Sprint Triathlon Taper Ride: 45-Minute Leg Opener

Session Overview

This 45-minute pre-race taper ride sharpens your legs without creating fatigue, combining easy zone 2 spinning with short race-pace bursts. It’s designed for the day before or two days before a sprint triathlon to activate your neuromuscular system and flush out any residual stiffness.

What You’ll Need

Warm-Up (10 minutes)

Begin with 10 minutes of easy spinning at 85–90 rpm, keeping effort in zone 1–2 (heart rate under 65% of max). The goal is to warm the legs gently — no pressure on the pedals at all. Stay relaxed in your aero position for the final 3 minutes to remind your body of race posture.

Main Set

The activation block uses three short race-effort bursts to prime your neuromuscular system without building fatigue. Keep the hard efforts genuinely hard — these should feel like the first minute of a sprint race. Recover fully between bursts.

  • 10 minutes zone 2 easy spin at 85–90 rpm
  • 3 x 90-second race-pace bursts (sprint triathlon bike effort, ~85–90% of FTP), 3 minutes easy between each
  • 5 minutes easy zone 2 spin to close out

Cool-Down (5 minutes)

Spin for 5 minutes at an easy cadence with zero resistance. Focus on soft pedalling and deep breathing. Dismount, do 2 minutes of light quad and hip flexor stretching — you want to feel fresh, not tight, going into race morning.

Coaching Notes

  • Do NOT extend the race-pace bursts — more intensity today means more fatigue tomorrow
  • 90–95 rpm cadence during the bursts keeps your legs snappy and avoids muscular fatigue
  • If you feel unusually flat or tired, skip the bursts and just spin easy for the full 45 minutes
  • This session also works for Olympic-distance taper — just swap race effort to your Olympic bike zone
  • RPE should average 3–4 for the session, peaking at 7–8 briefly during the bursts

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.