Ultra endurance athletes, whether cyclists pedalling up mountain passes or runners tackling endless trails, often experience a phenomenon known as "mid-season fatigue." This performance plateau or decline typically strikes in the middle of summer after one or two early season races, threatening to derail months of dedicated work. Let's explore why this happens, how to recognize it, and most importantly, how to overcome it to salvage your season.
Many athletes, eager to capitalize on improved weather and upcoming events, increase their training load too rapidly. The body needs time to adapt to increased stress, and without proper progression, the result is often burnout rather than fitness gains.
For cyclists, this might look like jumping from 10-hour training weeks to 15+ hours without adequate build-up. Runners might suddenly double their weekly mileage when trail conditions improve. While motivation may be high, physiological adaptation requires patience.
Ultra endurance performance depends on multiple fitness components: aerobic endurance, strength, technique, and mental fortitude. Attempting to improve everything at once often leads to diminishing returns and excessive fatigue.
When cyclists simultaneously tackle high-intensity intervals, long endurance rides, technical skills, and strength training without proper periodization, the body struggles to absorb and respond to these varied stressors. Runners face similar challenges when trying to improve speed, endurance, hill strength, and technical trail skills all at once.
The longer daylight hours and pleasant weather of late spring and summer naturally encourage longer training sessions. What might have been a two-hour ride in March can easily become four hours in June without seeming excessive. This gradual, often unconscious increase in volume can accumulate significant additional fatigue.
Many athletes fail to recognize these creeping increases in training load, particularly when the weather makes longer sessions more enjoyable. The body, however, registers every minute of additional stress.
As training volume increases, nutritional needs change dramatically. Many athletes maintain their off-season or early-season eating habits even as their energy expenditure rises significantly.
Cyclists burning an additional 1,000+ calories on longer rides or runners depleting glycogen stores on back-to-back long runs require proportional increases in caloric intake and specific attention to macronutrient balance. Without this nutritional adjustment, recovery becomes impossible, regardless of sleep quality or rest days.
The middle of the season often brings a proliferation of racing opportunities. The temptation to participate in "training races" or test fitness at local events can lead to an unsustainable pattern of high-intensity efforts without adequate recovery between them.
Both runners and cyclists frequently underestimate the recovery needed after race efforts, even shorter ones. The cumulative impact of these intense sessions, especially when recovery is compromised, accelerates the onset of mid-season fatigue.
Identifying mid-season fatigue early can prevent a complete derailment of your training season. Watch for these warning signs:
If you recognize the signs of mid-season fatigue, act quickly with these recovery strategies:
Implement a 7-10 day recovery period with drastically reduced volume and intensity. This isn't a complete break from training but rather a deliberate reduction to allow physiological recovery.
For cyclists, this might mean reducing weekly hours by 50% and keeping heart rate below 75% of maximum. Runners might cut mileage by a similar percentage and focus on easy, enjoyable runs rather than structured workouts.
Address potential nutritional deficits by:
Make sleep your top recovery tool by:
After your recovery block, rebuild with a more sustainable approach:
Be realistic about your remaining season goals:
Looking ahead, implement these strategies to prevent mid-season fatigue:
Our Traffic Light Tracker could help you track recovery status using your own personal assessment in combination with training metrics.
Mid-season fatigue is common among ultra endurance athletes, but it doesn't have to end your season. By recognizing the warning signs early and implementing strategic recovery and training adjustments, you can overcome this temporary setback and emerge stronger for your key events.
Remember that consistency over time, not any single workout or training block, builds the foundation for ultra endurance performance. Sometimes taking a step back allows you to ultimately move forward more effectively.