BIKEND
← Noticias

220 Triathlon · 10 de mayo de 2026 · por James Witts

Beyond VO2 max: the fitness metrics triathletes should work on

VO2 max grabs the headlines. But the physiological qualities that separate good triathletes from great ones run considerably deeper. Here’s what really matters – and when to work on each one.

Beyond VO2 max: the fitness metrics triathletes should work on

In early February, Norway’s Kristian Blummenfelt uploaded a post to his Instagram account that left endurance athletes and fans in awe. Blummenfelt, pictured in a lab, rode against a computer screen that displayed a VO2 max score of 101.1ml/kg/min. 

Before Blummenfelt’s test, the highest VO2 max recorded was by Norwegian cyclist Oskar Svendsen in 2012. Blummenfelt’s effort seemed to be an unprecedented show of physiological strength, but how does that figure relate to performance? And what other metrics matter when it comes to you becoming a strong, holistic triathlete? Here, we reveal the key areas you must focus on. Not only that, we also show you how and, importantly, when… 

VO2 max: the size of your engine

GEELONG, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 22: Kristian Blummenfelt of Norway running during the IRONMAN 70.3 Geelong on March 22, 2026 in Geelong, Australia.
A high rate of maximal oxygen consumption underpins Blummenfelt’s fast times. (Credit: by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)

Blummenfelt’s bellows translate to record-breaking performances. As a snapshot, in 2021 he set the Ironman world record of 7:21:12 at Ironman Cozumel. That broke down to 39:41 for the 3.8km swim, 4:02:35 for the 180km bike and a 2:35:24 marathon run. In short, VO2 max matters to both the elite and recreational triathlete. But why? 

“VO2 max is the size of your engine. It sets a ceiling on how much oxygen your muscles can consume during exercise, and since aerobic energy production powers any effort lasting longer than a few minutes (often less), that ceiling matters. You simply can sustain an intensity that demands more oxygen than your system can deliver,” says Jonathan Baker, one of the world’s leading exercise physiologists. 

Baker is more than aware of the importance of VO2 max. As well as running his own coaching company, Palmares (palmares.co.uk), he’s also data scientist at Mathieu van der Poel’s Alpecin Premier Tech cycling team. Baker’s worked with the Dutch superstar for years and has helped hone his physiology, so that his aerobic system can absorb hours of saddle time before, as the finish line approaches, he shifts up a gear and inevitably rides to victory. But how? 

Hit it

“The most reliably effective approach for any endurance athlete is high-intensity interval training with intervals long enough to spend meaningful time near VO2 max,” says Baker. 

“The research is fairly consistent that efforts of around 3-5mins, performed at maximal effort with adequate recovery, produce the largest adaptations. 

“In my experience, starting a little harder than you think you can maintain is a good strategy because you approach VO2 max sooner, so spend more time there during the session. Another trick is to increase your stroke rate, cadence or strides per minute – depending on discipline – as this has a higher oxygen cost and so, again, means you spend more time at a higher proportion of VO2 max.” 

These are demanding efforts but will pay off, albeit Baker caveats that if you’ve trained consistently for years, the gains become smaller. Also, we all have our individual ceilings. “It’s more genetically determined than most people want to hear,” he says. 

“Probably the most cited work in this area, the ‘Heritage Family Study’, found roughly half of VO2 max variation is attributable to genetic factors. Trainability is also partly heritable, which explains why some athletes respond dramatically to the same training that barely moves the needle for someone else. That’s not a failure of effort. It’s simple biology.” 

Don’t let your DNA dishearten you. Regular training still pays off. You just need to be adaptable. “VO2max tends to plateau after six months or so of structured work, which is why experienced athletes who keep improving usually do so via threshold and economy, not by pushing their ceiling higher.” We’ll come to those shortly… 

When to focus on VO2 max work 

As a triathlete, you should focus on VO2 max work during the build phase of your training, so after you’ve developed a solid aerobic base during the winter. One to two sessions per week in the six to 10 weeks prior to your peak racing period will raise your aerobic ceiling and improve oxygen utilisation (how proficient you burn oxygen for fuel). 

Threshold: the percentage of VO2 max you can sustain

TAUPO, NEW ZEALAND - MARCH 07: Kristian Blummenfelt of Norway on the bike during IRONMAN New Zealand on March 07, 2026 in Taupo, New Zealand
The best triathletes can also hold a high proportion of their aerobic capacity. (Credit: Fiona Goodall/Getty Images for IRONMAN)

VO2 max is a proxy for good fitness and correlates with longevity, studies showing the higher your VO2 max, the healthier, longer and arguably more enjoyable your life will be. For triathletes, especially the longer form of racing (Ironman), it’s important. But, says Baker, not everything. “Alone, it’s actually a poor predictor of who actually wins. What matters more is the proportion of VO2 max you can sustain during a race.” 

This is where threshold comes in. And so does Dr Garry Palmer of Sportstest. 

“I’ll show you the importance of threshold,” he says. “One study into top Kenyan and Caucasian runners revealed that their VO2 max scores were near identical but the Kenyan runners’ time to fatigue was around 20% longer than the Caucasians. They could hold a higher intensity of their VO2 max without fatiguing. Their lactate threshold, functional threshold, anaerobic threshold, ventilation threshold, whatever you call it, was higher.” 

What is threshold?

Your threshold represents the maximum effort you can maintain before lactate builds up more quickly than your body can remove it, increasing blood acidity and reducing power output. Having a high VO2 max is beneficial, but if you’re only able to use a small portion of it during more demanding parts of a race, you’ll be at a disadvantage compared to a rider with a lower VO2 max but a significantly higher threshold. 

Threshold training goes by several names – sweet spot, tempo, lactate threshold intervals – but they all aim to improve your body’s ability to remove lactate and enhance its buffering capacity. 

Sessions tend to be short and hard with rest periods in between. Examples include two 20-minute efforts at around 90 to 95% of threshold with five to 10 minutes’ rest in-between. Another is three 12min bursts at zone 4 with equal recovery. Or go for a sweet-spot session of 30 to 60mins at around 88 to 94% threshold. 

When to focus on threshold 

Similar to VO2 max work, threshold work really pays off during the build phase

Here’s how a week in the build phase might look. 

Monday: easy swim or ride

Tuesday: VO2 max bike intervals

Wednesday: endurance run or swim

Thursday: threshold run or bike

Friday: recovery or technique work

Saturday: long endurance brick

Sunday: optional threshold swim or steady ride

Durability: getting tired slower

Coach talks to a swimmer about her training
The ability to fatigue slower is critical in long-course triathlon. (Credit: Getty Images)

Durability is a relatively new scientific term to describe an old concept: stamina. Okay, we’re being slightly reductionist. More specifically, it’s sustaining a good level of performance despite fatigue kicking in. It’s particularly relevant to triathlon and its multi- disciplinary nature. 

The concept stemmed from cycling and the work of James Spragg of Tudor Pro Cycling. That’s why, when it comes to your second discipline, kilojoules is an important metric (which you can measure via your power meter). At an empirical level, Spragg showed that while under-23 athletes’ fatigue noticeably kicked in once 1,000 to 2,500kJ of work had been ticked off, the top endurance athletes could keep working hard well beyond 3,000kJ. In other words, they’d developed impressive fatigue resistance.

How can you test your durability?

When it comes to your bike, perform two tests: one when fresh and one when fatigued. Fresh, warm up for 20 to 30mins before unleashing a 20min maximal but sustainable effort. Record your average power output for this 20min effort. On another day, rack up 2000kJ work by riding steadily in zones two to three until your head unit displays 2000kJ. (You can raise or lower this to 1000, 1500, 2500 or even 3000kJ depending on fitness, experience and triathlon race length.) For many good amateur athletes this …

Continúa leyendo el artículo completo

Sigue la noticia en 220 Triathlon

Por respeto al trabajo del medio y a los derechos de autor, mostramos solo un extracto. Lee la pieza completa en la fuente original.

Leer artículo completo en 220 Triathlon

BIKEND es un agregador. Todos los derechos pertenecen a 220 Triathlon y a James Witts.