EPISODE · Jun 21, 2026 · 1H 2M
S2 E9. Recovery Weeks are Not Vacation Weeks
from Race Ready · host Nordic Team Solutions
This week on Race Ready, Andy and Brian dive deep into one of the most overlooked aspects of endurance training: recovery. Why do so many athletes struggle to absorb training? How much should you actually reduce volume during a recovery week? And why can treating a recovery week like a vacation sometimes leave you feeling even more tired? Drawing from their coaching experience with athletes ranging from juniors to World Cup competitors, they break down what recovery weeks should look like, how to structure them effectively, and why adaptation is the ultimate goal of training.The conversation also explores the growing world of lactate testing and threshold training. Andy shares lessons from a recent training session, including how respiratory rate can be a surprisingly powerful tool for monitoring intensity, why many athletes train their threshold sessions too hard, and whether amateur athletes really need a lactate monitor to improve. Along the way, they discuss continuous lactate monitoring technology, common mistakes athletes make during interval workouts, and how to recognize when your body is sending warning signs.Finally, the duo revisit a topic from a previous episode after receiving feedback from listeners: blood volume, mitochondrial density, and why fitness can seem to "snap back" so quickly after your first hard workouts of the season. It's a fascinating discussion on the physiology behind endurance performance, adaptation, and long-term development. Whether you're a skier, biathlete, coach, or endurance athlete preparing for your next big goal, this episode is packed with practical training wisdom you can apply immediately.Continuous lactic acid monitoring:https://www.idro.world/?shem=rimspwouoe,rimspwouohe,
What this episode covers
This week on Race Ready, Andy and Brian dive deep into one of the most overlooked aspects of endurance training: recovery. Why do so many athletes struggle to absorb training? How much should you actually reduce volume during a recovery week? And why can treating a recovery week like a vacation sometimes leave you feeling even more tired? Drawing from their coaching experience with athletes ranging from juniors to World Cup competitors, they break down what recovery weeks should look like, how to structure them effectively, and why adaptation is the ultimate goal of training.The conversation also explores the growing world of lactate testing and threshold training. Andy shares lessons from a recent training session, including how respiratory rate can be a surprisingly powerful tool for monitoring intensity, why many athletes train their threshold sessions too hard, and whether amateur athletes really need a lactate monitor to improve. Along the way, they discuss continuous lactate monitoring technology, common mistakes athletes make during interval workouts, and how to recognize when your body is sending warning signs.Finally, the duo revisit a topic from a previous episode after receiving feedback from listeners: blood volume, mitochondrial density, and why fitness can seem to "snap back" so quickly after your first hard workouts of the season. It's a fascinating discussion on the physiology behind endurance performance, adaptation, and long-term development. Whether you're a skier, biathlete, coach, or endurance athlete preparing for your next big goal, this episode is packed with practical training wisdom you can apply immediately.Continuous lactic acid monitoring:https://www.idro.world/?shem=rimspwouoe,rimspwouohe,
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S2 E9. Recovery Weeks are Not Vacation Weeks
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