Go inside the mind of WorldTour coach, Koen Pelgrim, as the episode traces the journey from the physiology lab to the chaos of racing. You’ll get an inside look at what it takes to build a champion—from altitude camps and heat training protocols to how gym and strength work have become non-negotiables for today’s sprinters. The discussion digs deep into balancing “the art and science” of coaching, sharing actionable insights on tapering, team communication, and why trusting data (like heart rate and strain metrics) is key—but personal connection comes first.
Key takeaways in this episode:
- Elite Prep: How sprinters and GC riders train differently for the Tour de France
- Altitude + Heat: Extend performance gains with modern adaptation strategies
- Strength & Conditioning: Why gym work is a pillar in today’s cycling programs
- Data in Action: How daily recovery, RPE, and metrics drive real-time decisions
- Art vs. Science: Why true coaching blends analytics and human intuition
Learn how top coaches prepare elite sprinters for the Tour and use cutting-edge altitude and heat adaptation hacks. Discover proven performance analytics and real athlete-coach conversations that make the difference at the world’s biggest races.
- 00:00 – Altitude & Heat Training: Boosting Endurance for the Tour
- 00:53 – Training Differences: Sprinters vs. GC Riders
- 01:13 – Meet Koen: Coaching Roots & Early Influence
- 02:01 – Recent Wins & Prepping for the Tour de France
- 02:24 – From University Researcher to World Tour Coach
- 05:16 – Coaching Lessons: Lab to Real-World Application
- 06:04 – Culture Shift: Structured Plans in Pro Cycling
- 08:21 – Sprinter Preparation: Specific Workouts & Stage Simulation
- 09:05 – Altitude Camps for Sprinters: Aerobic & Anaerobic Focus
- 10:26 – Practicing Lead-Out Trains & Team Dynamics
- 11:55 – Strength Training: How Gym Work Evolved in Cycling
- 14:34 – Tapering: Differences for Sprinters and Climbers
- 16:29 – The Rise of Young Talent: Paul Magnier’s Development
- 19:32 – Balancing Sprint Power & Classic Ambitions
- 20:02 – Analyzing Race Data: Daily Effort, Heart Rate, and Recovery
- 23:43 – Heat Adaptation: Protocols Leading to the Tour
- 27:47 – Monitoring Subjective Data: Conversations Over Metrics
- 30:13 – Adaptive Training Plans & Athlete Autonomy
- 33:33 – Preventing Overtraining: Keeping Riders Controlled
- 35:08 – Art vs. Science: The Human Side of Coaching
- 36:43 – Closing Thoughts & Tour de France Preview
Standout Quotes
On Altitude Training for Sprinters: “It’s also still beneficial to have the effect of the, of the altitude because even for a sprinter it’s still like a mainly aerobic effort that they, that they need to do to get through the stage, to get over a climb, to get with some reserves into that last 200 meters.”
“Because your hematological values can be very good. But if you’re not used to the heat, you can easily lose 20, 25% of your capacities if you’re not, if you’re not used to, used to the heat.”
Heat Adaptation in Cycling Training
On Building Tough Habits: “But there’s a period where you have to do it very regularly to get an effect. But then once it’s there, it’s a bit easier to maintain it by doing less.”
“You have to treat them as human beings and not just as machines that are that work based on an algorithm or on an input of data that you give and then expect a certain outcome.”
The Art of Coaching
