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Ironman Swim Coaching

Long-course triathlon swim coaching for 70.3 and full Ironman — technique that holds up over distance, pacing that protects the bike and run.

What we prepare for

70.3 and
full Ironman

Long-course preparation tailored to your specific race distance. The physical and tactical demands of a 70.3 and a full Ironman are distinct — your coaching reflects that.

1.9km

Half Ironman · 70.3

The 70.3 swim demands a controlled but committed pace. Fast enough to keep your run and bike targets intact, conservative enough to not blow up before T1. Coach-guided pacing and sustained technique under effort.

  • Sustainable race pace vs threshold effort
  • Mass start positioning and pack swimming
  • Open water sighting rhythm
  • Efficient T1 preparation
3.8km

Full Ironman

At 3.8km, technical breakdown is inevitable without specific preparation. Coaching focuses on maintaining efficient form across the full distance — including the back half when it matters most.

  • Long-course technique durability
  • Pacing across 3.8km with 180km to follow
  • Two-loop race management and buoy turns
  • Mental preparation for a long open water swim
Coaching focus

What we
work on

Ironman coaching goes beyond pool technique. These are the areas that decide long-course swim performance.

Long-course technique durability

The stroke mechanics that hold up over 1.9–3.8km. Efficient catch, sustainable stroke rate and the body position that minimises fatigue across the full distance.

Ironman pacing strategy

Arriving at T1 with energy in reserve. Long-course pacing is as much about the 180km and marathon ahead as the swim itself — understanding effort levels that protect the whole day.

Mass start confidence

Positioning, pack swimming, contact management and the tactical decisions in the first 500m that determine the shape of your race. Training to handle chaos without spending extra energy.

Open water sighting

Efficient head lift technique, reading the course, frequency of sighting and navigation around buoys without breaking stroke momentum or losing your line.

Wetsuit and open water adaptation

How buoyancy changes stroke mechanics, wetsuit-specific technique and the acclimatisation process for cold water racing. Most athletes are slower in a wetsuit than they should be.

T1 efficiency

Wetsuit removal under pressure, heart rate management from swim exit to bike start, and the transition preparation that happens before you reach the transition area.

Long-course specifics

The Ironman swim
is a different race

Long-course triathlon demands a fundamentally different approach to the swim. Where sprint and Olympic distance racing rewards aggressive effort, Ironman rewards precision — the ability to hold efficient technique over 1.9 or 3.8km while managing energy for the ride and run ahead.

Most Ironman athletes are undertrained in the specific skills that decide long-course swims: mass-start management, sustained open water sighting, mid-swim pacing, and the technical resilience to hold form when tired. That's exactly what this coaching addresses.

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Is this for me?

Who Ironman
coaching is for

First-time Ironman athletes

Training for your first 70.3 or full Ironman and want to arrive at T1 confident, fast and with energy intact for the rest of the day.

Repeat Ironman athletes targeting PBs

You've finished before but your swim split isn't where you want it. Targeted technical work finds the gains that more mileage won't.

Athletes with open water anxiety

Solid pool swimmer but the open water sends your heart rate through the roof. Specific confidence-building and race-simulation sessions.

Qualification-focused athletes

Racing for a Kona or World Championship slot. The swim must be fast and — more importantly — controlled. Precision coaching for high-stakes racing.

Athletes coming back from a break

Returning to long-course racing after injury or time away. Rebuilding technique and open water confidence with specific long-course conditioning.

Time-crunched age-groupers

Limited weekly training hours and need to know the swim sessions you do count. Focused coaching that maximises the impact of every session.

How it works

From enquiry
to race day

Enquire

Tell us your race distance, your event date, current swim times and where you feel you're losing time in the water. We'll respond within 24 hours.

Long-course assessment

Your first session covers pool technique and, where available, open water. Your coach assesses stroke mechanics, pacing instincts and open water comfort. Video analysis available.

Race-specific programme

A coaching plan built around your event calendar. Sessions progress through technique work, open water conditioning and race simulation, peaking in the weeks before your target race.

Race day & debrief

Post-race debrief to review what transferred. Many Ironman athletes continue coaching through the off-season and into the next build to compound improvements year on year.

FAQ · Ironman coaching

Common
questions

For a first Ironman, we recommend starting 16–20 weeks out and aiming for one coached session per week alongside your independent swim training. For experienced athletes targeting a PB, 8–12 weeks with fortnightly or weekly sessions is often enough to make meaningful technical progress. Enquire with your race date and we'll be specific about what's realistic.

This is extremely common. Open water removes the walls, the lane lines, the black line on the bottom and the fixed breathing pattern of pool lengths. Without these anchors, many swimmers lose their rhythm, their sighting breaks up their stroke, and elevated heart rate from cold water or mass-start anxiety compounds the issue. Specific open water coaching addresses all of these in progressive, structured sessions.

Ideally yes — pool sessions build technique and conditioning efficiently, while open water sessions apply those skills in race conditions. How many of each depends on your specific limiters. If your technique is solid but open water is the issue, we'll weight sessions accordingly. Your coach will advise after the initial assessment.

Yes — mass start anxiety is one of the most common and most solvable problems we work with. The fear usually comes from unfamiliarity and lack of tactical knowledge about where to position yourself. We simulate race start conditions in training and work through positioning strategy, what to do in contact situations, and how to manage your breathing and heart rate in the first 200m. Most athletes find it transforms their race experience.

Get in touch

Enquire about
Ironman coaching

Tell us your race distance, your event date and your current level. We'll be in touch within 24 hours.