
What Most Triathletes Ignore (But Shouldn’t): Why “Easy Days” Make You Faster
After more than a decade training and racing in triathlon — from local sprints to long-course events — there’s one lesson I learned the hard way, and that most athletes still struggle to accept:
Easy days are not optional. They are essential.
In a sport built on discipline, grit and the constant pursuit of improvement, many triathletes fall into the same trap: believing that “more intensity” equals “more progress”.
But physiology doesn’t work like that — and neither does long-term performance.
Today, I want to share a perspective that took me years to truly understand, and that has completely changed the way I train.
1. The biggest mistake: training in the “grey zone”
Most age-group triathletes spend far too much time in an effort level that is neither easy nor hard: the infamous grey zone.
It feels productive — you finish sweaty, tired, convinced you had a strong session — but it’s actually the least effective place to spend most of your training.
Why?
Because:
- It’s too hard to allow real recovery
- It’s too easy to develop speed, power or threshold gains
The result: stagnation, fatigue, and a constant feeling of “I train so much, but nothing changes”.
2. Easy training… actually builds speed
Low-intensity training increases:
- Aerobic efficiency
- Fat metabolism
- Mitochondrial density
- Recovery capacity
These are the foundations of endurance sports.
Without them, your high-intensity sessions lose impact and you never reach your true race potential.
Elite athletes know this.
If you look at the training distribution of any top long-distance triathlete, you’ll notice something surprising:
80–90% of their weekly volume is very easy.
If the pros slow down… why do so many amateurs feel guilty doing the same?
3. The confidence killer: running slow on purpose
Most triathletes struggle with easy days because they don’t want to feel slow.
I get it — running 1 minute or more slower per kilometre can be uncomfortable for the ego.
But performance isn’t about ego; it’s about physiology.
Your body doesn’t care how fast you look.
It cares about stimulus, adaptation and recovery.
4. The real magic: consistency
Here’s the real benefit of embracing easy days:
You stop breaking down. You stop interrupting progress. You stay consistent.
And consistency beats motivation, talent and even perfect programming.
A triathlete who trains smart — not hardest — is the one who stands on the start line confident, healthy and fast.
5. How to apply this starting today
Here’s a simple framework any triathlete can start using immediately:
✔️ Keep most sessions in Zone 2
You should be able to breathe comfortably and hold a conversation.
✔️ Make hard sessions truly hard
Threshold, VO2 and race-pace workouts should be uncomfortable and purposeful.
✔️ Respect recovery
Sleep, fueling and stress matter as much as the sessions themselves.
✔️ Leave the ego at the door
Slow training doesn’t make you slow — it gives you permission to race fast.
Triathlon is a lifestyle of discipline… but also self-awareness.
If you want longevity, better race performances and a healthier relationship with the sport, embrace this truth:
You don’t get faster by always pushing.
You get faster by knowing when not to.
And the beauty of this approach?
It works for beginners, experienced athletes, and everyone in between.