Best-Practice Endurance Training – Olypmic coaches share unifying principles to fine-tune your training

Best-Practice Endurance Training – Olympic coaches unifying principles to fine-tune your training

The findings from a recent study by Sandbakk (2025) reveal a complex and carefully managed approach to endurance training among the elite Norwegian coaches. Despite variations across different sports, several unifying principles were observed.

Typical world-class season in Olympic endurance sports. Based on Haugen et al. Green = preparation period, red = competition period, yellow = transition period. ** indicates weeks of peak performance during international championships or world tours. A = altitude camp (2–4 weeks), T = laboratory testing

Coaches largely followed a traditional periodisation structure, progressing from general preparation phases focused on building an aerobic base towards increasingly specific, higher-intensity training closer to competition periods. Early phases emphasised large volumes of low-intensity training to enhance endurance capacity and aerobic efficiency. As competitions approached, training became more race-specific, emphasising intensity, tactical elements, and technical skills relevant to each sport.

Annual training time and number of sessions (a), time distribution across different training forms (b), exercise modalities (c) and intensity zones (d), as well as the amount and type of intensive sessions (e, f) described by world-class coaches across Olympic endurance sports

A typical training week for the athletes was anchored by 2–3 key training days. These days feature multiple demanding sessions, designed to provide substantial physiological stimuli. Between these key days, recovery sessions or lower-intensity activities were strategically placed to allow for adaptation while maintaining training consistency. The balance of stress and recovery was a central concern, with coaches systematically monitoring athletes’ responses to training to avoid overtraining and optimise performance gains.

Monitoring of training load and recovery involved both objective and subjective measures. To adjust training programmes, coaches used physiological testing, training diaries, perceived exertion ratings, and regular athlete-coach communication. Recovery strategies were proactively integrated, including rest days, lighter training sessions, and non-training interventions when necessary to support physical and psychological readiness.

In all sports, most of the total training time (85–95%) is devoted to aerobic endurance training, in which a significant portion of this (80–90%) is dedicated to LIT (zones 1–2)

Although these general patterns were common across all sports studied, notable sport-specific differences emerged. Training volume and frequency were adapted to each discipline’s physiological demands and mechanical constraints. For instance, sports such as rowing and cross-country skiing, which involve large muscle mass and significant mechanical load, require careful management of strength training to avoid excessive fatigue. Conversely, endurance runners, who face high mechanical stresses from impact, had comparatively lower overall training volumes but placed greater emphasis on quality running sessions and injury prevention strategies.


*In triathlon, swimming, cycling and running account for approximately 30, 45 and 25% respectively of the total endurance training volume (hours) in both periods
**Note that in some sports, especially long-distance running and swimming, many of the Zone 3 sessions are designed in a way that makes metabolic markers within the Zone, while speed is approaching Zone 4–5

Intensity distribution, often referred to as the “polarised” model in endurance sports literature, varies by sport and the individual needs of athletes. Some disciplines, such as swimming and speed skating, adopted slightly different intensity distributions based on the specifics of race demands and competition schedules.

Cross-training played a different role depending on the sport. In running, for example, non-weight-bearing activities such as cycling or swimming were often used to increase aerobic volume without adding additional impact stress. In other sports like biathlon or cross-country skiing, training blends modalities naturally as part of the discipline.

Strength training was universally recognised as necessary, but differed in emphasis and implementation. Sports demanding high power output, such as rowing and speed skating, incorporate heavy strength work throughout the training year. Endurance runners and triathletes applied strength training more selectively, often focusing on core stability, injury prevention, and maintenance rather than significant gains in muscle mass.

Overall, the findings illustrate a pragmatic and experience-informed approach to coaching, characterised by careful planning, responsiveness to individual athlete needs, and a deep understanding of the demands of each sport. The study highlights that, while foundational training principles are broadly applicable, successful coaching at the elite level requires nuanced adaptation to sport-specific and athlete-specific factors.

Source: springer

Take Out

Coaches emphasise high training quality through session optimisation, load-recovery management, and competition preparation.

Periodisation strategies are similar across sports, following a traditional model with decreasing training volume and increasing competition-specific work closer to competition.

Coaches take a pragmatic approach to adapt training to various constraints and consistently prioritise high volumes of zone 1 training, supplemented by 3–5 intensive sessions, 2–3 days each week.

Despite shared principles, sport-specific differences arise due to competition demands, exercise mode constraints, and organisational factors.

 

 

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8 thoughts on “Best-Practice Endurance Training – Olypmic coaches share unifying principles to fine-tune your training

  1. Super interesting article! Could you please add an explanation what the two groups A and B mean in the large table?

  2. tfk – Seeing these numbers and their emphasis on Zone 1/2 work, I was wondering if you have worked out an effective protocol for using DFA1 to determine your zones? I tinkered with it a few years ago but haven’t looked back into it lately and wonder if it’s easier now to do regularly.

      1. I do remember that post now. So it sounds like despite the fact it’s a Suunto product, I could simply use the Suunto smartphone app with my Polar H9? For running workouts, it would need to be on a treadmill as I don’t carry my phone with me.

  3. After some further reading: The zones are not super clear (i also check the original study without much luck). Which is weird given the importance for interpretation the numbers. My *guess* is what is called “zone 1” in the zone distribution chart ends at ventilatory threshold (LT1) and this is roughly aligned with Z1+Z2 in a common zone model (e.g. Coggan).
    Because it would be weird if the norwegian athletes spend 80% of their sessions in recovery-session-intensity (=Z1 in Coggan, Friel or 80/20).

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