In a modern era defined by airbrushed Instagram and curating an image for sponsors, the one thing you can still guarantee with Norfolk’s Joe Skipper is raw honesty.
“When I retire, I won’t f**king swim. I’m 100% sure. Okay, I might occasionally on a nice summer day in a lake, but if people say: ‘Do you want to swim four times a week in the pool?’ I can 110% tell you now: Not a f**king chance.”
If the point hasn’t landed yet, Joe Skipper isn’t overly enamoured by triathlon’s first discipline. “The only people who like swimming are those who started it when they were kids because they don’t know any different and have a very high boredom threshold.
“If I’m not doing it with other people I think it absolutely sucks. If I’ve got a group to train with I’m fine, but I hate swimming by myself, I find it so boring, just staring at the bottom of the pool.
“On the bike, I can ride up a nice hill and take in the scenery. I’m out there with the elements and get a sense of speed. I can’t even talk to people when I do an easy swim. It’s just the s**test out of the three sports.”
Given swimming makes up approximately one-third of Skipper’s occupation, it could be argued that this mindset is potentially career-limiting. But then he’s also an eight-time Ironman champion, placed seventh, sixth and fifth in the past three world champs in Hawaii, and is self-aware enough to realise his limitations.
“It’s part of the reason I’ve struggled,” he willingly admits. “We’re generally better at sports we enjoy, so while I can get my head around it and force myself to get it done, if I loved swimming I’d be a lot better than I am.”
PLAYING CATCH-UP
Plenty of amateurs would echo his ‘swimming is a necessary evil’ stance, but at 36 years old and uncoachable by his own admission, he is doing something about it, taking on some guidance that might mean he hasn’t got such a deficit to claw back on the bike and run.
Esta historia es de la edición July 2024 de 220 Triathlon.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición July 2024 de 220 Triathlon.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
How to Carb Load - Packing your working cells with carbohydrates in the build-up to your big race is a proven strategy to race stronger and faster...
Whichever distance triathlon you're racing, the intensity and duration of your activity will see your body tap into its stores of carbohydrates (in the form of glycogen) to power your effort. While it's possible to top up your tank on the go, it's better to start your event with your stores full to the brim.
The Olympic Champion - On 31 July, Great Britain's Alex Yee put together arguably the greatest one-day performance we have ever seen at an Olympic Games to win gold. And we were there at the finish line to speak to tri's new poster boy...
The opening line of the race report read how 20 years on from New Zealand’s first and only Olympic triathlon gold medal, Hayden Wilde had put in a careerbest performance to regain the title for his nation. Then Alex Yee comes around the corner.Yee’s charge, seemingly from nowhere on the final lap of the 10km run in Paris, didn’t just help him become the most decorated Olympic male triathlete of all time, and didn’t just cap a rivalry that has been building for six years, it left seasoned watchers of swim, bike, run in awe. It will go down as one of the greatest triathlon races; Yee, still just 26, as one of the greatest triathletes. His medals from Paris added to the two from Tokyo, leaving his haul at two gold, a silver and a bronze, and counting.
"I HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO INFLUENCE THE GROWTH OF TRIATHLON"
British Triathlon CEO Ruth Daniels talks Paris, her plans to grow tri and her own personal goals... knees allowing
ZWIFT RIDE
£1,199.99 Zwift's new Ride is an indoor bike that might help you break your PB... but won't break the bank
PARIS SHOWED THE VALUE OF OLYMPIC EXPERIENCE
With the spotlight on triathlon like never before at these Games, debutant athletes talked about being overwhelmed by the unique environment
GAMES AT THE GAMES
After watching and enjoying the Olympic triathlon events, Brunt amused himself by playing the 'guess how far into each event I would die' game...
WHERE EAGLES DARE
With little heat prep, the wrong gear choice and a course-recce mistake, would experienced extreme triathlete Sean McFarlane soar like an eagle or drop like a stone in Italy?
HOW TO INCREASE RUN PACE WHEN FATIGUED
The ability to dig deep in the latter stages of a race helped Alex Yee achieve Olympic gold. Here Ben, a member of Team GB's coaching staff in Paris, explains how you too can find that extra gear...
BUYER'S GUIDE: BIKE COMPUTERS
Log your rides, find your way and monitor your multisport training with a quartet of impressive bike computers...
POLAR GRIT X2 PRO
\"You can't be anything other than impressed with the GPS, whose design is one of the significant changes to the V3\"