I can’t tell you how many ‘race weeks’ I have endured through my life. It must easily run into thousands.

With all the experience in the world I still haven’t mastered the art of enjoying a race week

I guess if you like resting, planning, worrying and waiting then race week is pure bliss for you. Not me, but I do know how to nurture a successful pre-race week experience.   Ultimately that means an enjoyable post-race week, and that is good enough!

Everybody gets nervous in race week.

Racing is a test of training and tests make us nervous. Test results are polarising; you pass or fail; you win or lose. That’s a lot of pressure.

Take the time to remember the preparation that has gone into your race. Remember good sessions, remember painful sessions. Understand that if you have done all you can in the allocated time that you have to be happy with the outcome of that work.

If you are a little ‘undercooked’ and haven’t been wholly focused on the task of racing that too is understandable. Do not force training in the last days before competition. You will only enter the race fatigued and unfit, which is infinitely worse than just unfit.

Use your relative freshness to your advantage. It is far better to be slightly undertrained than any over trained.

Concentrating on race routines and nutritional preparation won’t take too much energy but will improve your performance. Enter the correct mindset of going out there and doing the best with what you have’.

Sports nutrition is not complicated. Away from commercial agendas and product marketing, successful fuelling plans have remained virtually the same for decades.

Whilst professional athletes may reach for a 1% advantage in nutritional strategy, 95% of competitors simply need to drink a carbohydrate drink that they can stomach during exercising and eat sugars that are quickly absorbed and easy to digest.

Try your race fuel out in training.

In the days before a race it is important to reduce fibre intake.   Fruit, vegetables and salad play dominant roles in our daily diet but they have no place in the day preceding a race.

You need simple food that is not going to stay in your digestive tract for too long ensuring a settled, comfortable tummy for the race.

Nerves are not a bad thing. They are a physiological and hormonal response to prepare the body for action.

Once the gun fires, nerves are replaced by concentration.

If the days before a race are the worst part of my job then time spent racing is the best part. It’s better than any movie, ride or party I have ever been to.

Remember these three top tips for enjoying race day.

  • Experience people. Watch other people’s faces, their joy, their pain, their effort and acknowledge their achievement. The difference in peoples’ goals, in their shapes and their abilities is what makes this sport come alive.
  • Keep perspective. Triathlon is a sport and sport is marvellous because it mirrors life. Like life, it is the process rather than the result that matters in the end.
  • Sometimes people endure pain because they have no other choice. The grieving; the ill; the injured; the victims. Racers endure pain too, but in racing it is our choice and it is not infinite. Appreciate the freedom to experience pain, as we want. Millions would give anything for that privilege.

Great Racing

Jodie x

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Lauren Parker Leads Bahrain Victorious 13’s Medal Haul at World Championships

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The Bahrain Victorious 13 captured an impressive medal haul at the World Triathlon Championships in Wollongong, Australia this weekend.

Lauren Parker led the campaign, winning two medals including her fifth paratriathlon world title.

The paratriathlon races opened the elite competition on Saturday, where Parker once again proved untouchable. She led from the front, exiting the 750-metre swim first, hammering the 20-kilometre handbike leg with the day’s fastest split, and then powering through the 5-kilometre wheelchair run to cross the line 70 seconds clear of her nearest rival.

Unbeaten all year, Parker’s home victory carried extra meaning as she reclaimed the crown she relinquished last season.

“Everyone was so supportive out there and it definitely made me push a little bit harder,” Parker said post-race. “I wanted to get back on top again and I really worked hard for this one and I’m just happy to get it done.”

She also revealed her next sporting ambition: to qualify for the Winter Paralympic Games, with ongoing training in cross-country skiing and biathlon.

On Sunday, Parker added to her tally with a silver medal in the Para Mixed Relay World Championships, helping the Australian team to a podium finish.

In the men’s elite race, Vasco Vilaça placed fifth to secure the overall World Triathlon Championship Series bronze medal, returning to the world podium for the first time since earning silver at the one-day championship in Hamburg in 2020.

Emma Lombardi also delivered a standout performance, claiming bronze in the women’s race – her best finish of the season – and vaulting seven places to 11th overall in the Series standings. She swam into the pointy end on the 1.5-kilometre swim alongside compatriot Cassandre Beaugrand, then attacked on the 40-kilometre bike to lead onto the 10-kilometre run where she battled against the eventual winner and series champion Lisa Tertsch and a hard-charging Bianca Seregni to hold onto the final spot on the podium.

Beaugrand, who had stayed in the lead pack throughout the swim and bike, was forced to withdraw on the run to conclude her season ranked seventh overall.

The results in Wollongong wrap up the Bahrain Victorious 13’s short course season. The team now turns its attention to middle distance racing with the Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Marbella, Spain and Ironman 70.3 Bahrain on the horizon, as well as the T100 Tour’s final two stops in Dubai and Qatar.

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Kat Matthews Runs to Silver and a Record Finish in Kona

Kat Matthews Runs to Silver and a Record Finish in Kona

Kat Matthews led the charge for the Bahrain Victorious 13 on Saturday, taking her third IRONMAN World Championship silver medal at the historic final all-women’s race in Kona, Hawaii. The British star also set a new run course record on the way to her first-ever...

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