Ironman 70.3 Bahrain 2019

You only really know how hard you’re willing to push when your goal becomes a reality. You think you know when you set that goal or visualise that goal but when it suddenly becomes attainable ‘thinking’ must become ‘doing’. I found myself in this position at the 2019 IM 70.3 Middle East championships. To put things into some context, I need to go back a week. I was ill, as in I couldn’t move from a bed or a sofa for two days and have never had a head and body ache like it. Also throw in some vomiting and a cough for good measure and on the Monday/Tuesday before the race I still wasn’t sure if I’d make the start line. I was feeling well enough by Wednesday to know in my mind, I would race. I love racing. I was still coughing stuff up the night before the race but I really backed my last training block and knew I had fitness.
Nevertheless on race morning I felt awful and started to doubt how I’d get through the day. The swim is always a bit of an unknown for me, my simple goal was to just swim with good form and not gas myself out. The final 400m felt anything but good and I was a bit worried I had overcooked it for not much gain, however a PB and out not too far down meant I’d done something right. The bike was where I knew I had legs. Training numbers have been up lately and so long as I didn’t push way over I was confident I could have a solid spin. More time spent coughing stuff up in the early stages kept me honest and stopped me going off too hard but when a large pack came past me I realised I would need to step things up or I was going to get spat further and further down the field. Drafting really is a problem at these races now, if you stick to the rules (as I do) you will simply end up being pushed further and further back to adhere to the drafting rules.
There’s two ways to combat this which I’ve learnt over the years, attacking the bunch is one however that comes at a cost. I decided to do this early on to at least be at the front of the pack so the refs don’t penalise me. This usually works because the guys drafting don’t want to do any work anyway so they just tuck in and continue to cheat. You’re safe as you’re not drafting, however, you are towing 10-20 other athletes along with you. This normally gets to me when I see this at turn arounds or later into the bike when naturally your legs tire and the drafters start coming around you because they want to go faster. It’s at this time I begin the 2nd way I combat drafting, I start shouting at people. ‘If you’re going to cheat, at least do some F’ing work!’. Drafters are terrified of work, so they end up on the front and then immediately slow, letting someone else come round, they then jump on the wheel and the next guy comes through and shits himself to be doing work so try’s to slot in behind number 1 and therefore cutting up number 2. Number 2 gets pissed off now and does the same back to the guy in front and so you get a constant revolving shit show. So I ride up alongside and shout, they either laugh, swear, or cower back and I’m left alone for about 10mins before the pattern repeats itself. It’s definitely an energy cost on me but I think it’s worth it and it fires me up! Drafting is weak and it means you’re scared because you can’t run. I heard a horror story at this race, in the men’s field, an athlete who has an FTP of less than 200 rode 3mins slower than I did (an FTP of over 300). How is that possibly fair!? He’s lucky I don’t know his name or I’d call him out. Drafting rant over. I came off the bike ready to run, more because I just wanted the race to end. I was still feeling pretty shit. I began conservatively knowing I can run well on this course, I was told I was in 4th or 5th running out of T2, so I was content with running my best and seeing what happens. At around 10k I was told I’d moved to 2nd, this motivated the hell out of me. A few minutes later, I was told I had the lead and it was by over 1min. ‘Holy shit’ my goal here is to podium, but that was when I was feeling 100% and a podium doesn’t mean a win! I can win... and so began possibly the worst 30mins of running in my life. My legs were coming undone, I had a stitch that felt like a knife between my ribs and I was still coughing stuff up. I had to hold on. The final lap of the 3 was a complete battle with myself. I haven’t wanted to walk so badly in all my life, I really, really didn’t want to continue. Breathing hurt, every landing was painful and I couldn’t go faster. I’m trying but I’m a snail right now. There’s no way I’ve held this 1min gap, I’m 2nd now... oh well, good try Tom, you were first for a bit but you’re ill so there is your excuse. The Boss, @mjd_smith had text me his usual pre race message. ‘Mate: No F*^king Weakness. End of’. So that was it, I want to win, I don’t want 2nd, I’m willing to go full dark here, this isn’t murder mode this is running into a hole mode. 10min of hurt left, 5min left, 2min... I’m wobbling, I’ve up chucked down myself and now I’m on the red carpet, so slow, I’ve definitely lost the lead. Finish. All I wanted to do was collapse, which I did. I could not stand up and two women are trying to ask me to sit down. I can’t even fathom being able to do that so I just fold myself over a chair working out what is hurting the most. Thanks to Dubai racing snake Ian Farrell for checking on me, I got shipped onto the medical tent where I lay contemplating life for 40mins. The stitch went and my mouth stopped buzzing after being on a drip for a while and all was good again.
Now the thoughts come back, damn I had 1st place and I let it go. It was the winner of the female 25-29 AG, Lottie who said congrats first, then confirmed I had held on to win. I got a similar feeling on achieving a First at University, relief. Sometimes you don't realise how much you wanted something until you get it. There’s no instant gratification either, because you aren’t racing head to head at AG level you have to wait until the others have finished to know where you have finished, much like at university waiting for your work to be marked. I had an idea I was in first but in reality I didn’t know for sure, the tracker app could have been wrong or the person telling me could be. The fact just knowing there was a chance was enough to get me to react and yes, there was some negative reactions but in the end I settled on one final answer, GO FOR IT. Why did I settle there? Because I’ve been in that scenario a thousand times in my mind before and I always visually imagine reacting how I want to, with a final kick or last ditch effort. Don't dismiss your day dreaming, visualising or fantasies. One day you’ll get the chance to live them and trust me, instinct will kick in so train it to be a winning one.
Want to know my pre race set up? Head here
Want to know my fuelling plan? Head here
For a Secret Training saving, use code TW15 at checkout.
Thanks for reading. Tom Walker, Endurance Coach

ENGINE
A sustained 50-minute aerobic workout designed to build your engine and endurance. Expect continuous movement across the bike, rower, ski erg, and running, all at a manageable, steady pace.
GYMNASTICS
This week is all about the bar! On Tuesday, we’ll continue working on pulling strength, followed by kipping and butterfly progressions. On Thursday, Bar Muscle Ups will make an appearance. Get ready for low bar drills, strength work and BMU progressions galore.
HYROX
A high-intensity session focused on building leg strength and muscular endurance. We will finish each movement with short runs to build resilience under fatigue.
MOBILITY
Back to the flows, yes, back in popular demand, I’m running it back. Full body stretching ended with stability/activation of course.
PURE STRENGTH
This week in Pure Strength, we kick off Monday with a heavy set of RDLS, followed by some Front squat volume, and then some frontal plane strength work. On Wednesday, we have some overcoming isometrics to kick our session off, followed by some cluster sets on the bench press, and then some push-pull accessory work.
WEIGHTLIFTING
Weightlifting this week is snatch; we are breaking down the movement. Starting with the 3-position snatch. Drilling the timings under the barbell. Followed by snatch pulls and a complex of behind-the-neck push press into OHS.

Monday Ride
A ride dedicated to group riding skills and some fitness. Coach Rob Foster leads this ride, if you'd like to join email Rob Foster
Start time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1.5 hour
Location: The Loop Cafe, Bike DXB
Track Tuesday
Our weekly on track speed session! For any level of runner looking to build their run speed, threshold and Vo2max fitness and run with the best running community in Dubai.
Time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1.5 hour
Location: Dubai Sports City Sports Park
Friday - Coffee Run
Our weekly tempo run. Sessions are built on an RPE scale and accessible to all levels of runner. We start together, run hard then finish together and chat about it over a coffee and breakfast.
Brief time: 05:54 am
Start time: 05:59 am
Start Location: Common Grounds
Saturday - Long Ride
Our weekly endurance ride.
Please email Rob Foster for more details.
Time: 05:59 am
Location: Bottom of the Stick, Al Qudra.

Monday
Time: 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: LRC Tempo
This week will be dialling into that Tempo effort (7/10 RPE) for 5 mins blocks. You will take a 2 min recovery after each block and repeat the sequence 5x.
Tuesday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Dubai Sports City Sports Park
Session: Track Tuesday
This is your chance to run fast with the wider IFE community and coaches. This week we will be running 300m repeats at 3km pace, each with a very easy float between.
Wednesday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: LRC Intervals
Today we have intervals in the morning and evening. We will be running 100m effort through the park behind InnerFight, you will then have 300m easy/recovery before repeating the sequence.
Friday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Common Grounds
Session: The Coffee Run
This week we will be working on a negative split run. After 20 mins of easy running you will go into 1 min on, 1 min off intervals for 30 mins. Post session coffees at Common Grounds from 7am.

Monday:
Starting the week with some pressing tempo push-up work, followed by some bench press and death march, and then a strongman-style workout for an epic start to the week!
Strength:
A) EMOM x 8 - 3 to 5 tempo push-ups tempo @31x1
B) Every 90 sec x 10 alt between - 5 Barbell bench press @20x1 (building) & 16 alt DB death march
Conditioning:
For Time:
10-1 Sandbag Over Shoulder
1-10 Dumbbell STOH
Tuesday:
Tuesday, we have some sled work in the strength, and then some Interval work that will challenge your squat and pull endurance.
Strength:
A) 6 mins build to max triple broad jump
Rest 2 mins
B) Every 2 mins x 5 2 length sled push
Conditioning:
4 min window
30 sec wall sit
30 wall balls
15 pull-ups
AMRAP cal ski
Rest 2 mins x 4
Wednesday:
Wednesday is all about the barbell in both the skill and a fast-paced
Squat clean and run workout.
Strength:
A) Every 2 mins x 8 - 2 power clean + 2 push press
Rest 2 mins
B) Every 90 sec x 3 6 BB good mornings @30x1
Conditioning:
For Time:
15-12- 9 Squat Cleans
After each set, a park run
Thursday:
Thursday, we have some strict pull-up work followed by a long endurance workout on the rower.
Strength:
A: In a 2-minute window, establish a MAX unbroken set of strict pull-ups/chest 2 bar/bar muscle-ups
+
B: EMOM 8 @ 33% of A
Conditioning:
30 mins Max Cal Row:
0-10 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpees
11-20 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpee box jump
21-30 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpee box jump over
Friday:
FUF, we are finishing off with some single-leg and core work, and then 6 rounds of
Strength:
A) EMOM x 6 - 20 sec strict TTB/SLR
rest 2 min
B) Every 2 mins x 4 - 12 alt front rack KB reverse lunge
Conditioning:
6 Rounds For Time:
12 TTB
40/30 Cal Ass Bike and C2 bike (Alternating)
20 Russian KB Swing

You only really know how hard you’re willing to push when your goal becomes a reality. You think you know when you set that goal or visualise that goal but when it suddenly becomes attainable ‘thinking’ must become ‘doing’. I found myself in this position at the 2019 IM 70.3 Middle East championships. To put things into some context, I need to go back a week. I was ill, as in I couldn’t move from a bed or a sofa for two days and have never had a head and body ache like it. Also throw in some vomiting and a cough for good measure and on the Monday/Tuesday before the race I still wasn’t sure if I’d make the start line. I was feeling well enough by Wednesday to know in my mind, I would race. I love racing. I was still coughing stuff up the night before the race but I really backed my last training block and knew I had fitness.
Nevertheless on race morning I felt awful and started to doubt how I’d get through the day. The swim is always a bit of an unknown for me, my simple goal was to just swim with good form and not gas myself out. The final 400m felt anything but good and I was a bit worried I had overcooked it for not much gain, however a PB and out not too far down meant I’d done something right. The bike was where I knew I had legs. Training numbers have been up lately and so long as I didn’t push way over I was confident I could have a solid spin. More time spent coughing stuff up in the early stages kept me honest and stopped me going off too hard but when a large pack came past me I realised I would need to step things up or I was going to get spat further and further down the field. Drafting really is a problem at these races now, if you stick to the rules (as I do) you will simply end up being pushed further and further back to adhere to the drafting rules.
There’s two ways to combat this which I’ve learnt over the years, attacking the bunch is one however that comes at a cost. I decided to do this early on to at least be at the front of the pack so the refs don’t penalise me. This usually works because the guys drafting don’t want to do any work anyway so they just tuck in and continue to cheat. You’re safe as you’re not drafting, however, you are towing 10-20 other athletes along with you. This normally gets to me when I see this at turn arounds or later into the bike when naturally your legs tire and the drafters start coming around you because they want to go faster. It’s at this time I begin the 2nd way I combat drafting, I start shouting at people. ‘If you’re going to cheat, at least do some F’ing work!’. Drafters are terrified of work, so they end up on the front and then immediately slow, letting someone else come round, they then jump on the wheel and the next guy comes through and shits himself to be doing work so try’s to slot in behind number 1 and therefore cutting up number 2. Number 2 gets pissed off now and does the same back to the guy in front and so you get a constant revolving shit show. So I ride up alongside and shout, they either laugh, swear, or cower back and I’m left alone for about 10mins before the pattern repeats itself. It’s definitely an energy cost on me but I think it’s worth it and it fires me up! Drafting is weak and it means you’re scared because you can’t run. I heard a horror story at this race, in the men’s field, an athlete who has an FTP of less than 200 rode 3mins slower than I did (an FTP of over 300). How is that possibly fair!? He’s lucky I don’t know his name or I’d call him out. Drafting rant over. I came off the bike ready to run, more because I just wanted the race to end. I was still feeling pretty shit. I began conservatively knowing I can run well on this course, I was told I was in 4th or 5th running out of T2, so I was content with running my best and seeing what happens. At around 10k I was told I’d moved to 2nd, this motivated the hell out of me. A few minutes later, I was told I had the lead and it was by over 1min. ‘Holy shit’ my goal here is to podium, but that was when I was feeling 100% and a podium doesn’t mean a win! I can win... and so began possibly the worst 30mins of running in my life. My legs were coming undone, I had a stitch that felt like a knife between my ribs and I was still coughing stuff up. I had to hold on. The final lap of the 3 was a complete battle with myself. I haven’t wanted to walk so badly in all my life, I really, really didn’t want to continue. Breathing hurt, every landing was painful and I couldn’t go faster. I’m trying but I’m a snail right now. There’s no way I’ve held this 1min gap, I’m 2nd now... oh well, good try Tom, you were first for a bit but you’re ill so there is your excuse. The Boss, @mjd_smith had text me his usual pre race message. ‘Mate: No F*^king Weakness. End of’. So that was it, I want to win, I don’t want 2nd, I’m willing to go full dark here, this isn’t murder mode this is running into a hole mode. 10min of hurt left, 5min left, 2min... I’m wobbling, I’ve up chucked down myself and now I’m on the red carpet, so slow, I’ve definitely lost the lead. Finish. All I wanted to do was collapse, which I did. I could not stand up and two women are trying to ask me to sit down. I can’t even fathom being able to do that so I just fold myself over a chair working out what is hurting the most. Thanks to Dubai racing snake Ian Farrell for checking on me, I got shipped onto the medical tent where I lay contemplating life for 40mins. The stitch went and my mouth stopped buzzing after being on a drip for a while and all was good again.
Now the thoughts come back, damn I had 1st place and I let it go. It was the winner of the female 25-29 AG, Lottie who said congrats first, then confirmed I had held on to win. I got a similar feeling on achieving a First at University, relief. Sometimes you don't realise how much you wanted something until you get it. There’s no instant gratification either, because you aren’t racing head to head at AG level you have to wait until the others have finished to know where you have finished, much like at university waiting for your work to be marked. I had an idea I was in first but in reality I didn’t know for sure, the tracker app could have been wrong or the person telling me could be. The fact just knowing there was a chance was enough to get me to react and yes, there was some negative reactions but in the end I settled on one final answer, GO FOR IT. Why did I settle there? Because I’ve been in that scenario a thousand times in my mind before and I always visually imagine reacting how I want to, with a final kick or last ditch effort. Don't dismiss your day dreaming, visualising or fantasies. One day you’ll get the chance to live them and trust me, instinct will kick in so train it to be a winning one.
Want to know my pre race set up? Head here
Want to know my fuelling plan? Head here
For a Secret Training saving, use code TW15 at checkout.
Thanks for reading. Tom Walker, Endurance Coach

Monday Ride
A ride dedicated to group riding skills and some fitness. Coach Rob Foster leads this ride, if you'd like to join email Rob Foster
Start time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1.5 hour
Location: The Loop Cafe, Bike DXB
Track Tuesday
Our weekly on track speed session! For any level of runner looking to build their run speed, threshold and Vo2max fitness and run with the best running community in Dubai.
Time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1.5 hour
Location: Dubai Sports City Sports Park
Friday - Coffee Run
Our weekly tempo run. Sessions are built on an RPE scale and accessible to all levels of runner. We start together, run hard then finish together and chat about it over a coffee and breakfast.
Brief time: 05:54 am
Start time: 05:59 am
Start Location: Common Grounds
Saturday - Long Ride
Our weekly endurance ride.
Please email Rob Foster for more details.
Time: 05:59 am
Location: Bottom of the Stick, Al Qudra.

Monday
Time: 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: LRC Tempo
This week will be dialling into that Tempo effort (7/10 RPE) for 5 mins blocks. You will take a 2 min recovery after each block and repeat the sequence 5x.
Tuesday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Dubai Sports City Sports Park
Session: Track Tuesday
This is your chance to run fast with the wider IFE community and coaches. This week we will be running 300m repeats at 3km pace, each with a very easy float between.
Wednesday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: LRC Intervals
Today we have intervals in the morning and evening. We will be running 100m effort through the park behind InnerFight, you will then have 300m easy/recovery before repeating the sequence.
Friday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Common Grounds
Session: The Coffee Run
This week we will be working on a negative split run. After 20 mins of easy running you will go into 1 min on, 1 min off intervals for 30 mins. Post session coffees at Common Grounds from 7am.

Monday:
Starting the week with some pressing tempo push-up work, followed by some bench press and death march, and then a strongman-style workout for an epic start to the week!
Strength:
A) EMOM x 8 - 3 to 5 tempo push-ups tempo @31x1
B) Every 90 sec x 10 alt between - 5 Barbell bench press @20x1 (building) & 16 alt DB death march
Conditioning:
For Time:
10-1 Sandbag Over Shoulder
1-10 Dumbbell STOH
Tuesday:
Tuesday, we have some sled work in the strength, and then some Interval work that will challenge your squat and pull endurance.
Strength:
A) 6 mins build to max triple broad jump
Rest 2 mins
B) Every 2 mins x 5 2 length sled push
Conditioning:
4 min window
30 sec wall sit
30 wall balls
15 pull-ups
AMRAP cal ski
Rest 2 mins x 4
Wednesday:
Wednesday is all about the barbell in both the skill and a fast-paced
Squat clean and run workout.
Strength:
A) Every 2 mins x 8 - 2 power clean + 2 push press
Rest 2 mins
B) Every 90 sec x 3 6 BB good mornings @30x1
Conditioning:
For Time:
15-12- 9 Squat Cleans
After each set, a park run
Thursday:
Thursday, we have some strict pull-up work followed by a long endurance workout on the rower.
Strength:
A: In a 2-minute window, establish a MAX unbroken set of strict pull-ups/chest 2 bar/bar muscle-ups
+
B: EMOM 8 @ 33% of A
Conditioning:
30 mins Max Cal Row:
0-10 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpees
11-20 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpee box jump
21-30 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpee box jump over
Friday:
FUF, we are finishing off with some single-leg and core work, and then 6 rounds of
Strength:
A) EMOM x 6 - 20 sec strict TTB/SLR
rest 2 min
B) Every 2 mins x 4 - 12 alt front rack KB reverse lunge
Conditioning:
6 Rounds For Time:
12 TTB
40/30 Cal Ass Bike and C2 bike (Alternating)
20 Russian KB Swing

ENGINE
A sustained 50-minute aerobic workout designed to build your engine and endurance. Expect continuous movement across the bike, rower, ski erg, and running, all at a manageable, steady pace.
GYMNASTICS
This week is all about the bar! On Tuesday, we’ll continue working on pulling strength, followed by kipping and butterfly progressions. On Thursday, Bar Muscle Ups will make an appearance. Get ready for low bar drills, strength work and BMU progressions galore.
HYROX
A high-intensity session focused on building leg strength and muscular endurance. We will finish each movement with short runs to build resilience under fatigue.
MOBILITY
Back to the flows, yes, back in popular demand, I’m running it back. Full body stretching ended with stability/activation of course.
PURE STRENGTH
This week in Pure Strength, we kick off Monday with a heavy set of RDLS, followed by some Front squat volume, and then some frontal plane strength work. On Wednesday, we have some overcoming isometrics to kick our session off, followed by some cluster sets on the bench press, and then some push-pull accessory work.
WEIGHTLIFTING
Weightlifting this week is snatch; we are breaking down the movement. Starting with the 3-position snatch. Drilling the timings under the barbell. Followed by snatch pulls and a complex of behind-the-neck push press into OHS.

You only really know how hard you’re willing to push when your goal becomes a reality. You think you know when you set that goal or visualise that goal but when it suddenly becomes attainable ‘thinking’ must become ‘doing’. I found myself in this position at the 2019 IM 70.3 Middle East championships. To put things into some context, I need to go back a week. I was ill, as in I couldn’t move from a bed or a sofa for two days and have never had a head and body ache like it. Also throw in some vomiting and a cough for good measure and on the Monday/Tuesday before the race I still wasn’t sure if I’d make the start line. I was feeling well enough by Wednesday to know in my mind, I would race. I love racing. I was still coughing stuff up the night before the race but I really backed my last training block and knew I had fitness.
Nevertheless on race morning I felt awful and started to doubt how I’d get through the day. The swim is always a bit of an unknown for me, my simple goal was to just swim with good form and not gas myself out. The final 400m felt anything but good and I was a bit worried I had overcooked it for not much gain, however a PB and out not too far down meant I’d done something right. The bike was where I knew I had legs. Training numbers have been up lately and so long as I didn’t push way over I was confident I could have a solid spin. More time spent coughing stuff up in the early stages kept me honest and stopped me going off too hard but when a large pack came past me I realised I would need to step things up or I was going to get spat further and further down the field. Drafting really is a problem at these races now, if you stick to the rules (as I do) you will simply end up being pushed further and further back to adhere to the drafting rules.
There’s two ways to combat this which I’ve learnt over the years, attacking the bunch is one however that comes at a cost. I decided to do this early on to at least be at the front of the pack so the refs don’t penalise me. This usually works because the guys drafting don’t want to do any work anyway so they just tuck in and continue to cheat. You’re safe as you’re not drafting, however, you are towing 10-20 other athletes along with you. This normally gets to me when I see this at turn arounds or later into the bike when naturally your legs tire and the drafters start coming around you because they want to go faster. It’s at this time I begin the 2nd way I combat drafting, I start shouting at people. ‘If you’re going to cheat, at least do some F’ing work!’. Drafters are terrified of work, so they end up on the front and then immediately slow, letting someone else come round, they then jump on the wheel and the next guy comes through and shits himself to be doing work so try’s to slot in behind number 1 and therefore cutting up number 2. Number 2 gets pissed off now and does the same back to the guy in front and so you get a constant revolving shit show. So I ride up alongside and shout, they either laugh, swear, or cower back and I’m left alone for about 10mins before the pattern repeats itself. It’s definitely an energy cost on me but I think it’s worth it and it fires me up! Drafting is weak and it means you’re scared because you can’t run. I heard a horror story at this race, in the men’s field, an athlete who has an FTP of less than 200 rode 3mins slower than I did (an FTP of over 300). How is that possibly fair!? He’s lucky I don’t know his name or I’d call him out. Drafting rant over. I came off the bike ready to run, more because I just wanted the race to end. I was still feeling pretty shit. I began conservatively knowing I can run well on this course, I was told I was in 4th or 5th running out of T2, so I was content with running my best and seeing what happens. At around 10k I was told I’d moved to 2nd, this motivated the hell out of me. A few minutes later, I was told I had the lead and it was by over 1min. ‘Holy shit’ my goal here is to podium, but that was when I was feeling 100% and a podium doesn’t mean a win! I can win... and so began possibly the worst 30mins of running in my life. My legs were coming undone, I had a stitch that felt like a knife between my ribs and I was still coughing stuff up. I had to hold on. The final lap of the 3 was a complete battle with myself. I haven’t wanted to walk so badly in all my life, I really, really didn’t want to continue. Breathing hurt, every landing was painful and I couldn’t go faster. I’m trying but I’m a snail right now. There’s no way I’ve held this 1min gap, I’m 2nd now... oh well, good try Tom, you were first for a bit but you’re ill so there is your excuse. The Boss, @mjd_smith had text me his usual pre race message. ‘Mate: No F*^king Weakness. End of’. So that was it, I want to win, I don’t want 2nd, I’m willing to go full dark here, this isn’t murder mode this is running into a hole mode. 10min of hurt left, 5min left, 2min... I’m wobbling, I’ve up chucked down myself and now I’m on the red carpet, so slow, I’ve definitely lost the lead. Finish. All I wanted to do was collapse, which I did. I could not stand up and two women are trying to ask me to sit down. I can’t even fathom being able to do that so I just fold myself over a chair working out what is hurting the most. Thanks to Dubai racing snake Ian Farrell for checking on me, I got shipped onto the medical tent where I lay contemplating life for 40mins. The stitch went and my mouth stopped buzzing after being on a drip for a while and all was good again.
Now the thoughts come back, damn I had 1st place and I let it go. It was the winner of the female 25-29 AG, Lottie who said congrats first, then confirmed I had held on to win. I got a similar feeling on achieving a First at University, relief. Sometimes you don't realise how much you wanted something until you get it. There’s no instant gratification either, because you aren’t racing head to head at AG level you have to wait until the others have finished to know where you have finished, much like at university waiting for your work to be marked. I had an idea I was in first but in reality I didn’t know for sure, the tracker app could have been wrong or the person telling me could be. The fact just knowing there was a chance was enough to get me to react and yes, there was some negative reactions but in the end I settled on one final answer, GO FOR IT. Why did I settle there? Because I’ve been in that scenario a thousand times in my mind before and I always visually imagine reacting how I want to, with a final kick or last ditch effort. Don't dismiss your day dreaming, visualising or fantasies. One day you’ll get the chance to live them and trust me, instinct will kick in so train it to be a winning one.
Want to know my pre race set up? Head here
Want to know my fuelling plan? Head here
For a Secret Training saving, use code TW15 at checkout.
Thanks for reading. Tom Walker, Endurance Coach

Monday
Time: 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: LRC Tempo
This week will be dialling into that Tempo effort (7/10 RPE) for 5 mins blocks. You will take a 2 min recovery after each block and repeat the sequence 5x.
Tuesday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Dubai Sports City Sports Park
Session: Track Tuesday
This is your chance to run fast with the wider IFE community and coaches. This week we will be running 300m repeats at 3km pace, each with a very easy float between.
Wednesday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: LRC Intervals
Today we have intervals in the morning and evening. We will be running 100m effort through the park behind InnerFight, you will then have 300m easy/recovery before repeating the sequence.
Friday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Common Grounds
Session: The Coffee Run
This week we will be working on a negative split run. After 20 mins of easy running you will go into 1 min on, 1 min off intervals for 30 mins. Post session coffees at Common Grounds from 7am.

Monday:
Starting the week with some pressing tempo push-up work, followed by some bench press and death march, and then a strongman-style workout for an epic start to the week!
Strength:
A) EMOM x 8 - 3 to 5 tempo push-ups tempo @31x1
B) Every 90 sec x 10 alt between - 5 Barbell bench press @20x1 (building) & 16 alt DB death march
Conditioning:
For Time:
10-1 Sandbag Over Shoulder
1-10 Dumbbell STOH
Tuesday:
Tuesday, we have some sled work in the strength, and then some Interval work that will challenge your squat and pull endurance.
Strength:
A) 6 mins build to max triple broad jump
Rest 2 mins
B) Every 2 mins x 5 2 length sled push
Conditioning:
4 min window
30 sec wall sit
30 wall balls
15 pull-ups
AMRAP cal ski
Rest 2 mins x 4
Wednesday:
Wednesday is all about the barbell in both the skill and a fast-paced
Squat clean and run workout.
Strength:
A) Every 2 mins x 8 - 2 power clean + 2 push press
Rest 2 mins
B) Every 90 sec x 3 6 BB good mornings @30x1
Conditioning:
For Time:
15-12- 9 Squat Cleans
After each set, a park run
Thursday:
Thursday, we have some strict pull-up work followed by a long endurance workout on the rower.
Strength:
A: In a 2-minute window, establish a MAX unbroken set of strict pull-ups/chest 2 bar/bar muscle-ups
+
B: EMOM 8 @ 33% of A
Conditioning:
30 mins Max Cal Row:
0-10 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpees
11-20 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpee box jump
21-30 mins every 2:30 mins 6 burpee box jump over
Friday:
FUF, we are finishing off with some single-leg and core work, and then 6 rounds of
Strength:
A) EMOM x 6 - 20 sec strict TTB/SLR
rest 2 min
B) Every 2 mins x 4 - 12 alt front rack KB reverse lunge
Conditioning:
6 Rounds For Time:
12 TTB
40/30 Cal Ass Bike and C2 bike (Alternating)
20 Russian KB Swing

ENGINE
A sustained 50-minute aerobic workout designed to build your engine and endurance. Expect continuous movement across the bike, rower, ski erg, and running, all at a manageable, steady pace.
GYMNASTICS
This week is all about the bar! On Tuesday, we’ll continue working on pulling strength, followed by kipping and butterfly progressions. On Thursday, Bar Muscle Ups will make an appearance. Get ready for low bar drills, strength work and BMU progressions galore.
HYROX
A high-intensity session focused on building leg strength and muscular endurance. We will finish each movement with short runs to build resilience under fatigue.
MOBILITY
Back to the flows, yes, back in popular demand, I’m running it back. Full body stretching ended with stability/activation of course.
PURE STRENGTH
This week in Pure Strength, we kick off Monday with a heavy set of RDLS, followed by some Front squat volume, and then some frontal plane strength work. On Wednesday, we have some overcoming isometrics to kick our session off, followed by some cluster sets on the bench press, and then some push-pull accessory work.
WEIGHTLIFTING
Weightlifting this week is snatch; we are breaking down the movement. Starting with the 3-position snatch. Drilling the timings under the barbell. Followed by snatch pulls and a complex of behind-the-neck push press into OHS.

Monday Ride
A ride dedicated to group riding skills and some fitness. Coach Rob Foster leads this ride, if you'd like to join email Rob Foster
Start time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1.5 hour
Location: The Loop Cafe, Bike DXB
Track Tuesday
Our weekly on track speed session! For any level of runner looking to build their run speed, threshold and Vo2max fitness and run with the best running community in Dubai.
Time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1.5 hour
Location: Dubai Sports City Sports Park
Friday - Coffee Run
Our weekly tempo run. Sessions are built on an RPE scale and accessible to all levels of runner. We start together, run hard then finish together and chat about it over a coffee and breakfast.
Brief time: 05:54 am
Start time: 05:59 am
Start Location: Common Grounds
Saturday - Long Ride
Our weekly endurance ride.
Please email Rob Foster for more details.
Time: 05:59 am
Location: Bottom of the Stick, Al Qudra.

You only really know how hard you’re willing to push when your goal becomes a reality. You think you know when you set that goal or visualise that goal but when it suddenly becomes attainable ‘thinking’ must become ‘doing’. I found myself in this position at the 2019 IM 70.3 Middle East championships. To put things into some context, I need to go back a week. I was ill, as in I couldn’t move from a bed or a sofa for two days and have never had a head and body ache like it. Also throw in some vomiting and a cough for good measure and on the Monday/Tuesday before the race I still wasn’t sure if I’d make the start line. I was feeling well enough by Wednesday to know in my mind, I would race. I love racing. I was still coughing stuff up the night before the race but I really backed my last training block and knew I had fitness.
Nevertheless on race morning I felt awful and started to doubt how I’d get through the day. The swim is always a bit of an unknown for me, my simple goal was to just swim with good form and not gas myself out. The final 400m felt anything but good and I was a bit worried I had overcooked it for not much gain, however a PB and out not too far down meant I’d done something right. The bike was where I knew I had legs. Training numbers have been up lately and so long as I didn’t push way over I was confident I could have a solid spin. More time spent coughing stuff up in the early stages kept me honest and stopped me going off too hard but when a large pack came past me I realised I would need to step things up or I was going to get spat further and further down the field. Drafting really is a problem at these races now, if you stick to the rules (as I do) you will simply end up being pushed further and further back to adhere to the drafting rules.
There’s two ways to combat this which I’ve learnt over the years, attacking the bunch is one however that comes at a cost. I decided to do this early on to at least be at the front of the pack so the refs don’t penalise me. This usually works because the guys drafting don’t want to do any work anyway so they just tuck in and continue to cheat. You’re safe as you’re not drafting, however, you are towing 10-20 other athletes along with you. This normally gets to me when I see this at turn arounds or later into the bike when naturally your legs tire and the drafters start coming around you because they want to go faster. It’s at this time I begin the 2nd way I combat drafting, I start shouting at people. ‘If you’re going to cheat, at least do some F’ing work!’. Drafters are terrified of work, so they end up on the front and then immediately slow, letting someone else come round, they then jump on the wheel and the next guy comes through and shits himself to be doing work so try’s to slot in behind number 1 and therefore cutting up number 2. Number 2 gets pissed off now and does the same back to the guy in front and so you get a constant revolving shit show. So I ride up alongside and shout, they either laugh, swear, or cower back and I’m left alone for about 10mins before the pattern repeats itself. It’s definitely an energy cost on me but I think it’s worth it and it fires me up! Drafting is weak and it means you’re scared because you can’t run. I heard a horror story at this race, in the men’s field, an athlete who has an FTP of less than 200 rode 3mins slower than I did (an FTP of over 300). How is that possibly fair!? He’s lucky I don’t know his name or I’d call him out. Drafting rant over. I came off the bike ready to run, more because I just wanted the race to end. I was still feeling pretty shit. I began conservatively knowing I can run well on this course, I was told I was in 4th or 5th running out of T2, so I was content with running my best and seeing what happens. At around 10k I was told I’d moved to 2nd, this motivated the hell out of me. A few minutes later, I was told I had the lead and it was by over 1min. ‘Holy shit’ my goal here is to podium, but that was when I was feeling 100% and a podium doesn’t mean a win! I can win... and so began possibly the worst 30mins of running in my life. My legs were coming undone, I had a stitch that felt like a knife between my ribs and I was still coughing stuff up. I had to hold on. The final lap of the 3 was a complete battle with myself. I haven’t wanted to walk so badly in all my life, I really, really didn’t want to continue. Breathing hurt, every landing was painful and I couldn’t go faster. I’m trying but I’m a snail right now. There’s no way I’ve held this 1min gap, I’m 2nd now... oh well, good try Tom, you were first for a bit but you’re ill so there is your excuse. The Boss, @mjd_smith had text me his usual pre race message. ‘Mate: No F*^king Weakness. End of’. So that was it, I want to win, I don’t want 2nd, I’m willing to go full dark here, this isn’t murder mode this is running into a hole mode. 10min of hurt left, 5min left, 2min... I’m wobbling, I’ve up chucked down myself and now I’m on the red carpet, so slow, I’ve definitely lost the lead. Finish. All I wanted to do was collapse, which I did. I could not stand up and two women are trying to ask me to sit down. I can’t even fathom being able to do that so I just fold myself over a chair working out what is hurting the most. Thanks to Dubai racing snake Ian Farrell for checking on me, I got shipped onto the medical tent where I lay contemplating life for 40mins. The stitch went and my mouth stopped buzzing after being on a drip for a while and all was good again.
Now the thoughts come back, damn I had 1st place and I let it go. It was the winner of the female 25-29 AG, Lottie who said congrats first, then confirmed I had held on to win. I got a similar feeling on achieving a First at University, relief. Sometimes you don't realise how much you wanted something until you get it. There’s no instant gratification either, because you aren’t racing head to head at AG level you have to wait until the others have finished to know where you have finished, much like at university waiting for your work to be marked. I had an idea I was in first but in reality I didn’t know for sure, the tracker app could have been wrong or the person telling me could be. The fact just knowing there was a chance was enough to get me to react and yes, there was some negative reactions but in the end I settled on one final answer, GO FOR IT. Why did I settle there? Because I’ve been in that scenario a thousand times in my mind before and I always visually imagine reacting how I want to, with a final kick or last ditch effort. Don't dismiss your day dreaming, visualising or fantasies. One day you’ll get the chance to live them and trust me, instinct will kick in so train it to be a winning one.
Want to know my pre race set up? Head here
Want to know my fuelling plan? Head here
For a Secret Training saving, use code TW15 at checkout.
Thanks for reading. Tom Walker, Endurance Coach

You only really know how hard you’re willing to push when your goal becomes a reality. You think you know when you set that goal or visualise that goal but when it suddenly becomes attainable ‘thinking’ must become ‘doing’. I found myself in this position at the 2019 IM 70.3 Middle East championships. To put things into some context, I need to go back a week. I was ill, as in I couldn’t move from a bed or a sofa for two days and have never had a head and body ache like it. Also throw in some vomiting and a cough for good measure and on the Monday/Tuesday before the race I still wasn’t sure if I’d make the start line. I was feeling well enough by Wednesday to know in my mind, I would race. I love racing. I was still coughing stuff up the night before the race but I really backed my last training block and knew I had fitness.
Nevertheless on race morning I felt awful and started to doubt how I’d get through the day. The swim is always a bit of an unknown for me, my simple goal was to just swim with good form and not gas myself out. The final 400m felt anything but good and I was a bit worried I had overcooked it for not much gain, however a PB and out not too far down meant I’d done something right. The bike was where I knew I had legs. Training numbers have been up lately and so long as I didn’t push way over I was confident I could have a solid spin. More time spent coughing stuff up in the early stages kept me honest and stopped me going off too hard but when a large pack came past me I realised I would need to step things up or I was going to get spat further and further down the field. Drafting really is a problem at these races now, if you stick to the rules (as I do) you will simply end up being pushed further and further back to adhere to the drafting rules.
There’s two ways to combat this which I’ve learnt over the years, attacking the bunch is one however that comes at a cost. I decided to do this early on to at least be at the front of the pack so the refs don’t penalise me. This usually works because the guys drafting don’t want to do any work anyway so they just tuck in and continue to cheat. You’re safe as you’re not drafting, however, you are towing 10-20 other athletes along with you. This normally gets to me when I see this at turn arounds or later into the bike when naturally your legs tire and the drafters start coming around you because they want to go faster. It’s at this time I begin the 2nd way I combat drafting, I start shouting at people. ‘If you’re going to cheat, at least do some F’ing work!’. Drafters are terrified of work, so they end up on the front and then immediately slow, letting someone else come round, they then jump on the wheel and the next guy comes through and shits himself to be doing work so try’s to slot in behind number 1 and therefore cutting up number 2. Number 2 gets pissed off now and does the same back to the guy in front and so you get a constant revolving shit show. So I ride up alongside and shout, they either laugh, swear, or cower back and I’m left alone for about 10mins before the pattern repeats itself. It’s definitely an energy cost on me but I think it’s worth it and it fires me up! Drafting is weak and it means you’re scared because you can’t run. I heard a horror story at this race, in the men’s field, an athlete who has an FTP of less than 200 rode 3mins slower than I did (an FTP of over 300). How is that possibly fair!? He’s lucky I don’t know his name or I’d call him out. Drafting rant over. I came off the bike ready to run, more because I just wanted the race to end. I was still feeling pretty shit. I began conservatively knowing I can run well on this course, I was told I was in 4th or 5th running out of T2, so I was content with running my best and seeing what happens. At around 10k I was told I’d moved to 2nd, this motivated the hell out of me. A few minutes later, I was told I had the lead and it was by over 1min. ‘Holy shit’ my goal here is to podium, but that was when I was feeling 100% and a podium doesn’t mean a win! I can win... and so began possibly the worst 30mins of running in my life. My legs were coming undone, I had a stitch that felt like a knife between my ribs and I was still coughing stuff up. I had to hold on. The final lap of the 3 was a complete battle with myself. I haven’t wanted to walk so badly in all my life, I really, really didn’t want to continue. Breathing hurt, every landing was painful and I couldn’t go faster. I’m trying but I’m a snail right now. There’s no way I’ve held this 1min gap, I’m 2nd now... oh well, good try Tom, you were first for a bit but you’re ill so there is your excuse. The Boss, @mjd_smith had text me his usual pre race message. ‘Mate: No F*^king Weakness. End of’. So that was it, I want to win, I don’t want 2nd, I’m willing to go full dark here, this isn’t murder mode this is running into a hole mode. 10min of hurt left, 5min left, 2min... I’m wobbling, I’ve up chucked down myself and now I’m on the red carpet, so slow, I’ve definitely lost the lead. Finish. All I wanted to do was collapse, which I did. I could not stand up and two women are trying to ask me to sit down. I can’t even fathom being able to do that so I just fold myself over a chair working out what is hurting the most. Thanks to Dubai racing snake Ian Farrell for checking on me, I got shipped onto the medical tent where I lay contemplating life for 40mins. The stitch went and my mouth stopped buzzing after being on a drip for a while and all was good again.
Now the thoughts come back, damn I had 1st place and I let it go. It was the winner of the female 25-29 AG, Lottie who said congrats first, then confirmed I had held on to win. I got a similar feeling on achieving a First at University, relief. Sometimes you don't realise how much you wanted something until you get it. There’s no instant gratification either, because you aren’t racing head to head at AG level you have to wait until the others have finished to know where you have finished, much like at university waiting for your work to be marked. I had an idea I was in first but in reality I didn’t know for sure, the tracker app could have been wrong or the person telling me could be. The fact just knowing there was a chance was enough to get me to react and yes, there was some negative reactions but in the end I settled on one final answer, GO FOR IT. Why did I settle there? Because I’ve been in that scenario a thousand times in my mind before and I always visually imagine reacting how I want to, with a final kick or last ditch effort. Don't dismiss your day dreaming, visualising or fantasies. One day you’ll get the chance to live them and trust me, instinct will kick in so train it to be a winning one.
Want to know my pre race set up? Head here
Want to know my fuelling plan? Head here
For a Secret Training saving, use code TW15 at checkout.
Thanks for reading. Tom Walker, Endurance Coach

One-Hour Workout: Revving Your Swim Engine
