.
Speaker BI'm just gonna go do that.
Speaker BIn this, in this little period of time, I have autonomy and I don't feel, I don't have that pressure of having to subscribe to the, to the training plan.
Speaker CAnd I think that's the beauty of having a coach to have like letting them, putting that responsibility on, letting them.
Speaker ABe the bad guy that says, hey, no training this week.
Speaker CAnd then you don't, and then you don't have guilt.
Speaker CYou're like, I don't, I'm not allowed to train today actually.
Speaker CLike, it's not an option.
Speaker AI just do.
Speaker AMy coach told me to do.
Speaker AYeah, that's.
Speaker CYeah, exactly.
Speaker BMy coach told me to.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe, the other thing Randy, that I wanted to call attention to that you said is you, you mentioned, you know, cause you, you, you talked quite a bit about taking a break, unplugging, you know, but, but also keeping those recovery systems in place throughout your training cycle.
Speaker AAnd importantly, when tri does give you an easy run or an easy bike, letting those sessions be easy there is all the time where on a, on a Tuesday I might have a 20 minute zone two run and it's like I'm feeling pretty good today.
Speaker AI could probably run harder than this or I could probably stay in zone two longer than this, but gosh darn it, like try that is keeping my, my tomorrow and my next week and my next month in focus when it's giving me just that zone two stuff today.
Speaker ASo I love that you mentioned that one of the call a little extra attention to that point before we moved on.
Speaker ASo yeah, great, great.
Speaker ALongevity tip number two from Tim and Rennie.
Speaker AMoving on to longevity tip number three.
Speaker ACoach Tim, what do we got for this one?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNumber three, strength train for life.
Speaker BStrength training is more than just performance.
Speaker BIt's about keeping your quality of life high as you get older.
Speaker BAnd I mean we're experiencing that now, you know, almost 45 and Ren's not too far behind me.
Speaker BBut we, you know, we started working with our strength coach Aaron CARSON and geez, 12 years ago, 13 years ago.
Speaker BAnd it is, it is pivotal for performance just because you are really, you're bringing a new layer of training, you know, into your routine, but you're setting yourself up for success in terms of injury avoidance.
Speaker BIf you're a middle aged man like myself, it's a natural testosterone booster, right, to be lifting heavy weights.
Speaker BSo there's all these other benefits that you can bring in from strength training that can keep you in the sport longer, you know, you know, hormonal responses, staying injury free, those, these are all huge things to help you perform over a long time, but also just to, to be healthy and to be able to move when we get older.
Speaker BYou know, like I see some, you know, generations before us, you know, either runners or triathletes, you know, Olympic medalists that you, you see them moving around now and they obviously focused on one movement their whole life, right, like running in this plane and they, they weren't, you know, getting lateral movement, things like that.
Speaker BSo, and you can, you can tell it in how they move now.
Speaker BSo we want to, we want to be, you know, we're old parents so we're going to be old, older grandparents and we want to be active and being able to, to move with our grandkids someday.
Speaker BSo we keep that in mind.
Speaker AYeah, you know, a great thing to keep in mind.
Speaker AI, I, I played tennis a lot growing up in high school, college and have, have unplugged from that for the last 15 years or so.
Speaker AAnd I recently started playing tennis again with, with some guys that I met locally, guys and gals and, and most of them, much like triathlon, you know, the, the, the, the tennis people attracted to that sport are usually not like, you know, trendy 20 somethings, right?
Speaker AIt's, it's a, it's a, I guess I'm more of a middle aged upper sport.
Speaker ASo anyway, all the guys I'm playing doubles with throughout the week are in their, in their high 40s, 50s and 60s and, and they're, they're talking shop about like, you know, when my last knee surgery was and I have this surgery coming up and oh yeah, I had that two years ago.
Speaker AIt'll take you Six weeks to recover.
Speaker AAnd, and I'm like looking at like man, these, these guys and gals are, are in a different head space.
Speaker ALike I'm seeing the future somewhat of like to stay active at that age.
Speaker AWhat are they having to do?
Speaker AAnd, and it's a great reminder to like, like right now as, as a 37 year old, it is very easy for me to get in the middle of my week, do my swimming, biking and running and not touch a weight.
Speaker AI, I, I have, my, my wife and I, we have in our pain cave all the weights, all the dumbbells and stuff.
Speaker AWe need to get a good workout upstairs in our pain caveat.
Speaker AIt is so easy to just go a week or two or three and never make it up there to that room to do a strength session.
Speaker AAnd it's like I'm looking at these guys I play tennis with and I'm looking at their creaks and groans and moans and surgeries coming up and I'm like, okay, maybe I should take that more seriously now.
Speaker ASo I need less of that when I, when I get there.
Speaker ASo, so Tim, thank you for that, that reminder.
Speaker AIt's good for you both now as an athlete.
Speaker AIt's good for you in the future.
Speaker AAll of our Tridot staff members and coaches who race very successfully at a more advanced age, they take this so seriously.
Speaker AAnd I've noted that people that come on the, on the podcast, like coach Kurt Madden, coach Joanna Nami, you know yourselves.
Speaker AThis is a refrain I hear from people a step ahead of life.
Speaker BI mean, I don't think we're as old as Kurt though.
Speaker ANo, no, no, no.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANo, not the, not as old as the legendary not yet moving like we.
Speaker BWe want to be moving like him when we're his age.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, right.
Speaker BAnd to your point, to your point, Andrew, it doesn't have to be an hour session, right?
Speaker BLike you should.
Speaker BYou could knock out 20 minute session two to three times a week and it's, it's going to be noticeable.
Speaker AYep, yep.
Speaker ALove that.
Speaker AFor longevity in the sport, do, do your strength training.
Speaker ADon't just let those swimming, biking and running be all that you do.
Speaker AMoving on to Tim and Rennie, longevity tip number four.
Speaker ACoach Rennie, what do we have here?
Speaker CYeah, so tip number four, listen, adapt and repeat.
Speaker CSo like over the years you will find that some sessions may wear you down and as you get a little older, they may weigh you down a little more than they used to.
Speaker CSo listening to your body in those instances and maybe adjusting a little Bit a session like that, that may have been good five years ago is not good for today.
Speaker CAnd that's just listening to your body over time.
Speaker CLike, what does my body want?
Speaker CWhat does my body respond well to at this phase of my life?
Speaker CAnd I think it's always good to go back to the glory days.
Speaker CAnd I used to do, you know, 10 by a mile at this pace and this was great.
Speaker CIt was a fantastic stimulus.
Speaker COkay, maybe that sort of session is not the type of session that you should be doing anymore.
Speaker CSo just continuing to listen to your body and if there's a session or a combination of sessions or weeks of training that tend to elicit, you know, a niggle or just sickness as well.
Speaker CLike if I train like super hard for three weeks and don't have, you know, a rest day, or I don't have a rest day every four days, or maybe I can only run four days a week instead of six days a week like I used to.
Speaker CStaying ahead of the injury, I guess is the biggest thing.
Speaker CSo, yeah, listening to your body and adapting.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, I, I love this, Rennie.
Speaker AAnd, and there's so many reasons that we need to adapt.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd this is where, you know, tried out already in your training sessions themselves is going to look at your age, it's going to look at how long you've been in these sports and, and it, it, it knows how much stress your body can handle.
Speaker ASo, so somewhat in your, not somewhat very much in your training sessions already, these kind of things are accommodated for I, I think of a workout like math shuttles for example.
Speaker AMy, my father, who's in his upper 60s, when he gets MAV shuttles, he will have one set of MAP shuttles, he has one set where three or four times he's picking up the pace for a 20 second sprint.
Speaker AWhen I have MAV shuttles, I have three sets by seven sprints.
Speaker ASo I have 21 sprints, he might have four or five.
Speaker AAnd he, we were at the table talking about that the last time he visited Dallas and he was like, you have 20, you have 21 of them.
Speaker AWhen you have map shuttles.
Speaker AYeah, every single time I have 21 sprints, I have like four.
Speaker AYeah, that's what your body can handle when it comes to that particular type of stress.
Speaker ASo, so this is already happening in terms of try not managing the load for you at your age, your body type, your experience in the sports.
Speaker ABut, but even on top of that, Rennie, I love you pointing out just knowing your body, knowing how it's feeling knowing your.
Speaker AYour nicks and niggles.
Speaker AOne, one just very random, isolated example is for me, when the Texas summertime hits, I don't know why this is the case.
Speaker AIt's been this way for, like, the last seven years.
Speaker AAll of a sudden, my Achilles on both sides get really tight when I run.
Speaker AI don't notice it all throughout the day, but when I go for a run, it's like, man, why are my Achilles so tight?
Speaker AI have not figured it out.
Speaker AI've talked to pts, I've talked to.
Speaker AI've, I've.
Speaker AI've troubleshot.
Speaker AIs it my shoes?
Speaker AIs it this?
Speaker AIs it.
Speaker AThat have not isolated a cause, but okay, I need to do some things a little bit different in my running sessions during the summer.
Speaker AAs soon as the temperatures cool down a little bit, it goes away.
Speaker AIt's very wild.
Speaker ABut during the Texas summertime, when I go for a run, I'm making sure I'm taking some extra time doing my.
Speaker AMy warmup exercises.
Speaker AI'm making sure I do a little more zone 2 before I start doing the intervals.
Speaker AI don't jump straight into the intervals.
Speaker AAfter just a minute or two of zone two, I want to make sure that those Achilles and, And, you know, the whole chain of movement is warmed up properly.
Speaker AAnd so that's, that's just one example of a very weird way I have to listen to my body throughout the triathlon season.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd obviously, as you're working with different athletes, I imagine as coaches, there's a lot of different reasons.
Speaker ABoth physical, both seasonal.
Speaker AWhen you're talking with your athletes about.
Speaker AAbout how to adapt, when to adapt and when to listen to your body, did you guys in your pro career ever have a time where you kind of ignored something your body was trying to tell you and you paid for it?
Speaker AAny.
Speaker AAnything like that, or were you pretty dutiful in your pro careers?
Speaker BI feel like we were pretty.
Speaker CI was pretty lucky.
Speaker CI think I.
Speaker CI could pretty much just train.
Speaker AGood for you.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBut I think the strength training for us was a big component of that.
Speaker CLike, we had, you know, Aaron Carson 13 years ago when.
Speaker CHow old were we then?
Speaker CEarly 30s.
Speaker CWe would do strength twice a week, every single week.
Speaker CAnd so when we were sort of getting into that age where maybe niggles would pop up, I think having access to a great strength coach and being consistent with that strength training enabled us to continue to train.
Speaker CAnd again, yeah, I never really had many niggles, but if I did, I told my coach, like, you know, being honest with yourself, Right.
Speaker CAnd, like, I know, you know, sometimes athletes have a tendency.
Speaker CWell, my coach told me to do this.
Speaker CI'm going to do this no matter what.
Speaker CIt's probably not the smartest thing, but I'm doing it anyway.
Speaker CAnd, yeah, we will.
Speaker CNot like that.
Speaker CI'm like, that doesn't make any sense.
Speaker CLike, this hurts a little bit.
Speaker CI'm going to take a day off running.
Speaker CLike, for me, it was like, I'm just not going to run for one day and then it's fine.
Speaker CSo, yeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI think if a lot of people get caught chasing, you know, they're, you know, stressed or feel like they're.
Speaker BThey're trying to chase a goal or a dream, and if you just keep.
Speaker BKeep a calm, cool head on your shoulders and you realize that, you know, getting in front of it, taking, you know, not doing the run or whatever it might be is the right approach, you know, it's.
Speaker BIt's going to set you a better.
Speaker BSet you up better in the long run.
Speaker CAnd I think for me, one of one thing that stuck with me, Hamish Carter won gold in, like, Athens in 2004.
Speaker CAnd he basically put this down to it wasn't the sessions that I did that got me to gold medal, it was the sessions that I missed.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker CIt was.
Speaker CIt was being disciplined enough and honest with myself and take.
Speaker CLike, every.
Speaker CAnyone can push through, right?
Speaker CLike, everyone's tough.
Speaker CLike, you can push through, you can do the session, but it.
Speaker CIt's recognizing that I really want to do this session, and it's gonna weigh on me mentally if I don't do this session, but I know it's the right thing for me right now.
Speaker CSo being disciplined and not doing the session was the reason he won the gold medal.
Speaker CSo that stuck with me throughout my career.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I hope our audience hears, because I know they've heard our coaches say it in several ways on the podcast over our 300ish episodes now, but just that your consistency in training over time matters way more than perfection.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AEvery single day.
Speaker AAnd, and so.
Speaker AAnd so we say if you need to miss a session, if you need to augment a session, if you life comes up and you got to rearrange some stuff like, that's okay over time, just as long as you are consistent.
Speaker AAnd so they're hearing it from the two of you that, okay, Rennie was able to win some World championship titles.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AMissing some sessions along the way.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AThis.
Speaker AThis guy was able to win a gold medal, missing some sessions along the way.
Speaker ASo It's.
Speaker AIf it's okay for you guys, it's probably okay for me who's training, you know, training for Ironman such and such and hoping to come in under 12 hours.
Speaker AIt's probably okay for me to miss a session here and there for probable cause.
Speaker AListening to the body, adapting.
Speaker ASo love getting that reinforcement from two people that have had the career that, that you had.
Speaker AAnd I hope our listeners really take it to heart when you're now being on the coaching side of things.
Speaker AWhen you're coaching us pesky age groupers, do you find it hard to talk your pesky age groupers out of missing a session?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker AI feel like you just deleted off and they can't do it anyway.
Speaker CI just always just ask for honesty and yeah, like, give.
Speaker CTell me how you're feeling.
Speaker CFor the most part, I feel like a lot of the athletes that I coach are, are smart enough to take off the session if they need to take off a session.
Speaker COr write me and say, hey, I've got a niggle.
Speaker CMy calf is feeling a little sore and then I can adjust and work around it.
Speaker CNo, like, I think for the most part the athletes at least I've worked with, yeah, fairly receptive to and you.
Speaker BKnow, you, if you have an athlete like, you know, my tendon to miss some stuff, you just, you really have to emphasize the key sessions of that week and be like, hey, like, I don't care what you getting these sessions done this week.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker AAll right, we've got two longevity tips left with Tim and Rainey.
Speaker ACoach Tim, what is tip number five?
Speaker BTip number five.
Speaker BKeep the joy front and center.
Speaker AOh, I love that.
Speaker BBurnout is going to take more people out of this sport than injury does.
Speaker BI mean, it's just, it, it, it's mental fatigue of trying to be on top of it all the time.
Speaker BIt's okay to step away from the numbers on the right days.
Speaker BLike you said, Andrew on his own today.
Speaker BGo ride your gravel bike.
Speaker BGo ride your mountain bike if you have an easy ride.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBe able to be okay with not having to always look at your Garmin.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou know, I remember Randy would go out for runs where she, you know, would either wouldn't look at her watch or wouldn't bring a watch.
Speaker BAnd I tell that to athletes now too, that are just that feel like the pressure of always being, being on the program and always having to perform, always having to hit numbers.
Speaker BNo, there's just joy of, the joy of going out and running and looking around.
Speaker BThe blue sky, the trees, the fresh air.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ALove it.
Speaker BSoak all of that up and like let that give you energy to keep moving forward in the sport.
Speaker BGo train with friends or do you know, I have a lot of my swimmers or a lot of my athletes swim with masters groups if they can.
Speaker BBecause I know the joy of sharing a swim experience versus swimming on my own is so powerful.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo finding all these things and it all comes down to we just have to protect the passion.
Speaker BProtect your passion of the sport and do that by finding the joy in it.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AThat's so good.
Speaker AAnd we get questions all the time when it comes to try not training, you know.
Speaker AOh, like I've, I, I do a master's group on Mondays and Fridays and you know, my master's group has this workout for the day and I've got my tried out workout for the day.
Speaker AWhat do I do?
Speaker ALike okay, well we'll do, you know, do the master's group.
Speaker ALike it's, you know, it's probably, you know, similar, you know, training response and you know, oh, I've got my trouts telling me to do an hour 25 on the bike with these intervals.
Speaker ABut I was gonna do a group ride.
Speaker AOkay, well like if you have an A race coming up in the next four months, maybe do the trot out session.
Speaker AOther than that, go enjoy the group ride.
Speaker AAnd you know, that's, that's what it was noticeable for me like when I first got on try it out, you know, I did a group right.
Speaker AEvery single Saturday, right.
Speaker AWith some local athletes and you start doing the try not training and all of a sudden it doesn't quite work.
Speaker AAnd yeah, it's finding what is the right balance for you.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABecause it's got to be fun.
Speaker AYou got to keep it fun.
Speaker AIt's fun doing this with other people.
Speaker AAnd so, so Tim, I love you reminding us to do that.
Speaker AI myself, my rhythm has always been when I have a big A race coming up, I try to nail the training verbatim as much as I can day in and day out.
Speaker AAnd if I don't have an A race on the calendar, if I got some local stuff or some B races, C races, I'm going to give myself some more grace to make it fun and.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BAnd go ahead.
Speaker ATim.
Speaker BOh, sir.
Speaker BYeah, I was going to say Andrew.
Speaker BAnd when you time it like you do when you, when you know, like, hey, I'm going to have, this is going to be my push phase before my A race when you know that's that's go time.
Speaker BAnd you give yourself some grace earlier in the year or in late season, you're putting yourself in the position to actually really execute that big training block.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause your mind's fresher, you're happier and, and you know, like, hey, it's only, it's this long that I have to.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BThere's an end right now.
Speaker AYeah, that's a really, really great point.
Speaker BYeah, you can always, you know, you can always go up or down a lane.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike if your tried out session is, you know, aiming for maybe some thresholds in zone four, you know, maybe you pop up a lane if it's not a threshold set at Masters.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut now you're on a faster interval and you're trying to hang on in the back of lane and all of a sudden you just combine the best of both worlds.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ATim, you'll appreciate this one.
Speaker AOne of my favorite things I've ever heard a tried out athlete say.
Speaker AThis is shout out to athlete David Pagan.
Speaker AHe is in the United States Navy and he.
Speaker AYep, yep, I see, so you're already tracking with this.
Speaker ABut he relates it to the military principle of commander's intent.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd he, and he's like, I, we have so many athletes that stress out about getting that 100 train X score on it on as many sessions as they can.
Speaker AAnd there's a time and a place for that, but there's also a time and place for, okay, I might walk away with an 82 train X score or a 77 train X score, but if I come away from the session knowing that I, I fulfilled the commander's intent of the session, I didn't do verbatim what my commander told me to, but I still got the training response that tried out one of me to get.
Speaker ADoes that make sense?
Speaker AYeah, that's, that's kind of the way he views it.
Speaker AAnd, and I'm one of those athletes, I don't freak out if I get an 80 train X instead of 100 train X.
Speaker AIf I went out and held approximately the intensity I was supposed to hold for the, for the amount of times I was supposed to, I call it a win.
Speaker AAnd that's what David was getting at, was like, okay, you know, don't stress about nailing the session.
Speaker AJust, you know, try to do what try that is hoping you're going to do.
Speaker AAnd if you fulfill that intent, not every training session has to be verbatim what try out told you to do.
Speaker ASo I love David's perspective on that.
Speaker AAnd Tim, I know you'd appreciate that one as well.
Speaker BI love it, too.
Speaker AAll right, we've come to the moment.
Speaker ALongevity tip number six, drumroll from Tim and Rennie.
Speaker AI'm assuming.
Speaker AI'm assuming you saved a good one for last.
Speaker AWhat is your sixth tip for staying in this sport for a long time?
Speaker CI think number six is get the team around you so the team is like your A team.
Speaker CMake sure you surround yourself with whether that's a great coach.
Speaker CTraining partners are a godsend.
Speaker CIf you have a great training partner.
Speaker AThat'S so true that that will keep.
Speaker CYou turning up day in, day out, year in, year out, just to, like, share the suffering.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd the build and the experience.
Speaker CI've found throughout my career that, you know, the process could be lonely, but when you have a great team around you, it's just the whole experience is enhanced.
Speaker CAnd when I think back to crossing the finish line, it wasn't like myself, really.
Speaker CI was thinking about.
Speaker CIt was everyone that I suffered with along the way.
Speaker CYou know, coming down the finish shoot, I'm thinking about my coach, I'm thinking about my mom.
Speaker CI'm thinking about my training partners later on.
Speaker CI'm thinking about this guy and.
Speaker CAnd our kids.
Speaker CBut, yeah, having a great team around you to keep you motivated and engaged, I think that that is worth weight in gold.
Speaker CLike, and I'm finding now, post career, I have a really great couple of girls I like running with, and I wouldn't do the hard sessions if they weren't there.
Speaker CLike, I do have.
Speaker CYou know, we do a hard session once a week, we do a long run once a week, and then it's basically a social session, but you're out getting fitness and.
Speaker CAnd I look forward to those sessions.
Speaker CAnd, yeah, so I think accountability, too.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CAccountability.
Speaker CBut just, yeah, sharing the experience with someone else just amplifies that experience.
Speaker AYeah, this is a great tip.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AWhen I first got in the triathlon in 2014, I think my first maybe two years of just doing local sprints and Olympics around Dallas Fort Worth, I.
Speaker AI didn't really go out of my way to make any triathlon friends.
Speaker AI didn't try to plug in with, like, a tri club.
Speaker AI just wanted to go do the race.
Speaker AYou know, my, My, my.
Speaker AYou know, my wife, my family would come support me and cheer for me, but it was largely just like my.
Speaker AAnd this goes back to tip number one, right?
Speaker AAbout how your.
Speaker AWhy evolves.
Speaker AYou know, I.
Speaker AI just wanted a.
Speaker AA fun way to stay in shape, and so I, I wasn't really looking to spend extra time and effort to plug in with a group.
Speaker AAnd then in year number three, I joined a local triathlon team that I'd seen at a lot of the races and started meeting people, going on group rides and oh my gosh, like, enriched my triathlon experience so much.
Speaker AAnd then years later, I'm a part of the tried out crew.
Speaker ARight on try that staff and team tried out tried out ambassador at the races, meeting other tried outers.
Speaker AAnd it's like the deeper you plug in and the more people you meet and the more you open yourself up to that, it brings this whole experience to life in a way that you don't get on your own.
Speaker ASo I love you bringing this up.
Speaker AI love you saving it for last.
Speaker AI love the two of you bringing this topic up.
Speaker AI want to be very clear, I didn't say this at the beginning.
Speaker AWe did an episode early in the year 2025 at the time we're recording this where Mark Allen came on the show and gave us his six tips for just his six rules for day to day nutrition.
Speaker AIt was a topic he was passionate about.
Speaker AHe and I were, were at a dinner together and just started talking about, oh yeah, you should go on the podcast and talk about how passionate you are about just day to day healthy nutrition.
Speaker AAnd we turned into a podcast.
Speaker AIt did very well.
Speaker APeople were, you know, it was a very well received episode.
Speaker AAnd so I started throwing out to some of our other coaches like, hey, like let's, let's do this more.
Speaker ALike what, what is something you are passionate about?
Speaker ABring it to our audience and let's, let's talk about it.
Speaker AAnd we just had McKeely Jones come on and give us her six recovery rules because she's very passionate about making sure you do your recovery sessions throughout the week.
Speaker AAnd so when I threw this out to the two of you, this was the topic you came back with right straight away.
Speaker AWe want to talk about this.
Speaker AAnd I love that you chose this because I think to all the times we're at like USA Triathlons conferences and they're sharing the stats about, you know, just the, it's in our sport somewhat.
Speaker AYou know, there's people that get in the sport for life, but there's also a pretty decent turnover rate right there.
Speaker AThere's a pretty large amount of triathlete, I forget the percentage now, but it's, it's a, it's a fairly high percentage of triathletes get in the sport.
Speaker ADo it for Three to five years and then bounce to a new hobby and that can be okay.
Speaker ABut I think so many of those people that, that churn through and move on could have stayed longer, maybe probably would have even wanted to have stayed longer if they had just kind of established, laid the groundwork for themselves to enjoy the sport longer.
Speaker ADoes that make sense?
Speaker ASo, so I just publicly thank you so much for bringing, bringing this topic and I'm, I'm glad you, you brought it to our attention and, and all six of these guys.
Speaker ABuild these into your routine, build these into your mentality both for training and racing month in and month out and you will be a happier triathlete for a longer period of time.
Speaker AWhat I want to know Tim and Rennie, to close out our main set here.
Speaker AWe've talked about being in the sport for a long time.
Speaker AYou both had nice, long, healthy, successful professional careers.
Speaker AYou're now coaching triathletes.
Speaker AWhat's your plan for the rest of your triathlon journey?
Speaker AAre you both planning to continue racing here and there?
Speaker AAre you just Coach Tim and Coach Rainey now?
Speaker CYeah, I'll go first.
Speaker CSo triathlon for me is off the table for the time being with the three littles just it's a little too time consuming, particularly the biking but kind of leaning into more running events.
Speaker CI certainly am my best self when I'm physically active or sort of chasing some goal whether whatever level that be at.
Speaker CUm, so I have some trail races on the calendar and yeah that for me and strength training as well.
Speaker CSo yeah doing pretty much something six days a week is sort of where I'm at and training for some, some fun races.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker ASo still very much plugged into to the fitness world and the endurance sports world.
Speaker AI, I, I Rennie am, am have been on a triathlon racing hiatus for the same reason we, we, you know we have our two year old.
Speaker AI want to be dad and so I'm running.
Speaker AI'm not worrying about the biking and the swimming as much.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd I actually did just sign up for a 70.3.
Speaker AMy first triathlon since Ellie was born.
Speaker AThat's 50 minutes into this recording.
Speaker AI'm dropping a news break I guess but maybe next week on the show I'll announce which one it is because I have not publicly said that yet.
Speaker ABut, but yeah very much tracking with you Rennie of just in this season.
Speaker AYes, I want to be a triathlete.
Speaker AI want to do more triathlons.
Speaker AIt's just not in the cards right now.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ATo train for all three sports.
Speaker ABut it will be again soon.
Speaker ATim, same question over to you.
Speaker BYeah, I mean I, I still love swimming, biking and running so you know, I try to, you know, stay active and everything.
Speaker BI am going to do an exterior this, this August.
Speaker AYeah, awesome.
Speaker BSo that's for me, that's a fun way to do it.
Speaker BI mean, Randy and I were joking.
Speaker BI mean I broke two bikes last year.
Speaker BI broke a wheel the other day.
Speaker BLike she's like, you're just not meant to ride a mountain bike, buddy.
Speaker BBut it is, it's like a fun way for me to not compare myself and not take, take anything too seriously but still have that goal to train for and you know, keep me as part of the community.
Speaker BAnd we're doing the Grand Traverse together, which is 40 mile trail race from Aspen or sorry from Crested Butte to Aspen and then Aspen and Crested Butte.
Speaker BSo day one, Rennie will run Aspen to Crest or sorry, Crested, but Aspen and then day two, I'll ride back.
Speaker ANo, that's super cool.
Speaker AI, I, it's funny Tim, you mentioned with the mountain biking it, it's kind of a way to be competitive, have fun, get those juices flowing without having the direct comparison to who you were as an athlete in your prime.
Speaker AYou know, who the current pro what, you know, the times they're laying down.
Speaker AI've noticed just again anecdotally on social media I see guys like Sebastian Kienle, Luke and Beth McKenzie are, they're all doing CrossFit and Hyrox competitions.
Speaker AI've seen, you know, Gwen Jorgensen famously switched back to running and now back to triathlon.
Speaker ABut there's a number of, of pro triathletes that, that when they move on from triathlon, not always.
Speaker AYou know, there's someone like McKeely Jones who is still actively racing in the age group field as a triathlete.
Speaker ABut many of them seem to move into some form of co competing.
Speaker ABut that's different than triathlon.
Speaker ADo, do you guys keep tabs on what everybody else is doing or do you think Tim, it's because of kind of that notion you just expressed?
Speaker BYeah, I mean I think we were always paying attention, see what's going on and you know you're always also looking for other fun stuff.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike so you see Luke and Beth doing Hyrax, like oh, maybe I'll give that a try at some point, things like that.
Speaker BWhich is kind of cool.
Speaker BBut I mean honestly living in Colorado, like there's so many, you have so.
Speaker AMuch cool stuff around you there's so.
Speaker BMuch, there's so many, so much adventure type of stuff that you could do, really.
Speaker BDon't have to look further than our state.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAll right, well, on to the cool down portion of our show where I will have coach Tim and Coach Rennie answer a question from audience.
Speaker AAnd guys, today I picked a question about bike cadence.
Speaker AEileen asked us this.
Speaker AWhat is the importance of cadence on the bike?
Speaker AWhen I'm out on the road, I find that my cadence is always lower than prescribed by Tridot.
Speaker AAnd in fact, I have a natural tendency to want to change gears to drop my cadence as soon as it gets over 75.
Speaker ASo my question is, why does cadence matter and how do I improve it?
Speaker AYou know?
Speaker ASo Eileen is, is throwing out some numbers specific to her.
Speaker AIt seems like her body naturally gravitates to a lower cadence.
Speaker AAnytime it starts spinning up, she wants to drop it down.
Speaker AI'm kind of the opposite.
Speaker AI, I like cycling at a higher cadence.
Speaker AI have little chicken legs and I don't wanna push any more power than I have to anyway.
Speaker AI know as, as professionals, this is something you paid attention to.
Speaker AYou probably had it dialed in to what worked for your body, and now you're coaching athletes and talking through these things.
Speaker ASo what would the both of you have to say to Eileen about the importance of cadence and how to get it in the best zone for her?
Speaker CYeah, I think.
Speaker CI don't think there's a one size fits all for cadence for athletes.
Speaker CThe general rule of thumb is higher cadence, you're more relying on your cardiovascular system.
Speaker CLower cadence, you'll.
Speaker CYou're sort of relying more on that strength.
Speaker CSo each revolution is pushing more power.
Speaker CThe more revolutions, the power for each revolution comes down for that same amount of watts.
Speaker CI dialed my mine in at around 84.
Speaker CYou know, there are cyclists that are well into the 90s.
Speaker CTriathlon Typically, I think, is a little lower than cycling.
Speaker CAnd a lot of the very successful females over the years have been sort of in the low 80s, high 70s.
Speaker CSo it sounds like for this particular athlete, she likes to feel the talk and the strength and, and that's fine.
Speaker CI think mid-70s is probably a little low.
Speaker CI would try to aim for sort of maybe around 80 as sort of an ideal race cadence.
Speaker CBut, yeah, but if you feel like that 75 feels great for you.
Speaker CYou can push good power, you can sustain it for a long time, and you get off the bike and you feel good running, then that's your, that's your number.
Speaker CUm, and that's Fine.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut, but if you are getting on the run and, and feeling some fatigue on your legs, it might have been because of that low cadence.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker BI mean at 75, you're almost like at the gym.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BDoing leg press.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BBut so for me, and I stress this a lot with my athletes is cadence.
Speaker BDifferent cadence cadences are different tools.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd you need to have a, a full tool belt.
Speaker BYou can't just rely on, you know, you need a screwdriver too.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo I really, when I, we have cadence sessions on Tridont, I'm, I'm stressing, hey, follow the cadence.
Speaker BAnd usually as a lot of athletes have a hard time when there's a 90 cadence interval in there to hold 90.
Speaker BBut you know, when you're, when you're riding on rolling terrain or climbing, descending, you need to be able to move your legs differently for, you know, to match the terrain, being able to spin up, get a higher cadence when you're climbing to get on top of your gears so you can then accelerate overhill versus you know, a lot of people, low cadence, they kind of almost sprint at the bottom of the hill.
Speaker BThey're out of their saddle at the bottom of the hill and then their pace just goes down and down and down.
Speaker BBy the time they, they get to the top, they're taking a rest.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause you know, they haven't been on top of that gearing.
Speaker BSo the only way to get better is to practice.
Speaker BAnd it's annoying.
Speaker B90 to 95 is probably gonna really feel annoying, but do the sessions properly, practice it and, but it doesn't take.
Speaker CThat long, I don't think to like, it's like almost a neuromuscular change.
Speaker CIt's like it, your, your brain signaling to your legs to spin faster.
Speaker CSo it's like an annoying, annoying sort of shift.
Speaker CBut you know, it will a month or so focusing on it, you'll be able to access those, those higher cadences and it won't feel as, as out, you know, as different as it first did.
Speaker AWould you encourage an athlete like this to.
Speaker AYou know, obviously, Tim, you just mentioned when tried out and not every try to workout tells you hold this cadence, hold that cadence.
Speaker ACertain ones do.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo would you encourage an athlete like this to work some different cadences into their routines?
Speaker AEven a little more often than what Trot says or something?
Speaker AI, I think to the, the bike warmup drills.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AMost bike sessions it'll cough you to do some spin ups or some high cadence pedaling.
Speaker AWould you have an athlete like Eileen, who's struggling with a higher cadence.
Speaker ADo more of that throughout the bike session.
Speaker AOr.
Speaker AOr not?
Speaker BWell, it depends.
Speaker BIf.
Speaker BEileen, be honest.
Speaker BAre you doing them?
Speaker AAre you doing the warmup?
Speaker AFair question.
Speaker BSo if you're not doing them, doing them, do them.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd then I think you could just really.
Speaker BYou have to focus on it, right.
Speaker BLike, if it's a deficiency.
Speaker BSo you gotta.
Speaker BYou gotta address it.
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Speaker AUntil next time, Happy training.