Articles

Exercise technique tips, training advice, and race reflections that you can apply to your own strength and endurance training.

Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

How to Schedule Strength and Endurance Training

First and foremost, it's important to remember that the best time to strength train is whenever you can fit it in to your schedule! It's better to complete a strength training session at a less than optimal time than to just not do it altogether! With that being said, there are some best practices for scheduling strength alongside endurance training, which I will try to cover in this article.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

How Long Should a Strength Workout be for Runners and Cyclists?

A mistake I see some endurance athletes make is trying to cram too much into their workouts, resulting in excessive fatigue both during and after the session that carries over into their running or cycling performance. However, you don’t need to spend several hours in the gym or include every lower body exercise variation known to man for a strength session to be effective.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

How Many Times a Week Should Runners and Cyclists Strength Train?

Runners and cyclists don’t have to spend several hours in the gym, multiple days a week, to benefit from strength training. The optimal dose will vary from individual to individual, but here are some guidelines to make sure your strength work complements and supports your life and endurance training, and doesn’t detract from it.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Three Ideas to Help You Train Consistently This Winter

The lack of races or events on the calendar makes the winter a great time to focus on being consistent with your training and building a solid base of strength and endurance. Here are 3 of my favorite training concepts to help you stay consistent with both your strength and endurance training this winter.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Two Kinds of Goals to Set This Year

My mom informed me that since I’m a personal trainer I should make a New Year’s post about goal setting. I’m a little late, but as far as I know you’re still allowed to set goals after January 1st, so here we go. I like to focus on setting two kinds of goals: Long-term goals and process goals. In my experience, having these two types of goals in place gives you the best chance of success and actually achieving what you want.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Three Ways to Structure Your Strength Workouts

I have always loved programming and writing workouts ever since I started strength training 10+ years ago. I wanted to share some of my favorite workout “templates” that I use when designing workouts for both myself and athletes I work with. Hopefully these can give you some ideas on how to organize and plan your own strength workouts if you are feeling disorganized or unsure where to start.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Tips for Training Outdoors this Winter

We’ve reached that time of year when the cold weather has forced many of us to start doing some of our endurance training indoors. While the bike trainer and treadmill are a great way to maintain or even build fitness in the offseason, I still think it’s important to get outside once or twice a week to do your primary sport or activity. Here are some tips to make the most of your outdoor training this winter.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

You Only Get One Body…

The best investment you can make as an endurance athlete for both performance and injury prevention is not a new bike or pair of shoes, but in your own body, and the untapped strength and movement potential already within you.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

How to Do More Pull Ups and Chin Ups

Pull ups are arguably one of the best upper body exercises out there for endurance athletes. I love seeing my clients get to the point where they can do them comfortably, even if it’s just a couple good reps. I wanted to share some tips and ideas to improve your pull ups, whether you just want to be able to do more of them or are working towards your first unassisted rep.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Why Should Endurance Athletes do Strength & Conditioning?

I think there are three main reasons why endurance athletes should be engaging in a targeted strength and conditioning program: To Improve their endurance performance, reduce their risk of injury, and (perhaps most importantly) to be more than the sport.

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End-of-Season Evaluation and Reflection

The changing leaves and cooler temperatures signal the beginning of the “off season” for many runners and cyclists, which is typically a period of reduced training stress and racing and more time spent resting or cross training. For many athletes this is a good time to do a mental and physical “reset” and reflect on how the last year of training and competition went.

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Mount Greylock Time Trial

The 9-mile Mount Greylock Time Trial has a little bit of everything. Big walls, fast rollers, punchy steep bits, and an unrelenting ascent to the highest point in Massachusetts. This was my first time riding up Greylock, and it was probably the toughest hour of riding I’ve ever done. Here are just some thoughts I had the morning after the event.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

The 80/-10/+10 Principle for Strength and Endurance Training

I first learned about 80/-10/+10 when I started strength training over 10 years ago, but I think the principle applies to endurance training as well. I’ve personally found it helpful for managing the emotional highs and lows that come with training and not getting too fixated on individual workouts, both the good and the bad.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

My Current Strength Training Routine

I don’t share much about what I do in the gym, mostly because 1) it’s not too exciting/impressive 2) I’m not sure if anyone really cares. But maybe this will give you some ideas for your own strength workouts, or at least show that strength training need not be too complicated or complex.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Why Small Things Matter

These two phrases have been on my mind lately. The little actions we take on a daily or weekly basis (both the positive and the negative) seem insignificant or of little consequence in the moment. But when you zoom out and give things enough time to accumulate and combine with each other they can add up to something remarkable.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Accommodating Resistance

I’ve been experimenting with accommodating resistance (AR) recently by adding band tension to some of my usual lifts, so I figured I’d make an article about it. AR might seem like an advanced technique for elite athletes, but it’s something anyone can incorporate into their training, either to improve performance or add some novelty.

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Supported Single-Leg RDL Variations

The single-leg RDL is often the next exercise progression for those who’ve mastered the hinge and double-leg RDL. But for some people it’s a pretty big jump from double to single-leg, and many spin their wheels and become frustrated by how hard they are to learn and progress beyond very light weight. If balance is the thing preventing you from learning or loading the single-leg RDL, you might want to try some supported variations.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

Building a Home Gym for Endurance Athletes

A runner who does online strength training with me is planning to put together a home gym and asked for some equipment recommendations. This is my list of priority and preferred strength equipment for endurance athletes (and really most other people out there) who are looking to build a home gym.

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Ryan Dupuis Ryan Dupuis

The Hex Bar Deadlift

The hex bar deadlift is one of my favorite exercises and my preferred deadlift variation both for myself and the individuals I work with. In my option, if you’re an endurance athlete looking for an exercise to develop lower body strength and power, then there aren’t many options better than the hex bar deadlift.  

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