
The Mental Edge in Triathlon: Risk, Confidence, and Leaving One Rep in the Bank
Joel Filliol introduces the Real Coaching Podcast, his background coaching elite triathletes, and the origin of "Real Coaching". Inspired by Jan Frodeno's Going Mental interview with Alistair Brownlee, Filliol reflects on the mental side of performance, distinguishing competition confidence and assertiveness from training decision-making. He recalls Brownlee's dominant 2010 Madrid win after a stress fracture and his London collapse and heat stroke, highlighting both strengths and risks of pushing limits. Using Frodeno and Brownlee's "99.9% vs 101%" discussion and Non Stanford's reflections on injury, overtraining, and Rio 2016, he argues most athletes should prioritize consistency, buffers, and arriving healthy, guided by the heuristic of finishing with "one rep left in the bank."
This podcast serves as an extended version of an article on the Real Coaching Substack, offering valuable advice for athletes and coaches alike.
00:00 Welcome and Background
01:01 Why Real Coaching
02:07 Subscribe and Services
03:18 Inspiration Going Mental
05:47 Mental Edge Framework
07:10 Alistair Racing Mindset
10:22 Madrid Comeback Win
13:06 London Heatstroke Lesson
16:35 Training 99 Percent Trap
22:45 Red Line Warning Signs
25:51 Injury Cycles and Recovery
29:26 Non Stanford Perspective
35:27 Consistency Over Perfection
37:43 One Rep in the Bank
40:19 Wrap Up and Next Time
Follow Joel on youtube, X, Instagram, facebook, LinkedIn, and substack where there is written version of this podcast.
Substack article: Risk and Reward
Substack article: Zone 1 is where the magic happens
Substack article: Progression: A powerful training heuristic
Substack article: Don't be a January Champion
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