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Why You Need Cross-Training in Your Plan
Episode 110

Why You Need Cross-Training in Your Plan

The Athlete's Compass · Athletica

January 8, 202633m 39s

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Show Notes

In Episode 110, the hosts of The Athletes Compass dive into the overlooked powerhouse of endurance training: cross-training. Dr. Paul Laursen, Marjaana Rakai, and Paul Warloski explore how activities like rowing, skiing, and cycling aren't just recovery fillers—they're performance-enhancing tools backed by science. The trio debates whether strength training should count as cross-training, unpacks when specificity should take priority, and shares stories of elite athletes like Kyle Chalmers and Mahe Drysdale whose success came from training smarter, not harder. More than anything, the conversation is a powerful reminder that enjoying your training—and staying injury-free—may be the ultimate performance advantage.

Key Takeaways

  1. Strength Training ≠ Cross-Training: It’s foundational and should be part of every endurance athlete’s program.
  2. Specificity Still Matters: But the need for it increases closer to race day.
  3. Cross-Training Works: It can directly improve aerobic fitness, reduce injury risk, and maintain performance.
  4. Minimum Effective Dose Exists: You might not need as much sport-specific work as you think.
  5. Joy Enhances Adaptation: Enjoyable training (including cross-training) supports better recovery and long-term consistency.
  6. Elite Athletes Use It: Olympic champions like Mahe Drysdale and Nils van der Poel used 50%+ cross-training in their routines.
  7. Technique is Sport-Specific: For technical sports like swimming or skiing, keeping some year-round specificity is key.
  8. Balance is Critical: Cross-training supports mental freshness and helps athletes avoid burnout.