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The principles that drive adaptation in the world's best endurance athletes are the same principles that drive adaptation in people who train seriously but are not competing. The application changes. The fundamentals do not.
Dr Dan Plews is an applied sports scientist, coach and world-class endurance athlete. He holds a doctorate in applied heart rate variability from Auckland University of Technology, has coached athletes to more than 30 world and Olympic titles, and has set records at both the Ironman World Championship and in HYROX.
In this episode, we discuss:
Why the gap between elite endurance science and everyday training is smaller than most people think. The framework Dr Plews uses with Olympic athletes, identifying the gap between current capacity and the target and then designing training to close it, applies equally to someone training six hours a week for health and longevity.
Whether the concurrent training interference effect actually matters for non-athletes. Dr Plews explains that while the interference effect is real, it primarily matters at the highest levels of performance. For most people training six or fewer hours a week, getting the work done in a recovered state matters more than the sequencing of strength and endurance sessions.
What zone two training actually is and where the common misconceptions come from. Zone two is defined by physiological markers, not by feel or a percentage of maximum heart rate, and most people who think they are training in zone two are working considerably harder than the research supports.
How heart rate variability reflects the state of the autonomic nervous system and why it is one of the most useful tools available for managing training load and recovery. Dr Plews explains how to interpret HRV trends over time, what a suppressed morning reading actually tells you, and how to use it to make better daily training decisions.
How low carbohydrate approaches and fueling strategies affect endurance adaptation, why metabolic flexibility matters for both performance and long-term health, and what the evidence shows about carbohydrate availability during training and competition.
Key insight:
Elite endurance athletes succeed by applying the right stimulus at the right time and recovering properly between sessions. That principle does not change when you have six hours a week instead of thirty. The gap between what the best coaches in the world know and what everyday people apply is smaller than it looks, and this episode closes it.
Topics: zone two training, concurrent training, interference effect, heart rate variability, HRV, endurance training, polarised training, low carbohydrate training, metabolic flexibility, fueling for endurance, HYROX, triathlon, longevity and exercise, training load management, strength and endurance, applied sports science