Reflecting on the Rift Valley

Three months later...
I didn't release an article immediately after returning from Iten, the reason, Iten is a place that is close to my heart. We have history. Whether it was my dad going out there in the '70s and shaping the athlete in me or retracing his footstep three and a half years ago and connecting with a place I'd grown up hearing so much about. I went on this most recent trip as a coach, willing and ready to be coached.
Marcus, Tom, and I all set out with very few expectations and were blown away by what we had learned. The consequences of what we experienced have been profound and personal.
I have been open about our trip, with my personal stories and anecdotes, a podcast or two, and more importantly, my athletes, who have seen some changes in my coaching approach. Now I am ready to share what I have learned from a place that truly is the 'home of the champions.'
A Coaching Methodology
I witnessed a different coaching style while I was in Iten, and it made me question a lot of my practices. I have summarized in four parts the coaching methodology that I thought about the most and that I have implemented into my coaching practices.
The Simplicity
What we witnessed there was incredible and honestly eye-opening. Just imagine this, as an athlete, you have no idea what you're doing. You do what you're told. As a coach, the group you coach turns up to where you are and tells them what they are going to do in very vague detail. No real explanation of why, simply what. This requires a deep level of trust and confidence in each other.
In some ways, I feel it is important to make sure an athlete understands the why to sessions. However, I am now far less concerned about giving 'boring' sessions or repeated sessions because I know their value, and my athletes trust that I am programming sessions that will enable them to reach their goals. The theory of the training is solid, and repetition breeds success. Repetition doesn't have to be complex for the athlete. They simply have to get on and do it.
If you look at Kenyan athletes and how their training is structured, you'll find a very simplistic structure; hard run, easy run, tempo, fartlek, hill efforts, long-run. All at specific paces, and that's it. In fact, when I openly ask 'Is that it?' when given the instruction 1;1;20, the person who answered 'Yes.' had just won the Kenyan national cross country title.
The Mind Game
Our coach, Ian Kiprono, stated that coaching is 80% tending to an athlete's mental game and 20% physical training. I wouldn't say I 100% agree with this. Still, I agree that the building of discipline, respect between coach and athlete, and athlete behaviors and attitudes are essential to developing a trusting relationship. As coaches, we need to appreciate, nurture and respect this aspect of our job.
Since coming back from Iten, I've been looking beyond training as physiological. I often think, how is this session going to test the athlete? By purposefully making it hard or pushing someone beyond what they believe they are capable of, you can unlock potential they never knew was in them. Equally as important, teaching them how to accept failure and respond to it will benefit the pursuit of a goal and other situations in life. I am also giving more ownership to the athletes I coach, creating a more self-reliant athlete. This makes more productive communication, as the focus of dialog moves away from micro aspects of a session to a much broader macro perspective.
The Community
I don't just mean knocking about each other daily over great coffee and chat. I mean a strong athletic community. Surrounding yourself with people who have an honest and positive attitude and who understand your situation is super important. I have reflected on some of the most successful athletes I have trained. The strong network was with them throughout their athletic journey.
I recently attended a talk with leaders who have excelled in their field, and one of the points raised was the importance of a solid support network that supports your ambition and inspires you to do more than you ever thought you could. As an athlete, your community also keeps you accountable, they lift you and will not shy away from giving you a kicking if you lose perspective.
In Iten, runners always run together, eat together and succeed together.
The Big Picture
Considering the bigger picture is something I've really tried to implement in my coaching process and is one of the lessons that hold the most significant value for me. As a coach, I'm winning if I can get across the implications of a session, where it holds value in the week, and what it's helping to build over the months. In this way, a session is rarely a failure. I embody the bigger picture, and the trust that I have built with my athletes means that they trust me and, subsequently, the process. The athlete can simply focus on doing each session with the knowledge that all the puzzle pieces will come together.
Iten is an incredible place, and being there reinforced my love of running, the beauty of a good running stride, the power of focus, the love of my job as an endurance coach, and the Innerfight Endurance community.
Everything I have discussed in this article was highlighted to me while we were in Iten. If you want to hear some more anecdotes, join this muzungu over a coffee, we will have a great chat!

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

Three months later...
I didn't release an article immediately after returning from Iten, the reason, Iten is a place that is close to my heart. We have history. Whether it was my dad going out there in the '70s and shaping the athlete in me or retracing his footstep three and a half years ago and connecting with a place I'd grown up hearing so much about. I went on this most recent trip as a coach, willing and ready to be coached.
Marcus, Tom, and I all set out with very few expectations and were blown away by what we had learned. The consequences of what we experienced have been profound and personal.
I have been open about our trip, with my personal stories and anecdotes, a podcast or two, and more importantly, my athletes, who have seen some changes in my coaching approach. Now I am ready to share what I have learned from a place that truly is the 'home of the champions.'
A Coaching Methodology
I witnessed a different coaching style while I was in Iten, and it made me question a lot of my practices. I have summarized in four parts the coaching methodology that I thought about the most and that I have implemented into my coaching practices.
The Simplicity
What we witnessed there was incredible and honestly eye-opening. Just imagine this, as an athlete, you have no idea what you're doing. You do what you're told. As a coach, the group you coach turns up to where you are and tells them what they are going to do in very vague detail. No real explanation of why, simply what. This requires a deep level of trust and confidence in each other.
In some ways, I feel it is important to make sure an athlete understands the why to sessions. However, I am now far less concerned about giving 'boring' sessions or repeated sessions because I know their value, and my athletes trust that I am programming sessions that will enable them to reach their goals. The theory of the training is solid, and repetition breeds success. Repetition doesn't have to be complex for the athlete. They simply have to get on and do it.
If you look at Kenyan athletes and how their training is structured, you'll find a very simplistic structure; hard run, easy run, tempo, fartlek, hill efforts, long-run. All at specific paces, and that's it. In fact, when I openly ask 'Is that it?' when given the instruction 1;1;20, the person who answered 'Yes.' had just won the Kenyan national cross country title.
The Mind Game
Our coach, Ian Kiprono, stated that coaching is 80% tending to an athlete's mental game and 20% physical training. I wouldn't say I 100% agree with this. Still, I agree that the building of discipline, respect between coach and athlete, and athlete behaviors and attitudes are essential to developing a trusting relationship. As coaches, we need to appreciate, nurture and respect this aspect of our job.
Since coming back from Iten, I've been looking beyond training as physiological. I often think, how is this session going to test the athlete? By purposefully making it hard or pushing someone beyond what they believe they are capable of, you can unlock potential they never knew was in them. Equally as important, teaching them how to accept failure and respond to it will benefit the pursuit of a goal and other situations in life. I am also giving more ownership to the athletes I coach, creating a more self-reliant athlete. This makes more productive communication, as the focus of dialog moves away from micro aspects of a session to a much broader macro perspective.
The Community
I don't just mean knocking about each other daily over great coffee and chat. I mean a strong athletic community. Surrounding yourself with people who have an honest and positive attitude and who understand your situation is super important. I have reflected on some of the most successful athletes I have trained. The strong network was with them throughout their athletic journey.
I recently attended a talk with leaders who have excelled in their field, and one of the points raised was the importance of a solid support network that supports your ambition and inspires you to do more than you ever thought you could. As an athlete, your community also keeps you accountable, they lift you and will not shy away from giving you a kicking if you lose perspective.
In Iten, runners always run together, eat together and succeed together.
The Big Picture
Considering the bigger picture is something I've really tried to implement in my coaching process and is one of the lessons that hold the most significant value for me. As a coach, I'm winning if I can get across the implications of a session, where it holds value in the week, and what it's helping to build over the months. In this way, a session is rarely a failure. I embody the bigger picture, and the trust that I have built with my athletes means that they trust me and, subsequently, the process. The athlete can simply focus on doing each session with the knowledge that all the puzzle pieces will come together.
Iten is an incredible place, and being there reinforced my love of running, the beauty of a good running stride, the power of focus, the love of my job as an endurance coach, and the Innerfight Endurance community.
Everything I have discussed in this article was highlighted to me while we were in Iten. If you want to hear some more anecdotes, join this muzungu over a coffee, we will have a great chat!

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.

Three months later...
I didn't release an article immediately after returning from Iten, the reason, Iten is a place that is close to my heart. We have history. Whether it was my dad going out there in the '70s and shaping the athlete in me or retracing his footstep three and a half years ago and connecting with a place I'd grown up hearing so much about. I went on this most recent trip as a coach, willing and ready to be coached.
Marcus, Tom, and I all set out with very few expectations and were blown away by what we had learned. The consequences of what we experienced have been profound and personal.
I have been open about our trip, with my personal stories and anecdotes, a podcast or two, and more importantly, my athletes, who have seen some changes in my coaching approach. Now I am ready to share what I have learned from a place that truly is the 'home of the champions.'
A Coaching Methodology
I witnessed a different coaching style while I was in Iten, and it made me question a lot of my practices. I have summarized in four parts the coaching methodology that I thought about the most and that I have implemented into my coaching practices.
The Simplicity
What we witnessed there was incredible and honestly eye-opening. Just imagine this, as an athlete, you have no idea what you're doing. You do what you're told. As a coach, the group you coach turns up to where you are and tells them what they are going to do in very vague detail. No real explanation of why, simply what. This requires a deep level of trust and confidence in each other.
In some ways, I feel it is important to make sure an athlete understands the why to sessions. However, I am now far less concerned about giving 'boring' sessions or repeated sessions because I know their value, and my athletes trust that I am programming sessions that will enable them to reach their goals. The theory of the training is solid, and repetition breeds success. Repetition doesn't have to be complex for the athlete. They simply have to get on and do it.
If you look at Kenyan athletes and how their training is structured, you'll find a very simplistic structure; hard run, easy run, tempo, fartlek, hill efforts, long-run. All at specific paces, and that's it. In fact, when I openly ask 'Is that it?' when given the instruction 1;1;20, the person who answered 'Yes.' had just won the Kenyan national cross country title.
The Mind Game
Our coach, Ian Kiprono, stated that coaching is 80% tending to an athlete's mental game and 20% physical training. I wouldn't say I 100% agree with this. Still, I agree that the building of discipline, respect between coach and athlete, and athlete behaviors and attitudes are essential to developing a trusting relationship. As coaches, we need to appreciate, nurture and respect this aspect of our job.
Since coming back from Iten, I've been looking beyond training as physiological. I often think, how is this session going to test the athlete? By purposefully making it hard or pushing someone beyond what they believe they are capable of, you can unlock potential they never knew was in them. Equally as important, teaching them how to accept failure and respond to it will benefit the pursuit of a goal and other situations in life. I am also giving more ownership to the athletes I coach, creating a more self-reliant athlete. This makes more productive communication, as the focus of dialog moves away from micro aspects of a session to a much broader macro perspective.
The Community
I don't just mean knocking about each other daily over great coffee and chat. I mean a strong athletic community. Surrounding yourself with people who have an honest and positive attitude and who understand your situation is super important. I have reflected on some of the most successful athletes I have trained. The strong network was with them throughout their athletic journey.
I recently attended a talk with leaders who have excelled in their field, and one of the points raised was the importance of a solid support network that supports your ambition and inspires you to do more than you ever thought you could. As an athlete, your community also keeps you accountable, they lift you and will not shy away from giving you a kicking if you lose perspective.
In Iten, runners always run together, eat together and succeed together.
The Big Picture
Considering the bigger picture is something I've really tried to implement in my coaching process and is one of the lessons that hold the most significant value for me. As a coach, I'm winning if I can get across the implications of a session, where it holds value in the week, and what it's helping to build over the months. In this way, a session is rarely a failure. I embody the bigger picture, and the trust that I have built with my athletes means that they trust me and, subsequently, the process. The athlete can simply focus on doing each session with the knowledge that all the puzzle pieces will come together.
Iten is an incredible place, and being there reinforced my love of running, the beauty of a good running stride, the power of focus, the love of my job as an endurance coach, and the Innerfight Endurance community.
Everything I have discussed in this article was highlighted to me while we were in Iten. If you want to hear some more anecdotes, join this muzungu over a coffee, we will have a great chat!

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.

Three months later...
I didn't release an article immediately after returning from Iten, the reason, Iten is a place that is close to my heart. We have history. Whether it was my dad going out there in the '70s and shaping the athlete in me or retracing his footstep three and a half years ago and connecting with a place I'd grown up hearing so much about. I went on this most recent trip as a coach, willing and ready to be coached.
Marcus, Tom, and I all set out with very few expectations and were blown away by what we had learned. The consequences of what we experienced have been profound and personal.
I have been open about our trip, with my personal stories and anecdotes, a podcast or two, and more importantly, my athletes, who have seen some changes in my coaching approach. Now I am ready to share what I have learned from a place that truly is the 'home of the champions.'
A Coaching Methodology
I witnessed a different coaching style while I was in Iten, and it made me question a lot of my practices. I have summarized in four parts the coaching methodology that I thought about the most and that I have implemented into my coaching practices.
The Simplicity
What we witnessed there was incredible and honestly eye-opening. Just imagine this, as an athlete, you have no idea what you're doing. You do what you're told. As a coach, the group you coach turns up to where you are and tells them what they are going to do in very vague detail. No real explanation of why, simply what. This requires a deep level of trust and confidence in each other.
In some ways, I feel it is important to make sure an athlete understands the why to sessions. However, I am now far less concerned about giving 'boring' sessions or repeated sessions because I know their value, and my athletes trust that I am programming sessions that will enable them to reach their goals. The theory of the training is solid, and repetition breeds success. Repetition doesn't have to be complex for the athlete. They simply have to get on and do it.
If you look at Kenyan athletes and how their training is structured, you'll find a very simplistic structure; hard run, easy run, tempo, fartlek, hill efforts, long-run. All at specific paces, and that's it. In fact, when I openly ask 'Is that it?' when given the instruction 1;1;20, the person who answered 'Yes.' had just won the Kenyan national cross country title.
The Mind Game
Our coach, Ian Kiprono, stated that coaching is 80% tending to an athlete's mental game and 20% physical training. I wouldn't say I 100% agree with this. Still, I agree that the building of discipline, respect between coach and athlete, and athlete behaviors and attitudes are essential to developing a trusting relationship. As coaches, we need to appreciate, nurture and respect this aspect of our job.
Since coming back from Iten, I've been looking beyond training as physiological. I often think, how is this session going to test the athlete? By purposefully making it hard or pushing someone beyond what they believe they are capable of, you can unlock potential they never knew was in them. Equally as important, teaching them how to accept failure and respond to it will benefit the pursuit of a goal and other situations in life. I am also giving more ownership to the athletes I coach, creating a more self-reliant athlete. This makes more productive communication, as the focus of dialog moves away from micro aspects of a session to a much broader macro perspective.
The Community
I don't just mean knocking about each other daily over great coffee and chat. I mean a strong athletic community. Surrounding yourself with people who have an honest and positive attitude and who understand your situation is super important. I have reflected on some of the most successful athletes I have trained. The strong network was with them throughout their athletic journey.
I recently attended a talk with leaders who have excelled in their field, and one of the points raised was the importance of a solid support network that supports your ambition and inspires you to do more than you ever thought you could. As an athlete, your community also keeps you accountable, they lift you and will not shy away from giving you a kicking if you lose perspective.
In Iten, runners always run together, eat together and succeed together.
The Big Picture
Considering the bigger picture is something I've really tried to implement in my coaching process and is one of the lessons that hold the most significant value for me. As a coach, I'm winning if I can get across the implications of a session, where it holds value in the week, and what it's helping to build over the months. In this way, a session is rarely a failure. I embody the bigger picture, and the trust that I have built with my athletes means that they trust me and, subsequently, the process. The athlete can simply focus on doing each session with the knowledge that all the puzzle pieces will come together.
Iten is an incredible place, and being there reinforced my love of running, the beauty of a good running stride, the power of focus, the love of my job as an endurance coach, and the Innerfight Endurance community.
Everything I have discussed in this article was highlighted to me while we were in Iten. If you want to hear some more anecdotes, join this muzungu over a coffee, we will have a great chat!

Three months later...
I didn't release an article immediately after returning from Iten, the reason, Iten is a place that is close to my heart. We have history. Whether it was my dad going out there in the '70s and shaping the athlete in me or retracing his footstep three and a half years ago and connecting with a place I'd grown up hearing so much about. I went on this most recent trip as a coach, willing and ready to be coached.
Marcus, Tom, and I all set out with very few expectations and were blown away by what we had learned. The consequences of what we experienced have been profound and personal.
I have been open about our trip, with my personal stories and anecdotes, a podcast or two, and more importantly, my athletes, who have seen some changes in my coaching approach. Now I am ready to share what I have learned from a place that truly is the 'home of the champions.'
A Coaching Methodology
I witnessed a different coaching style while I was in Iten, and it made me question a lot of my practices. I have summarized in four parts the coaching methodology that I thought about the most and that I have implemented into my coaching practices.
The Simplicity
What we witnessed there was incredible and honestly eye-opening. Just imagine this, as an athlete, you have no idea what you're doing. You do what you're told. As a coach, the group you coach turns up to where you are and tells them what they are going to do in very vague detail. No real explanation of why, simply what. This requires a deep level of trust and confidence in each other.
In some ways, I feel it is important to make sure an athlete understands the why to sessions. However, I am now far less concerned about giving 'boring' sessions or repeated sessions because I know their value, and my athletes trust that I am programming sessions that will enable them to reach their goals. The theory of the training is solid, and repetition breeds success. Repetition doesn't have to be complex for the athlete. They simply have to get on and do it.
If you look at Kenyan athletes and how their training is structured, you'll find a very simplistic structure; hard run, easy run, tempo, fartlek, hill efforts, long-run. All at specific paces, and that's it. In fact, when I openly ask 'Is that it?' when given the instruction 1;1;20, the person who answered 'Yes.' had just won the Kenyan national cross country title.
The Mind Game
Our coach, Ian Kiprono, stated that coaching is 80% tending to an athlete's mental game and 20% physical training. I wouldn't say I 100% agree with this. Still, I agree that the building of discipline, respect between coach and athlete, and athlete behaviors and attitudes are essential to developing a trusting relationship. As coaches, we need to appreciate, nurture and respect this aspect of our job.
Since coming back from Iten, I've been looking beyond training as physiological. I often think, how is this session going to test the athlete? By purposefully making it hard or pushing someone beyond what they believe they are capable of, you can unlock potential they never knew was in them. Equally as important, teaching them how to accept failure and respond to it will benefit the pursuit of a goal and other situations in life. I am also giving more ownership to the athletes I coach, creating a more self-reliant athlete. This makes more productive communication, as the focus of dialog moves away from micro aspects of a session to a much broader macro perspective.
The Community
I don't just mean knocking about each other daily over great coffee and chat. I mean a strong athletic community. Surrounding yourself with people who have an honest and positive attitude and who understand your situation is super important. I have reflected on some of the most successful athletes I have trained. The strong network was with them throughout their athletic journey.
I recently attended a talk with leaders who have excelled in their field, and one of the points raised was the importance of a solid support network that supports your ambition and inspires you to do more than you ever thought you could. As an athlete, your community also keeps you accountable, they lift you and will not shy away from giving you a kicking if you lose perspective.
In Iten, runners always run together, eat together and succeed together.
The Big Picture
Considering the bigger picture is something I've really tried to implement in my coaching process and is one of the lessons that hold the most significant value for me. As a coach, I'm winning if I can get across the implications of a session, where it holds value in the week, and what it's helping to build over the months. In this way, a session is rarely a failure. I embody the bigger picture, and the trust that I have built with my athletes means that they trust me and, subsequently, the process. The athlete can simply focus on doing each session with the knowledge that all the puzzle pieces will come together.
Iten is an incredible place, and being there reinforced my love of running, the beauty of a good running stride, the power of focus, the love of my job as an endurance coach, and the Innerfight Endurance community.
Everything I have discussed in this article was highlighted to me while we were in Iten. If you want to hear some more anecdotes, join this muzungu over a coffee, we will have a great chat!

One-Hour Workout: Revving Your Swim Engine
