This episode explores one of the most debated topics in endurance training: whether athletes should take full rest days or train every day. Drawing from elite athlete examples and recent research, the hosts explain that there’s no single “correct” approach. Instead, recovery depends on training intensity, individual preferences, and lifestyle. They highlight the importance of low-intensity (zone 1) training, the role of the nervous system in recovery, and why many athletes sabotage progress by pushing too hard on easy days. Ultimately, recovery—whether active or complete—is a critical part of performance, not a break from it.Key TakeawaysThere is no universal rule: both daily training and scheduled rest days can work.Elite athletes follow vastly different recovery strategies—context matters.Active recovery (zone 1 movement) can enhance recovery through parasympathetic activation.Many athletes train “easy days” too hard, limiting adaptation.Zone 1 and Zone 2 training are crucial for building aerobic capacity and heart function.Full rest days are especially valuable when fatigued, sick, or mentally drained.Recovery is not just physical—it’s also mental and emotional.Walking, mobility work, and light movement are highly underrated recovery tools.Low-volume athletes may not need full rest days but should manage intensity carefully.Consistency and quality of sessions matter more than rigid schedules.Ep. 34 Øyvind Sandbakk: The Sc… - Race Ready - Apple PodcastsPaul Warloski - Simple Endurance CoachingMarjaana Rakai | Nordic Performance Lab
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