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By Moz Neumann

HYROX season is in full swing, and more athletes than ever are dedicating countless hours to training in the gym and on the track, preparing for their next race. While running capacity, pacing, and movement economy are essential for improving HYROX times, one key area often overlooked is strength training. This is the foundation for a successful season ahead, and getting it wrong can impact your race performance.

Why Strength Training is Essential for HYROX

A HYROX race requires a unique combination of strength, endurance, and muscular endurance. Building a solid strength foundation is critical before focusing on other aspects of your training.

It's important to clarify — you don't need to be the strongest athlete out there. However, increasing your baseline strength by just 5-10% will yield massive benefits on race day.

How to Structure Strength Training for a HYROX Race

  1. Off-Season: Focus on building absolute strength with compound lifts such as squats, lunges, bench presses, and deadlifts. These compound exercises engage multiple muscle groups, and progressively overloading these movements will lay the groundwork for the rest of your training.

  2. Pre-Season (within 8 weeks): Shift focus to strength endurance with high-rep squats, sled pushes, and weighted lunges. This phase will activate other energy systems and help replenish muscle fuel stores for sustained efforts.

  3. Peak Season (within 4 weeks): Prioritize muscular endurance and race simulations. Incorporate running under fatigue into your workouts for better race-day preparation.

Why You Can’t Rely on Running Alone

Strength is the base for everything else. If you've maximized your strength in key movements like the back squat or barbell lunge, this strength will directly translate to better performance in movements like sled pushes and wall balls. Improved mechanics and muscle force development lead to greater efficiency, reducing energy expenditure and strain on your body.

Building absolute strength raises the ceiling for strength endurance and muscular endurance. This means when it comes to lunges, sled pushes, and wall balls, you can sustain your efforts without "hitting a wall." Without a solid strength base, you risk undermining the more advanced phases of your training.

When you build strength, the training stations won’t feel like obstacles. Instead, you'll approach them with confidence, making it easier to pace yourself throughout the race. You’ll perform better under fatigue, especially with challenging movements like the heavy sled, and reduce the risk of injury.

Take a Lesson from the Pros

The top HYROX athletes are not only exceptional runners, but they also include consistent strength training year-round in their programs. Strength training is essential to their success, and it should be part of your HYROX strategy too!

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