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Today’s guest is Sue Sotir. Sue is currently a coach at Breakthrough Performance Coaching, where she coaches athletes from complete endurance/triathlon beginners to those that cross the finish line at the Ironman World Championships. Before Breakthrough, Sue was a D3 swimmer at Tufts University and raced her first triathlon in 1989. Since then, she has raced triathlons from sprint to Ironman distances. In this episode, I discuss with Sue the training and coaching aspects of swimming, the art and science of coaching an athlete for an endurance event, as well as performance nutrition and post-race recovery. As someone new to endurance sports, some of her thoughts around stretching, nutrition, and recovery were eye-opening for me and may also be for a lot of you listening. Hope this episode provides some new and valuable insight for all you athletes out there!
Timestamps
00:01:40 Her expertise as a coach, swimming background
00:09:35 Swimming's impact on the body vs. running and cycling
00:13:15 Importance of technique in swimming
00:19:15 When did she start coaching
00:24:21 Her coaching philosophy
00:26:04 Why do people want to do Ironman triathlons?
00:29:33 The art of coaching
00:33:23 Journaling/tracking training, good-better-how
00:38:10 Yoga for endurance training, is stretching beneficial?
00:44:35 Importance of body self awareness during training
00:48:35 How long should you train before doing your first Ironman?
00:51:00 How did she get into competing in triathlons
00:53:58 Effects of stress on training*
00:59:22 Nutrition pre-race and during the race
01:14:45 Recovery and rest after and Ironman
01:20:00 What's kept her driven as a competitor and coach
01:23:14 Words of motivation for someone looking to compete in their first endurance event
*Stress is the best predictor of injury, but past injury is also another good predictor of future injury
By Chase Rosa5
1919 ratings
Today’s guest is Sue Sotir. Sue is currently a coach at Breakthrough Performance Coaching, where she coaches athletes from complete endurance/triathlon beginners to those that cross the finish line at the Ironman World Championships. Before Breakthrough, Sue was a D3 swimmer at Tufts University and raced her first triathlon in 1989. Since then, she has raced triathlons from sprint to Ironman distances. In this episode, I discuss with Sue the training and coaching aspects of swimming, the art and science of coaching an athlete for an endurance event, as well as performance nutrition and post-race recovery. As someone new to endurance sports, some of her thoughts around stretching, nutrition, and recovery were eye-opening for me and may also be for a lot of you listening. Hope this episode provides some new and valuable insight for all you athletes out there!
Timestamps
00:01:40 Her expertise as a coach, swimming background
00:09:35 Swimming's impact on the body vs. running and cycling
00:13:15 Importance of technique in swimming
00:19:15 When did she start coaching
00:24:21 Her coaching philosophy
00:26:04 Why do people want to do Ironman triathlons?
00:29:33 The art of coaching
00:33:23 Journaling/tracking training, good-better-how
00:38:10 Yoga for endurance training, is stretching beneficial?
00:44:35 Importance of body self awareness during training
00:48:35 How long should you train before doing your first Ironman?
00:51:00 How did she get into competing in triathlons
00:53:58 Effects of stress on training*
00:59:22 Nutrition pre-race and during the race
01:14:45 Recovery and rest after and Ironman
01:20:00 What's kept her driven as a competitor and coach
01:23:14 Words of motivation for someone looking to compete in their first endurance event
*Stress is the best predictor of injury, but past injury is also another good predictor of future injury