The run is where triathlons are won and where bodies break. It is the only discipline with no machine to hold you up — every stride is a small impact your form either absorbs or pays for. So we coach the run from the ground up: run well first, then run more.
Every other discipline gives you something to lean on — the water holds you up, the bike carries your weight. Running gives you nothing. Each footfall is two to three times bodyweight passing through one leg, and you do it tens of thousands of times in a long run. Your form is the only thing standing between that load and an injury.
This is why we treat running biomechanics as the lever, not the afterthought. A cleaner stride doesn't just make you faster — it lowers the cost of every step, which means you can run more before something gives. Most age-group athletes don't get injured because they're weak or unlucky. They get injured because they keep loading a flawed pattern and call the result "bad knees."
The recovery-led principle matters most here. Running carries the highest nervous-system and structural cost of the three sports, so it's the discipline we gate most tightly to your readiness. On a suppressed-HRV morning, the run is the first thing we soften — because a hard run on a depleted system is how a niggle becomes a layoff.
“You don't earn durability by running more. You earn it by running well — then running more.”
Good running form isn't a style — it's a set of positions that keep the load where the body can carry it. We build it from the ground up: cadence and contact first, then posture and the spring, then the drive.
“Quick and light, not long and heavy.”
Cadence is the master dial. Lift your steps-per-minute toward 170–185 and overstriding fixes itself, because a faster turnover forces the foot to land closer to your body. Raise it 5% at a time with a metronome — the change is a load in itself.
“Fall forward from the ankles, not the waist.”
A 4–8° lean from the ankles lets gravity do part of the work of moving you forward. Run tall through a long spine; bending at the waist collapses the hips and shortens the stride. Posture is free speed.
“Land under yourself, not out in front.”
The single biggest braking force in running is a foot that lands ahead of the body. Whether you're mid- or forefoot matters far less than landing under your centre of mass. Get this right and every step pushes you forward instead of stopping you.
“The ankle is a spring — load it, don't sink into it.”
Economical runners have stiff, elastic ankles that store energy on contact and return it on push-off through the Achilles and calf. A soft, collapsing ankle leaks that free energy. Strides, skips, and calf strength build the spring.
“Finish the stride behind you, from the glute.”
Power comes from extending the hip and driving the leg behind you with the glute — not from reaching forward. The shuffling, sat-down stride you see late in a race is lost hip extension: tired or weak glutes. Strong hips are what hold form when fatigue arrives.
“Drive back, don't swing across.”
Elbows near 90°, hands relaxed, arms driving forward and back. Arms crossing the midline force the torso to rotate, which steers the hips off line and wastes energy. Quiet, straight arms keep the whole system tracking forward.
The heavy, wooden legs in the first kilometre off the bike are not lost fitness — they're motor-pattern recruitment. Cycling runs a hip-flexor-dominant pattern with a shortened range; when you start running, your glutes and hamstrings take five to fifteen minutes to fully switch on. That's the shuffle.
You train it away. Weekly brick sessions teach the legs to make the switch faster — over 8–12 weeks the gap between your fresh-run pace and your off-the-bike pace narrows from 10–15 sec/km down to 5–8. On race day, hold deliberately 10–15 sec/km slower for the first 3 km, let the legs open, and lift your cadence from the very first step. Forcing pace into heavy legs is how a good bike becomes a walked marathon.
Almost every running injury is a load problem or a strength problem wearing a scary name. Treat the cause, not the symptom.
Rarely a tight band — usually weak hip abductors and external rotators letting the knee collapse inward. Foam-rolling the band treats the symptom; strengthen the glute med (clamshells, lateral band walks, single-leg bridges) and the pain leaves.
Inadequate calf and foot strength plus a sudden load spike. Build eccentric calf raises and intrinsic foot strength, and respect the ramp. Act on the first morning of heel pain — left alone it becomes a season-ender.
Around 90% of cases are simply ramping too fast for the bone to remodel. Hold volume increases under 10% a week, build the tibialis anterior, and if diffuse soreness ever becomes a precise point, stop and get it imaged.
The common thread runs straight to the strength work: a body that's strong through the hips, ankles, and feet holds its form when it's tired, and form held under fatigue is what keeps you on the road.
The most common running mistake is making easy days moderately hard, which leaves you too tired to make hard days genuinely hard. We anchor effort to zones off your lactate-threshold heart rate, and keep roughly 80% of running easy.
| Zone | % LTHR | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| Z1 — Recovery | <85% | Very easy, fully conversational |
| Z2 — Aerobic | 85–89% | Easy — passes the nose-breathing test |
| Z3 — Tempo | 90–94% | Short sentences only |
| Z4 — Threshold | 95–99% | Comfortably hard, deliberate breathing |
| Z5 — VO₂max | 100–102% | Cannot talk |
The nose-breathing test keeps you honest on easy days: if you can't breathe comfortably through your nose, you're above Zone 2. Long runs run progressive — the bulk in Z2, the final fifth at marathon effort — which trains the specific skill of running well on tired legs without adding the wreckage of running them fast throughout.
Because it carries the highest impact and the highest nervous-system cost, the run is the discipline the R.A.C.E. Framework protects most carefully. Your readiness decides how much running your body can absorb today — and on the mornings it can't, we move the aerobic work to the bike or the pool instead of forcing impact onto a system that can't repair it.
Run form, run strength, and recovery aren't separate projects. Strength builds the hips and ankles that hold your stride together; recovery decides whether today's run builds you or breaks you. Trained as one system, the run stops being the thing that keeps getting you injured and becomes the thing you can finally rely on.
Swim, bike, run, strength, recovery, and the mind are coached as one system, organised around your nervous system. Here's where to go next.
Stop trading injuries for fitness. Build form, strength, and load inside a system that knows what your body can take today.