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HYROX has moved from “fitness racing” to a specific, mainstream target for runners and triathletes — and it’s showing up inside the coaching market fast. More endurance coaches are quietly adding HYROX blocks, hybrid memberships, and “run + strength” packages to keep athletes engaged (especially when triathlon feels a long way off).
In this episode, Cam makes the case that endurance coaches should take HYROX seriously — not just as a training format, but as a retention and growth lever for your business.
Because if your athlete leaves your ecosystem for 8–16 weeks to join a gym program or HYROX-specific coach, you risk:
Cam’s take: the coach who can say “Awesome — let’s do it properly and keep your long-term endurance goals intact” is the coach who keeps athletes long-term.
What You’ll Learn
- Endurance athletes doing HYROX as an off-season race target
- HYROX athletes “graduating” into half marathons, marathons, trail, and triathlon — and needing long-term structure (your strength as an endurance coach)
- Station competence → education + reps
- Equipment/logistics → gym partnerships + smart substitutions
- Programming conflicts → treat HYROX like a real season with trade-offs
- Brand confusion → position as endurance-first hybrid coaching
Key Takeaway
HYROX isn’t a weird outlier anymore — it’s becoming a mainstream “second sport” for endurance athletes who want something competitive, measurable, and community-driven.
You don’t need to become a full-time HYROX specialist.
But if your athletes are asking about it, you need an answer — and ideally, an offer.
Because the coach who can say “Yes — and we’ll do it properly” is the coach who keeps the relationship, keeps continuity, and builds a business that lasts.
You can read the blog version of this episode over at Training Tilt
Or you can watch the video version on Youtube here
Training Tilt is an all in one coaching and e-commerce platform that helps coaches get better results for the clients and their businesses. You can learn more about Training Tilt here
By Training TiltHYROX has moved from “fitness racing” to a specific, mainstream target for runners and triathletes — and it’s showing up inside the coaching market fast. More endurance coaches are quietly adding HYROX blocks, hybrid memberships, and “run + strength” packages to keep athletes engaged (especially when triathlon feels a long way off).
In this episode, Cam makes the case that endurance coaches should take HYROX seriously — not just as a training format, but as a retention and growth lever for your business.
Because if your athlete leaves your ecosystem for 8–16 weeks to join a gym program or HYROX-specific coach, you risk:
Cam’s take: the coach who can say “Awesome — let’s do it properly and keep your long-term endurance goals intact” is the coach who keeps athletes long-term.
What You’ll Learn
- Endurance athletes doing HYROX as an off-season race target
- HYROX athletes “graduating” into half marathons, marathons, trail, and triathlon — and needing long-term structure (your strength as an endurance coach)
- Station competence → education + reps
- Equipment/logistics → gym partnerships + smart substitutions
- Programming conflicts → treat HYROX like a real season with trade-offs
- Brand confusion → position as endurance-first hybrid coaching
Key Takeaway
HYROX isn’t a weird outlier anymore — it’s becoming a mainstream “second sport” for endurance athletes who want something competitive, measurable, and community-driven.
You don’t need to become a full-time HYROX specialist.
But if your athletes are asking about it, you need an answer — and ideally, an offer.
Because the coach who can say “Yes — and we’ll do it properly” is the coach who keeps the relationship, keeps continuity, and builds a business that lasts.
You can read the blog version of this episode over at Training Tilt
Or you can watch the video version on Youtube here
Training Tilt is an all in one coaching and e-commerce platform that helps coaches get better results for the clients and their businesses. You can learn more about Training Tilt here