Sprint Triathlon Race Pace Run: 5km Under Race Conditions

Session Overview

This compact 30-minute session trains your body to run at sprint triathlon 5km race pace — fast and efficient off the bike. Short effort blocks slightly above your target 5km pace sharpen race-specific neuromuscular speed and mental resilience for the run-off.

What You’ll Need

  • Your race day running shoes (if you have them — this session simulates race conditions)
  • GPS watch to track pace per kilometre
  • Flat or lightly undulating route — avoid heavy hills on this session

Warm-Up (7 minutes)

5 minutes easy Zone 1–2 jog, then 4 x 20-second strides at 5km race pace with 40 seconds easy jogging between each. Stride focus: tall posture, quick cadence (aim for 90+ steps per minute per foot), relaxed jaw and shoulders. These strides prime your running economy before the main effort blocks.

Main Set

4 x 3-minute efforts at your target sprint triathlon 5km race pace (or 5 seconds per km faster). Recovery: 90 seconds easy jog between each effort.

  • Rep 1: controlled — treat this as a calibration rep
  • Reps 2–3: hold race pace; maintain cadence above 88 spm throughout
  • Rep 4: match pace of rep 1 — resist the temptation to coast on the final rep
  • Finisher: immediately after the final 90-second recovery, run 2 minutes all-out to simulate the race finish kick

Cool-Down (5 minutes)

5 minutes walk or easy jog, finishing with 60 seconds of standing calf stretches (foot on a kerb, heel drop) and 60 seconds of standing quad stretches per leg.

Coaching Notes

  • Track your km splits — variation of more than 10 seconds per km between reps indicates inconsistent pacing; aim for even splits
  • Classic mistake: blasting rep 1, then struggling from rep 3. Your first rep should feel controlled and repeatable.
  • Scale down: 3 x 3 minutes with 2-minute recovery; skip the finisher
  • Scale up: reduce recovery to 60 seconds, or add a fifth rep before the finisher

Training at your own risk. The information provided is for general guidance only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Please consult a doctor before starting any new exercise programme, especially if you have any pre-existing health conditions.