Logo

    KoopCast

    Coach Jason Koop covers training, nutrition and recent happenings in the ultramarathon world.

    en-us220 Episodes

    People also ask

    What is the main theme of the podcast?
    Who are some of the popular guests the podcast?
    Were there any controversial topics discussed in the podcast?
    Were any current trending topics addressed in the podcast?
    What popular books were mentioned in the podcast?

    Episodes (220)

    Coach Roundtable - What we learned this year with Addison Smith and Adam Ferdinandson #199

    Coach Roundtable - What we learned this year with Addison Smith and Adam Ferdinandson #199

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    CTS coaches Addison Smith and Adam Ferdinandson join the podcast for an insightful coach roundatble. We discuss subjectivity from coach participation in sport, the delicate balance of simultaneously supporting and challenging your athletes, and the importance of being there either in-person or virtually for your athletes before, during, and after events. We round out our discussion with takeaways from the UESCA conference and the developing professionalism of ultramarathon coaching.

    Episode highlights:

    (20:24) Addison’s takeaway: supporting your athlete while managing expectations and challenging them as athletes, being the cheerleader while also pushing challenge, fueling example

    (28:50) The athlete owns their training: a material coaching philosophy, taking the ego out of coaching, examples, your athlete’s training is not your training, changing vocabulary to reflect coaching philosophy

    (35:58) UTMB example: Addison on UTMB, feeling like you have a teammate, example of an athlete who lost all their gear on the way to UTMB, impromptu Billy Yang care package, athlete feedback

    Additional resources:

    SUBSCRIBE to Research Essentials for Ultrarunning

    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com
    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon and Audible.

    Mastering Interval Training for Ultrarunners with Michael Rosenblat, PhD #198

    Mastering Interval Training for Ultrarunners with Michael Rosenblat, PhD #198

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Michael Rosenblat is a researcher and coach with expertise in kinesiology, physiotherapy, and exercise science. In this episode we discuss his three most recent meta-analyses on interval structure, including how to translate cycling intervals to protocols for runners, interval duration and macrostructure, and the relationship between VO2peak and time trial performance.

    Episode highlights:

    (14:24) Translating interval structure: it depends, direct translation usually works, tendon loading, injury prevention, recovery, metabolic load is probably 1:1

    (32:59) HIIT volume: example of 20x1min versus 4x5min, metabolic differences, total session volume does not correlate with improvement, duration of work bout does, maximizing versus optimizing time at intensity

    (51:14) VO2max vs. performance: %change in VO2peak does not correlate with %change in performance, Paula Radcliffe example, VO2max plateaus with years of training but performance keeps improving, CTS lab example

    Additional resources:


    Papers discussed-
    The Additional Effect of Training Above the Maximal Metabolic Steady State on VO2peak, Wpeak and Time‑Trial Performance in Endurance‑Trained Athletes: A Systematic Review, Meta‑analysis, and Reality Check

    Effect of Interval Training on the Factors Influencing Maximal Oxygen Consumption: A Systematic Review and Meta‑Analysis

    Programming Interval Training to Optimize Time‑Trial Performance: A Systematic Review and Meta‑Analysis

    SUBSCRIBE to Research Essentials for Ultrarunning
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.
    Information on coaching-https://trainright.com/
    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Anti-doping Solutions for Ultrarunning Part 1-USADA and Dr. Fedoruk (2021) #197

    Anti-doping Solutions for Ultrarunning Part 1-USADA and Dr. Fedoruk (2021) #197

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Dr. Fedoruk is the Chief Science Officer for USADA. In this episode, we discuss the landscape of anti-doping solutions and what USADA does to combat doping within the sports they have jurisdiction over.

    Episode highlights:

    (32:48) Global anti-doping structure: USADA is one of over 100 signatories of the World Anti-Doping Agency, protecting the independence of the anti-doping framework, application to professional sport, examples

    (45:40) Therapeutic use exemptions (TUEs): why TUEs exist, medical prescriptions, ADHD example, independent specialists examine blinded samples to confirm diagnoses are legitimate

    (56:14) Contamination: supplements, increasingly precise tests pick up on contaminated medication, examples of contamination from pharmaceutical manufacturers and restaurants, solutions, minimal reporting limits, aligning technology and policy, examples

    Additional resources:

    https://www.globaldro.com/Home
    USADA Athlete Resources-https://www.usada.org/resources/
    USADA Reasoned Decision-
    https://www.usada.org/athletes/results/u-s-postal-service-pro-cycling-team-investigation/
    SUBSCRIBE to Research Essentials for Ultrarunning-https://www.jasonkoop.com/research-essentials-for-ultrarunning
    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com
    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon and Audible

    High Performance Coaching in Ultrarunning with Guillaume Millet & Vincent Viet #196

    High Performance Coaching in Ultrarunning with Guillaume Millet & Vincent Viet #196

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Guillaume Millet and Vincent Viet manage the Salomon High-performance program for their elite athletes.

    Episode highlights:

    (12:57) HPC coaching structure: team sports the U.S., the high performance coordinator, bringing in other experts

    (24:30) Building athlete confidence: the process takes time, not all athletes are interested, being careful with the framing of HPC, examples, injury prevention

    (44:08) Who should create HPC: example of athlete concerns about the HPC as a screening process within Salomon, recognizing bias, theorizing athlete-driven HPC, data confidentiality

    Additional resources:

    SUBSCRIBE to Research Essentials for Ultrarunning
    Information on coaching
    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Potential Long Term Health Effects of Ultrarunning with Nick Tiller PhD (2021) #195

    Potential Long Term Health Effects of Ultrarunning with Nick Tiller PhD (2021) #195

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Originally released on October 14, 2021.

    Nick Tiller Research is a fellow at the Lundquist Institute at Harbor-UCLA where he studies clinical respiratory and exercise physiology, and the physiology / pathophysiology of ultra-endurance exercise. He is also a columnist at Skeptical Inquirer Magazine, and the author of The Skeptic's Guide to Sports Science.

    Episode highlights:

    (20:01) Recap of potential cardiovascular health effects: athletes who train high volumes are not at risk, races and high intensity training are more likely to be problematic, the emergent state of ultramarathon research

    (27:20) Respiratory risks of racing ultras: chronically no different than other endurance sports, drops in acute lung function, most are not clinically significant, asthma or other conditions mean you start from a lower baseline and can experience clinically significant problems

    (35:23) The renal system: UTMB health policy, banning NSAIDs, duration, heat, altitude, dehydration, and hyponatremia all compound, NSAIDs make everything worse, acute kidney dysfunction in ultras is common and generally non harmful, chronic effects are unknown

    Additional resources:

    Potential Long-Term Health Problems Associated with Ultra-Endurance Running: A Narrative Review-https://www.researchgate.net/publication/354387155_Potential_Long-Term_Health_Problems_Associated_with_Ultra-Endurance_Running_A_Narrative_Review
    Nick’s Interview on Triathlete magazine-https://www.triathlete.com/culture/the-fight-against-pseudoscience-and-bad-training-advice-in-endurance-sports/
    Nick’s Book: The Skeptic’s Guide to Sports Science-https://www.amazon.com/Skeptics-Guide-Sports-Science-Confronting/dp/1138333123
    SUBSCRIBE to Research Essentials for Ultrarunning-https://www.jasonkoop.com/research-essentials-for-ultrarunning
    Information on coaching-
    https://www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon and Audible.

    Exogenous Ketones-Claims vs Reality with Brendan Egan, PhD. #194

    Exogenous Ketones-Claims vs Reality with Brendan Egan, PhD. #194

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Brendan is an Associate Professor of Sport and Exercise Physiology and Head of School for the School of Health and Human Performance at DCU. His current research investigates skeletal muscle function and adaptation across the life course, with special interest in the synergy between nutrition and exercise interventions ranging from athletes to older adults. His research group performs human trials involving both acute and chronic interventions for outcomes around performance (physical and cognitive), recovery, and adaptation. It has employed various experimental designs and has been complimented by molecular analysis tools, including transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics. Nutrients recently and presently under investigation include caffeine, creatine, omega-3 fatty acids, resveratrol, leucine, protein hydrolysates, beetroot juice, and exogenous ketones.

    Brendan received his BSc in Sport and Exercise Science from the University of Limerick in 2003, MSc in Sport and Exercise Nutrition from Loughborough University in 2004, and Ph.D. from Dublin City University in 2008 before completing two years of post-doctoral training with Prof. Juleen Zierath’s Integrative Physiology group at the Karolinska Institute, Sweden. His doctoral studies focussed on skeletal muscle adaptation to exercise, and in particular, the continuity between acute molecular responses to individual bouts of exercise and adaptations induced by exercise training, whereas his post-doctoral training utilized animal models and in vitro cell systems to investigate the transcriptional regulation of skeletal muscle development and mechanisms of insulin resistance. He joined the faculty in the School of Public Health, Physiotherapy, and Sport Science at University College Dublin in 2011, where he spent five years before moving to DCU. He is also a Visiting Research Scientist at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, Pensacola, FL, USA, and a Principal Investigator at the National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology at DCU.

    Outside of academia, through his sporting career as an inter-county Gaelic footballer with Sligo from 2003 to 2017, Brendan has had a lifelong association with sport, training, and performance at all levels of competition, from grassroots to elite level, and also practices in the field as a performance nutritionist with emphasis on field-based team sports, and endurance athletes.

    Episode highlights:

    (25:27) The “preferred energy source”: media sources, ketones become the dominant fuel in the brain during starvation, dominant does not mean preferred, ketogenesis is a survival mechanism, exogenous ketones can rescue heart failure

    (35:30) Ketones as glycogen sparing: Tour de France background, mechanistic basis, two existing relevant studies, one showed glycogen sparing and one showed no difference, differences in methods, the theory is solid but the proof is lacking

    (57:27) Ketones for protein generation study: design, downstream markers from mTOR increase with ketones, protein synthesis was not measured directly but is likely, once again the mechanistic theory is promising but the proof is pending, ketones for sleep

    Additional  resources:

    Papers discussed-

    Exogenous Ketone Supplements in Athletic Contexts: Past Present and Future

    Ketone monoester ingestion increases postexercise serum erythropoietin concentrations

    Mitochondria and Amplifying Adaptation with Professor David Bishop #193

    Mitochondria and Amplifying Adaptation with Professor David Bishop #193

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:


    Professor Bishop is a world leader in muscle exercise physiology, with over 250 scientific publications. He leads the Skeletal Muscle and Training research group at Victoria University in Australia.

    The focus of his research group is to examine how diet, exercise, and genes interact to regulate skeletal muscle adaptations.

    Throughout his career, Professor bishop has held many different and important leadership positions within the exercise science community in Australia.  He was the youngest-ever president of Exercise & Sport Science Australia (ESSA). He has been named one of the top 25 influencers of exercise & sports sciences in Australia. He has twice been on the Excellence in Research Australia (ERA) panel. He was made a fellow of three different organizations, Exercise and Sports Science Australia (ESSA), the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), and the European College of Sports Science (ECSS). Professor Bishop is now a director of the Victorian Institute of Sport (VIS) and an assistant editor of Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise.

    Episode highlights:

    (19:56) Physiological limits to mitochondrial mass: homeostasis and why athletes plateau, mitochondria can never be 100% muscle mass, car analogy and spatial limitations

    (43:29) Acute responses to training with low carb availability: cell signaling and mitochondrial benefits at lower intensities, no benefit at high intensities, train low can augment moderate intensity, recovering from low carb takes time

    (54:12) Mechanisms of sodium bicarbonate: lactate and hydrogen ions move down concentration gradients, sodium bicarbonate lowers blood acidity by pulling hydrogen ions out of the muscle, applications to anaerobic performance

    Additional resources:

    David’s Twitter

    Podcast with Renee Eastman on Physiological Testing

    Mighty Mitochondria with Iñigo San Millán


    Effects of Dietary Supplements on Adaptations to Endurance Training

    Principles of Exercise Prescription, and How They Influence Exercise-Induced Changes of Transcription Factors and Other Regulators of Mitochondrial Biogenesis


    Get my deep dive newsletter Research Essentials for Ultrarunning

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Iron Metabolism and Supplementation for Ultrarunners with Dr. Alannah McKay #192

    Iron Metabolism and Supplementation for Ultrarunners with Dr. Alannah McKay #192

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:


    Alannah McKay completed a Bachelor of Science (Exercise, Health, and Sports Science) at the University of Western Australia in 2014. Subsequently, Alannah completed a post-graduate position within the Physiology department at the Australian Institute of Sport, where she was involved in preparing many Australian athletes before the 2016 Rio Olympic and Paralympic games. Since Alannah has submitted her Ph.D. titled “The Effect of Dietary Manipulation on Iron Metabolism and the Immune System in Elite Athletes,” which was undertaken in partnership with the Australian Institute of Sport, Western Australian Institute of Sport, and the University of Western Australia. Alannah joined Australian Catholic University as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in 2020. Her research will continue to explore the impact of diet and exercise on a range of health outcomes in athletes, with a specific interest in iron metabolism.

    Episode highlights:

    (20:48) Iron metabolism and low-carb diets: 3 week ketogenic intervention followed by <24 hours of carbohydrate intake, low carb diets decrease hepcidin, the acute carb intervention did not restore hepcidin, low carb states are when you are at greater risk for iron deficiency

    (39:40) What iron supplements to use: ferrous sulfate, 100mg of elemental iron, maltofer, deficiency versus topping off, tailor frequency and dosing, avoid multivitamins

    (47:39) Frequency of supplementation: absolute and relative absorption, the more iron you consume the more you absorb, alternate day dosing is well supported, mechanistic reasoning

    Additional resources:

    Papers discussed-

    CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO THE IDENTIFICATION AND TREATMENT OF IRON DEFICIENCY IN ATHLETES

    Acute carbohydrate ingestion does not influence the post-exercise iron-regulatory response in elite keto-adapted race walkers


    Chronic Adherence to a Ketogenic Diet Modifies Iron Metabolism in Elite Athletes

    Six Days of Low Carbohydrate, Not Energy Availability, Alters the Iron and Immune Response to Exercise in Elite Athletes

    Acute carbohydrate ingestion does not influence the post-exercise iron-regulatory response in elite keto-adapted race walkers

    Sign up for Research Essentials for Ultrarunning

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Live High, Train Low- Lessons from 25 years of Practice with Olivier Girard, PhD | KoopCast Episode #191

    Live High, Train Low- Lessons from 25 years of Practice with Olivier Girard, PhD | KoopCast Episode #191

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Dr. Olivier Girard is an Associate Professor in Human Performance and Research Director of the Sports Science, Exercise, and Health Department at the University of Western Australia.

    He spent 20 years in the field of exercise physiology and biomechanics developing and facilitating performance outcome-based solutions for elite athletes (mainly team/racket sports), coaches, and their support teams. In Perth, Dr. Girard leads an environmental physiology special interest group.

    Olivier completed his Doctoral Degree (2006) in Human Movement Sciences at the University of Montpellier in France. For eight years, he worked as Research Scientist at Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, a FIFA and IOC-accredited medical center. He was employed at Lausanne University, Switzerland, and Murdoch University in Perth, Australia.

    Olivier has published over 200 articles in peer-reviewed journals and 25 book chapters and has presented his work at more than 180 national/international conferences.

    Episode highlights:

    (47:32) Timing altitude interventions: pre-race acclimation is high risk-high reward, using altitude to enable harder training requires a second step, Koop’s low risk to high reward process

    (56:35) Lesson 5: managing fatigue is key, altitude exposes your weaknesses exponentially, you need to nail the basics

    (1:18:29) Intermittent hypoxic training: intervals and resistance training in hypoxia, potential benefits to muscle strength, combining hematological and non-hematological training, live high-train low and high

    Additional resources:

    https://www.oliviergirard.com/

    Subscribe to Research Essentials for Ultrarunning
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-
    https://www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Continuous Glucose Monitors in Ultramarathon with Amy-Lee Bowler, PhD (c) | KoopCast Episode #190

    Continuous Glucose Monitors in Ultramarathon with Amy-Lee Bowler, PhD (c) | KoopCast Episode #190

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Amy-Lee Bowler is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Bond in Australia. Her research seeks to understand the current practice pathways and subsequent dietary management used by sports dietitians when assessing and managing energy availability in athletes.

    Episode highlights:

    (25:45) Personalization of blood glucose: new study on standard glucose levels in athletes, “metabolic flexibility”, lipid oxidation, tighter glucose control in endurance athletes, intensity, duration, diet, and training level all change blood glucose

    (35:41) CGMs for identifying acute low energy availability: subjective assessments might be more valuable, examples

    (55:30) CGMs are not tools for athletes: it is difficult for athletes to determine anything useful from the data, examples, currently CGMs must be used with practitioners

    Additional resources:

    The Use of Continuous Glucose Monitors in Sport: Possible Applications and Considerations-https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/ijsnem/33/2/article-p121.xml
    Low Energy Availability in Female Athletes: from the Lab to the Field-https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33832385/
    Sports Dietitians Practices for Assessing and Managing Athletes at Risk for Low Energy Availability-https://www.jsams.org/article/S1440-2440(22)00036-6/fulltext
    Sign up for Research Essentials for Ultrarunning-https://www.jasonkoop.com/research-essentials-for-ultrarunning

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.
    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    How To Build A Valuable Coach-Athlete Relationship with Dominic Guinto, CTS Athlete Services Director (2022) | KoopCast Episode #189

    How To Build A Valuable Coach-Athlete Relationship with Dominic Guinto, CTS Athlete Services Director (2022) | KoopCast Episode #189

    View all timestamps and show notes on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    (2022 Re-Release)

    Dominic Guinto is the Director of Athlete Services for CTS. His role is dedicated to finding the right solution for endurance athletes across the world.

    Episode highlights:

    (28:00) The best athlete feedback: why do you want a coach, expectations

    (34:05) Long term athlete-coach relationships: finding a coach that the athlete believes in

    (1:00:40) Coach mentorship: the importance of collective experience in professional development

    Additional resources:

    Get Research Essentials for Ultrarunning
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.
    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com
    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Addiction in Ultrarunning with Dr. Harlan Austin | KoopCast Episode #188

    Addiction in Ultrarunning with Dr. Harlan Austin | KoopCast Episode #188

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Harlan Austin, Ph.D., is a licensed psychologist with national certifications in sport psychology and addiction psychology.  With 20 years of experience working in the sport and clinical psychology field, Harlan has worked with individuals focused on high performance, return-to-performance, and leadership development. Harlan has served in many roles, including performance consultant, clinician, program developer, and clinical director. He has lectured and presented at national conventions on the topics of sport and performance psychology, clinical sport psychology, athlete psychological assessment, athlete rehabilitation, and athlete return to sport. Throughout his career, Harlan has had the opportunity to work with professional athletes (NBA, MLB, NFL, Boxing, LAX, Ski, and Snowboard), healthcare professionals, US Special Forces groups, and high-level executives.

    Episode highlights:

    (14:20) Why athletes are higher risk for addiction: no simple answer, appreciating social context, hard work and celebration, examples, adolescence and sport, letdown in sport

    (30:00) Changing behavior to aid performance: meet addicts where they have motivation to change, develop incongruence between addiction and performance

    (41:20) The process of recovery: removing the substance is step one, finding out what was going on under the surface is step two, parallels to the athlete mentality, transferable skillset

    Additional resources:

    Resources covered-
    CAGE Substance Abuse Screening Tool
    https://www.recoveryanswers.org/
    https://www.samhsa.gov/
    https://www.addicttoathlete.com/
    ------------------------------------------------------
    Get Research Essentials for Ultrarunning
    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.
    Information on coaching-https://www.trainright.com
    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Adapting Ultramarathon Nutrition for High Altitude with Meredith Terranova | KoopCast Episode #187 (2022)

    Adapting Ultramarathon Nutrition for High Altitude with Meredith Terranova | KoopCast Episode #187 (2022)

    View all timestamps and show notes on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    (2022 Re-Release)

    Meredith Terranova is a performance nutritionist to many of today’s top ultrarunners. She has been helping her clients reach their nutritional goals since 2004.  Through Meredith’s guidance, her clients have reached goals ranging from losing weight, wellness nutrition, race nutrition, training and recovery nutrition, and others using a real world nutrition approach. 

    During the course of this conversation we discuss Meredith’s approach to nutrition planning, how to find the right foods for you and her famous ‘gas station’ protocol.

    Episode highlights:

    (18:20) Compounding variables at altitude: increased need for carbs, intensity, hydration, temperature, processing fuel, pacing

    (26:39): Summary of nutrition advice: effort first, hydration second, the Nibble Principle third, practice your routine

    (38:28) Logistics and routine: plan your low-altitude training nutrition around your high altitude nutrition and race logistics

    Additional resources:

    Meredith’s Website: https://eatingandlivinghealthy.com

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning:
    Amazon-https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09MYVR8P6
    Audible-https://www.audible.com/pd/Training-Essentials-for-Ultrarunning-Second-Edition-Audiobook/B09P38S2PR?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-290525&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_290525_rh_us

    Information on coaching-
    https://www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Blood Biomarkers with Charlie Pedlar, PhD | KoopCast Episode #186

    Blood Biomarkers with Charlie Pedlar, PhD | KoopCast Episode #186

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Charlie Pedlar, Ph.D. is a researcher at St. Mary’s University in Twickenham, London. He started out as a research assistant for the British Olympic Association based at Northwick Park Hospital. He has since held positions as London Region Lead Physiologist at the English Institute of Sport (primary sport: British Athletics) and Chief Science Officer at Orreco. Charlie was the Director of the Centre for Health, Applied Sport and Exercise Science at St Mary’s between 2009 and 2015. Whilst embedded in high-performance sport, Charlie completed his Ph.D. at Brunel University in 2007 entitled 'Sleep and Exercise during Acclimation and Acclimatization to Moderate Altitude in Elite Athletes, which involved a combination of field data collected during moderate altitude training camps and laboratory data, investigating responses to altitude in the GB national squads for Speed skating, Biathlon, Rowing, Kayaking, and Athletics.

    Episode highlights:

    (19:19) Necessary biomarkers to track: full blood count (FBC) aka  complete blood count (CBC), ferritin, Vitamin D, nutrition-related markers

    (25:30) Standardizing blood tests: timing tests around training and menstrual cycles (continued at 39:41), fasted and rested conditions, guidelines for getting good test data, practicality of standardized blood testing

    (54:30) Blood testing and performance: companies don’t know if you are performing well, they can’t tell you what is optimal, retrospective data analysis, health and performance are complementary, athlete intake example

    Additional resources:

    https://www.orreco.com/

    Papers discussed-
    A case study of an iron-deficient female Olympic 1500m runner.

    Blood biomarker testing for high-performance physiology and nutrition: current perspectives, limitations, and recommendations.

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    How to Design Ultramarathon Training Camps with CTS Coaches Ryne Anderson and Cliff Pittman | KoopCast Episode #185 (2022)

    How to Design Ultramarathon Training Camps with CTS Coaches Ryne Anderson and Cliff Pittman | KoopCast Episode #185 (2022)

    View all timestamps and show notes on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    (2022 Re-Release)

    The weekend training camp is an essential element of most ultrarunner’s training programs. Coaches Ryne Anderson, Cliff Pittman and host Jason Koop discuss how to set up the most effective training camp possible inclusive of goals, volume and the right timing relative to your race.

    Ryne Anderson is a CTS Expert coach located in Knoxville, TN. He has been coaching ultrarunners since 2018 and joined CTS in 2021. Ryne has run and coached numerous athletes with limited access to mountains that had successful races at Bighorn 100, Leadville 100, CCC 100k, and San Juan Solstice 50. Integrating strength and mobility work is vital to an athlete’s overall development, and incorporates running-specific strength work with each athlete he coaches.

    Cliff Pittman began pursuing his passion for endurance sports at the age of 11 when his parents signed him up for a community track club. He competed on a national level in both track and cross country through high school, but opted to enlist in the military shortly after 9/11, and delayed college until later in life. After a decade in the military, he transitioned into a corporate career, but continued to train several military athletes preparing for special operations. Cliff continued his passion for endurance sports by training for triathlons and marathons. In 2017, he launched a Life Coaching Practice that enabled me to leave my corporate career. But as he made efforts to grow that business, more and more athletes were seeking his help with their running goals and events. Cliff took this as a sign to align his purpose and efforts with what he is really passionate about – coaching athletes. In 2019, he transitioned to full-time run coaching with a specialty in helping ultra/trail athletes.

    Episode highlights:

    (45:06) Ideal scheduling for training camps: scheduling around training blocks, scheduling camps based on convenience

    (48:38) Boundaries on training camp volume changes: using midweek runs as a benchmark, duration and frequency of runs, using races

    (1:03:26) Summary: duration, scheduling, physiological versus psychological benefits, practicing race strategy and nutrition, specificity of mode, volume increases, have goals

    Additional resources:

    https://trainright.com/coaches/ryne-anderson/

    Ryne on Instagram

    https://trainright.com/coaches/cliff-pittman/

    Cliff on Instagram

    Buy Koop’s new book on Amazon or Audible

    Information on coaching-

    www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media

    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    How Training for Ultras Can Empower Your Pregnancy Journey with Carla Meijen PhD and Stephanie Howe PhD | KoopCast Episode #184

    How Training for Ultras Can Empower Your Pregnancy Journey with Carla Meijen PhD and Stephanie Howe PhD | KoopCast Episode #184

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:


    Carla Meijen comes back on the podcast to discuss her newest book Empowered Birth which takes lessons learned during training and racing and translates and reframes them to empower the pregnancy and birthing process.

    Episode highlights:

    (9:20) Stephanie’s athlete-pregnancy journey: mental and physical pain, the unknown, adapting plans, personal anecdote, pushing through pain

    (44:27) Conflicting athletic and maternal identities: athletic journeys evolve over decades, maternal journeys evolve over months, unfair expectations for shifting identity, identity takes experience and time

    (50:00) The post-pregnancy athletic journey: bumps in the road, sick toddlers, avoiding expectations of linear progress, tapping into support, the post-baby PB, process goals

    Additional resources:

    You can find her book on her website or Amazon.

    Papers discussed- Pregnancy and Motherhood in elite sport

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible

    Information on coaching-www.trainright.com

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    The Neuroscience of Ultrarunning Part 2-A Coach Roundtable | KoopCast Episode #183

    The Neuroscience of Ultrarunning Part 2-A Coach Roundtable | KoopCast Episode #183

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Coaches Jason Koop, AJW, and Neal Palles discuss the takeaways from last week’s podcast with Dr. Scott Frey.

    Episode highlights:

    (6:36) Adjusting training for life stress: methodologies, acceptance and awareness, using RPE, experiential training and pain, “taper” your cognitive load

    (23:46) Koop’s takeaway: your relationship with workout-related pain is malleable, athletes see short-term improvement from intensity workouts that physiology cannot explain, examples, individual variation

    (42:53) DNF spiral: the DNF prediction machine, team sports example, hard interventions to break the cycle, examples

    Additional resources:

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-https://trainright.com/

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    The Neuroscience of Ultrarunning with Scott Frey, PhD | KoopCast Episode #182

    The Neuroscience of Ultrarunning with Scott Frey, PhD | KoopCast Episode #182

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Dr. Scott H. Frey is an internationally renowned neuroscientist, psychologist, accomplished endurance athlete, author, and teacher. Scott helps individuals and groups identify and realize their aspirations. He can be reached at: Scott@CerebralPerformance.com

    Episode highlights:

    (33:42) Factors that reduce pain tolerance: sleep deprivation, anxiety and stress, limited mental bandwidth, maximizing cognitive reserve, automate your race strategy

    (44:49) Time-course for adaptation to pain: physical analogy, relatively acute increased ability to recruit motor units over the short term, chronic adaptations to training, psychology follows a similar trend

    (55:48) How to practice mental skills: mental skills for intervals are different from mental skills for long runs, simulate the race environment mentally as well as physically,  CerebralPerformance.com

    Additional resources:

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-https://trainright.com/

    Koop’s Social Media
    Twitter/Instagram- @jasonkoop

    Protein for Ultrarunning with Jose Antonio, PhD | KoopCast Episode #181

    Protein for Ultrarunning with Jose Antonio, PhD | KoopCast Episode #181

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Dr. Antonio is the chief executive officer and co-founder of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, an academic nonprofit dedicated to the science and application of sports nutrition and supplementation. In addition, he is the co-founder and vice president of the Society for Neurosports, an academic nonprofit with a focus on sports neuroscience. Dr. Antonio earned his Ph.D. and completed a post-doctoral research fellowship at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. He has published over 100 peer-reviewed papers as well as over a dozen books. His current areas of research include: dietary supplements (e.g., creatine, protein, etc.), sports neuroscience, and human performance. He is currently a professor at Nova Southeastern University in Davie, Florida.

    Episode highlights:

    (32:10) Maximize caloric intake during races: 27 hour paddle example, eat whatever you can eat, focus on protein for recovery during training

    (44:58) How much protein to intake: training camp example, race-day nutrition prioritizes carbs, spread your protein intake across the day, examples, individuality

    (50:29) Increased protein during hard training: 2g/kg of protein for normal training, 1.2g/kg is common but 2g/kg is better but hard to ingest, ISSN recommends 1.6-2.5g/kg

    Additional resources:

    The ISSN

    International Society of Sports Nutrition Position Stand: nutritional considerations for single-stage ultra-marathon training and racing

    KoopCast on ISSN positon stand on nutrition for ultramarathon

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Information on coaching-www.trainright.com

    Ketones for Ultrarunning with Chiel Poffé PhD | KoopCast Episode #180

    Ketones for Ultrarunning with Chiel Poffé PhD | KoopCast Episode #180

    View all show notes and timestamps on the KoopCast website.

    Episode overview:

    Chiel Poffe is a Postdoctoral researcher at KU Leven. His areas of focus are energy metabolism and ketones.

    Episode highlights:

    (32:56) Practical ketone use: best during high-intensity training, 25g after exercise and before sleep, individual variance, potential improved sleep, muscle recovery, cognitive benefits, cost

    (39:38) Ultramarathon study results: complications with investigating performance, reaction time test, no cognitive decline in ketone groups, ketone increase dopamine levels, mechanistic speculation

    (45:19) Ketones aid cognition in extreme circumstances: revisiting study design, parallels to the overtraining study, ketones inhibit cognitive decline rather than improving cognition, support from initial ketone research

    Additional resources:

    Chiel on Twitter

    Ketone ester supplementation blunts overreaching symptoms during endurance training overload

    Exogenous ketosis increases circulating dopamine concentration and maintains mental alertness in ultra-endurance exercise

    Outside Online’s dumb headline that ketones cure overtraining

    Research Essentials for Ultrarunning: https://www.jasonkoop.com/research-essentials-for-ultrarunning

    Koop’s Social Media-
    Twitter/Instagram @jasonkoop

    Information on coaching-
    https://trainright.com/

    Buy Training Essentials for Ultrarunning on Amazon or Audible.

    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io