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  Triathlon 2

An 8-week training program for sprint triathlons

 

This Triathlon 2 Training Program is designed for runners who would like to test their fitness in a triathlon by adding swimming and cycling to their workout routines. It requires a moderately high level of fitness, certainly an ability to finish 5-K or 10-K races if not marathons.

 

If you never have trained before, consider carefully before starting this program. It assumes in the first week that you have the ability to run for a half hour and bike and swim near equal amounts of time. Some of the workouts combine two or more of the three triathlon disciplines in a single workout. Also in the program is two days strength training each week. If you feel you need to start at a lower level and have the time before your chosen triathlon, select instead my much easier Triathlon 1 Training Program, which is designed mainly to get you in good shape with or without competitive goals. Like Triathlon 2, Triathlon 1 lasts 8 weeks. I also have combined the two into a Triathlon Supreme Program, which lasts 16 weeks. It along with Triathlon 1 and Triathlon 2 are available in an InterActive Format, where I send you daily e-mail messages telling you how to train and also offering tips and advice. Click here to review my Interactive Training Programs.

 

Triathlons are fun and can offer a good break from standard training for 10-K and marathon races, if you are a runner. The combination of three endurance events also can provide you with a higher level of fitness than you might ordinarily get from only doing one sport. Consider for a moment now some of what you will need to know to train for a triathlon.

 

SWIMMING: A simple bathing suit will suffice. No flippers, but you may want to purchase a wet suit to keep you warm if the water is cold. Wet suits also provide a degree of buoyancy that will make swimming easier. Noseplugs and goggles are a necessity. If you live near a lake or the ocean, and it is summer, that may be your best training venue. You can also train effectively in a lap pool, but remember that almost all triathlons are in open water. If you are not a good swimmer (and few runners are), consider engaging a swim coach to teach you how to do the strokes right. I offer some tips on form in my Interactive program. Mainly, you need to swim well enough to get you through this first triathlon leg without drowning, no small feat in itself.

 

BICYCLING: Biking can be an expensive sport when it comes to equipment. If you don't care that much about speed, you can pick up a fat-tired bike for a couple of hundred dollars that will carry you to the finish line. High-tech bicycles will get you to that line faster, but they also cost thousands of dollars more. Specially designed pedals, handlebars and wheels also can improve speed, but at a cost. As for training, I suggest you just get out and ride at whatever speed seems comfortable. If you have a fat-tired bike like mine, you can sit up and enjoy the scenery more than the serious cyclists who ride in chains at speeds faster than 20 mph. I designed this program to prepare you for a sprint triathlon, not Ironman, so you might as well enjoy your training, not flagellate yourself.

 

RUNNING: The simplest of sports, the main equipment needed is a pair of shoes which you also can use for biking. If I am right in assuming that most individuals signing up for this Triathlon 2 Training Program are runners, you already should have your equipment in place. Plus you should know how to train. Just go out and run at whatever speed seems comfortable. You can save the speedwork for your next 10-K, or if and when you do decide to move up to the next level: an Olympic-distance triathlon.

 

 

TRANSITIONS: To avoid wasting time, you need to learn how to do transitions, the period between the swim and the bike and the bike and run where you change clothes and equipment. Doing workouts where you swim first and bike second or bike first and run second will teach you to make smooth transitions. Consider that in a sprint triathlon with short distances, it may be just as easy to bike and run while still in your swimming trunks and wear your running shoes during the bike leg.

 

The distances for Olympic triathlons, by the way, are 1,500 meters for the swim, 40-K for the bicycle ride and 10-K for the run. Sprint triathlons are those races featuring shorter distances. Many of these are "local" races designed for fun more than anything else. I recommend them to you. As for Ironman, if you have to ask the distances for this premiere event in Hawaii, you're not ready to begin training for it.

 

This Triathlon 2 Training Program only suggests how you might train. Try different combinations to see what works best for you, More detailed instructions on how to work out each day, along with training tips, are available with the Interactive version available through TrainingPeaks. Click here to learn more.

 

In the schedule below, prescribed workouts are in minutes not miles. Thus, "Bike 30, Run 15" means that you bike for 30 minutes and run for 15 minutes, what triathletes call a "Brick" workout. Running even a short distance after a long swim or ride helps your legs recover for the next day. "Strength" suggests that you do weight training in a fitness center. Light weights and high reps usually work best for runners, and this is true for triathletes too. Enjoy your training.

 

 

Week

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

Sun

1

Strength

Run
30 min

Bike 45
Strength
Swim 20
Run 25

Rest

Run
30 min
Swim 30
Run 30

2

Strength
Bike 30
Run 15
Swim 15
Run 30

Run 30
Strength

Rest

Run
35 min
Swim 30
Bike 30

3

Strength
Run
35 min
Bike 50
Strength
Swim 30
Run 20

Rest

Run
40 min
Swim 30
Run 45

4

Strength
Bike 40
Run 10
Swim 30
Run 15
Run 30
Strength

Rest

Run
45 min
All 3
90 min

5

Strength
Run
40 min
Bike 30
Strength
Swim 30
Run 25

Rest

Run
50 min
Swim 30
Run 45

6

Strength
Bike 40
Run 15
Swim 15
Run 40
Run 40
Strength

Rest

Run
55 min
Swim 30
Bike 60

7

Strength
Run
45 min
Bike 40
Strength
Swim 30
Run 30

Rest

Run
60 min
Swim 30
Run 60

8

Strength
Bike 30
Run 30
Swim 30
Run 30
Run 30

Rest

Rest
Triathlon

 

Copyright 2006 by Hal Higdon. All rights reserved

 

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