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IRONMAN Long Distance

The ultimate triathlon: 3.86 km swim, 180 km bike, marathon

The full Ironman distance – a 3.86 km swim, a 180 km bike ride, and a marathon. The ultimate endurance adventure. This guide shows you how to prepare for the longest day of your athletic life.

In short, explained

  • Distances: 3.86 km swim, 180 km bike, 42.195 km run
  • Duration: 8–17 hours depending on level
  • Training: 15-25 hours/week, 6-12 months of development
  • Nutrition: 6,000-10,000 kcal during the race
  • Mental: The mind decides – overcoming low points
  • Finisher: Anything is possible – you are an Ironman

IRONMAN Long Distance – The ultimate endurance test

3.86 kilometers swimming, 180.2 kilometers cycling, 42.195 kilometers running – a full marathon after almost a day on the bike and in the water. The IRONMAN, the long-distance triathlon, is the ultimate test of endurance sports and the dream of many athletes.

'Anything is possible' – the slogan of the IRONMAN brand says it all. Finishing an Ironman means achieving the seemingly impossible. It's not just a race against the clock or the competition – it's above all a battle with oneself, lasting for hours, through highs and lows, until the announcer at the finish line calls out the magic words: 'You are an Ironman!'

What makes the Ironman special?

The race duration for amateur triathletes typically ranges between 10 and 16 hours. This isn't simply 'more' than a 70.3 – it's a completely different experience. You experience sunrise and sunset during the race. You go through emotional lows and unexpected highs. You discover reserves within yourself that you didn't know existed.

The Ironman is also a life commitment. 15-20+ hours of training per week for 6-9 months is the norm. Work, family, social life – everything has to be organized around training. This guide shows you if and how you can make this dream a reality.

Understanding the dimensions

Before you embark on the Ironman journey, you need to understand what to expect.

3.86 km swim

About an hour in open water for good swimmers, up to 1 hour and 40 minutes for slower swimmers. The distance is long enough that panic or technical problems can turn into real crises. At the same time, the swim is only the 'prelude' – you need to come out of the water with reserves.

180 km cycling

The heart of the Ironman – 5-7 hours on the bike. This is where the race is decided. Not by speed, but by strategy. Pacing is everything: those who ride too fast pay a brutal price in the marathon. Nutrition is critical: you have to consume several thousand calories during the race.

42.195 km Marathon

A full marathon after 6-8 hours of pre-race exertion. For most, it won't be 'running' in the classic sense – it's a mix of jogging, walking, and fighting your way forward. Your Ironman marathon pace will be far slower than your fresh marathon pace. The mental component is dominant here.

Total time

Professionals: 8-9 hours. Fast age-groupers: 10-12 hours. Solid finishers: 12-14 hours. The time limit is usually 17 hours – those starting at midnight must finish by 5:00 PM.

Requirements

Recommended: Successful completion of at least one 70.3 triathlon. Several years of triathlon experience. Willingness to dedicate 15-20+ hours to training per week. Support from family/partner. Financial resources (entry fee, travel, equipment).

Swimming training for 3.86 km

Almost 4 kilometers in open water – that requires solid technique, endurance and mental calm.

The challenge

An hour or more in the water, surrounded by other swimmers, waves, and possibly cold water. The distance leaves no room for technical errors – inefficient swimming will exhaust you for the 10+ hours still ahead.

Technology priorities

Body position: Hips high, streamlined – minimal resistance. Arm stroke: Efficient catch, powerful pull, relaxed recovery. Leg kick: Minimal! A two-beat kick saves your legs for the bike and marathon. Breathing: Relaxed, bilateral if possible. Sighting: Briefly look up every 8-12 strokes.

Training structure

Frequency: 3-4 times per week. Volume: 3,000-5,000m per session. Total weekly volume: 10-15 km. Mix: Technique, intervals, endurance, open water.

Example units

Technique (3,500m): 500m warm-up. 6 x 100m technique drills. 3 x (300m paddles + 200m normal). 4 x 50m sprints. 400m cool-down. Endurance (4,500m): 500m warm-up. 3,500m continuous (below race pace). 500m cool-down. Intervals (4,000m): 500m warm-up. 10 x 200m with 20-second rest (race pace). 5 x 100m fast (15-second rest). 500m cool-down.

Open water training

Extensive open water swimming experience is essential for Ironman competitions. Regular open water sessions (twice a week during the season) are required. Longer sessions should include 3-4 km swims at a time. Practice: mass swims, buoy turns, sighting, and wetsuit handling.

Swimming goals

Realistic target times: Strong swimmers: under 60 min. Good swimmers: 60-75 min. Moderate swimmers: 75-90 min. The swim shouldn't exhaust you – you still have 10-15 hours ahead of you.

Cycling training – 180 km ride

180 kilometers on a bike – 5-7 hours in which the race is won or lost. Not by speed, but by strategy.

Philosophy

Ironman cycling isn't about speed – it's about being smart. Every extra watt on the bike will cost you minutes (or hours) in the marathon. The goal: to complete 180 km as efficiently as possible and with full energy reserves for the marathon.

Training structure

Frequency: 3-4 times per week. Weekly volume: 200-350 km. Types: Endurance (2-3 hours easy). Tempo (90 minutes with threshold intervals). Long ride (4-6 hours on weekends). Brick workout (bike + run).

Example units

Endurance (3 hrs): Zone 2, constant pace. Test nutrition and hydration. Tempo (90 mins): 20 min warm-up. 4 x 12 mins at 70.3 pace with 4 mins easy recovery. 20 min cool-down. Long ride (5 hrs): Moderate intensity (Zone 2). Simulate race nutrition. The last 60 mins at Ironman race pace.

Pacing – the critical factor

Your Ironman cycling pace needs to be conservative – well below your 70.3 pace. Power meter: 65-70% FTP (or less). Heart rate: Zone 2, never Zone 3. Feeling: 'This is too easy' = correct. 'This is pleasantly hard' = too fast! The first 90 km: Consciously hold back. Km 90-150: Controlled. Last 30 km: Still no acceleration, conserve energy.

Nutrition while cycling

For a 5-7 hour bike ride, you need to consume 3,000-4,000+ calories. Plan for 60-90g of carbohydrates per hour (some train at 90-120g). Mix: fluids (sports drink), gels, bars, solid food. Start early (after 20-30 minutes) and eat regularly – every 15-20 minutes. Don't forget salt/electrolytes!

The Aero question

At 180 km, aerodynamics makes a huge difference – 30+ minutes are possible. A triathlon/time trial bike or road bike with aero bars is recommended. The aero position must be comfortable for 5+ hours. An aero helmet and close-fitting clothing are essential.

Running training – The Ironman Marathon

A marathon. After almost 7 hours of swimming and cycling. The Ironman marathon is unlike any other marathon – here's how to prepare.

The reality

Your Ironman marathon will be slower than a fresh marathon – significantly slower. Plan for an extra 1-2 minutes per kilometer. Your legs will be exhausted, your glycogen stores depleted, and your mental reserves exhausted. Walking is normal – almost everyone walks at some point, at least at aid stations. The last 15 km are a mental battle.

Training structure

Frequency: 3-4 times per week. Weekly volume: 40-70 km. Types: Easy runs (45-75 min). Tempo runs (30-45 min). Intervals (6-10 x 1 km). Long runs (2-3 hours). Brick runs (after cycling).

The long run

The most important training session for the Ironman marathon. Duration: 2-3 hours (not necessarily 42 km – those come up in the race). Pace: Easy to moderate. Slightly faster for the last 30-45 minutes. Test nutrition and hydration. Frequency: 1x per week (or every 10 days at peak performance).

Combined training

Absolutely essential for Ironman training. Frequency: 1-2 times per week. Variations: Standard: 90-120 min. bike + 45-60 min. run. Long: 4+ hrs. bike + 90+ min. run. Ultra-Brick (rare): 5-6 hrs. bike + 2+ hrs. run.

Running strategy

The first 10 km: Hold back extremely. Your legs will feel strange – that's normal. Km 10-30: Find your own pace. Drink and eat regularly at aid stations. Km 30-42: This is where you see who paced themselves well. One step at a time. Walking is allowed: Many runners walk at aid stations – to eat, drink, and recover. That's strategy, not weakness.

Mental preparation

The Ironman marathon is 70% mental. Divide the course into segments: 'To the next aid station.' Mantras: 'I am prepared.' 'One step is enough.' 'Pain is temporary, Ironman is forever.' Visualize crossing the finish line – this helps in dark moments.

Nutrition – Fuel for 10+ hours

In a 10-16 hour competition, nutrition is the fourth crucial discipline. Those who make mistakes here will not reach the finish line – or only with extreme suffering.

The numbers

You burn 8,000-12,000 calories during an Ironman. You can only consume and utilize about 300-400 calories per hour. This means you will be in a calorie deficit – the challenge is to minimize that deficit.

Before the competition

The week before: Focus on carbohydrates (carb loading, but don't overdo it). Eat familiar foods. Stay well hydrated. Race morning: Eat breakfast 3-4 hours before the start. 150-200g of carbohydrates. Tried and tested options: toast, porridge, banana, honey. Shortly before the start: Optionally, 100-200 calories (gel, sports drink).

During the competition – swimming

No food or drinks available. Possibly gel pack in a wetsuit or swim cap for T1.

During the competition – cycling

This is where you get your energy! Goal: 60-90g of carbohydrates per hour (trained athletes can manage 90-120g). Start eating after 20-30 minutes and eat something every 15-20 minutes. Sample plan for a 6-hour bike ride: Sports drink: 2 bottles at 80g carbs = 160g. Gels: 8 gels at 25g = 200g. Bars: 2 bars at 40g = 80g. Electrolyte tablets: 2-3 per hour. Total: ~400g carbs = ~65g/hour. Hydration: 500-1000ml per hour. Don't forget your salt intake!

During the competition – Running

Reduced capacity for food intake (more sensitive stomach). Target: 30-60g of carbohydrates per hour. Options: Cola (fast sugar + caffeine). Gels (dose carefully). Broth (salt, fluids, warmth for night races). At aid stations: Walk, eat, drink.

Common mistakes

Too little on the bike: Guaranteed collapse in the marathon. Too much at once: Stomach problems. Too little salt: Cramps, hyponatremia. New products in competition: Digestive disaster. Test, test, test – during long training sessions.

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Equipment for long distances

For 10+ hours on the track, equipment comfort and efficiency become critical.

The wheel

The most important investment for an Ironman. Ideal: Triathlon/time trial bike with optimized aerodynamics. Alternative: Road bike with good aero bars. Critical: Professional bike fitting! 5+ hours in the wrong position = pain + loss of performance. Priorities: Aerodynamic position (can save 30+ minutes over 180 km). Comfort (you'll be on it for 5-7 hours). Reliability.

Watt measurement

Almost indispensable for Ironman. Enables precise pacing – your most important tool. You know exactly whether you're going too fast or at the right pace. Investment: 300-1,000 euros (or more for integrated systems).

To swim

Wetsuit: High-quality neoprene for buoyancy and warmth. Comfort is more important than minimal time savings. Backup goggles: Always with you!

Run

Shoes: Tried and tested, well-broken-in shoes. Some change into fresh, dry shoes at T2. Socks: Optional – some run without for faster changes. Cap/visor: Sun protection is important for 4-6 hour runs.

Triathlon-specific

Tri-suit: Quality is essential for rides of 10+ hours. Pay attention to fit and padding. Or: a two-piece suit (more flexibility). Aero helmet: A significant advantage for rides of 180 km. Must be comfortable and well-ventilated.

Special needs

For night races: reflectors, lights. Change of clothes in special needs bags (if permitted). Personal hygiene: Vaseline/Body Glide to prevent chafing.

Nutrition setup

Bento box on the top tube for solid food. Gel/bar holder. 2-3 bottle cages. Aero bottle between the aero bars.

Training plan – 24-30 weeks to Ironman

An Ironman requires long-term, structured preparation. Here is the framework.

Time required

Average: 15-20 hours per week. Peak weeks: 20-25 hours. Taper: 8-12 hours. This is a significant commitment – ​​plan accordingly.

Phase 1: Foundation (Weeks 1-8)

Focus: Building volume, base endurance. Weekly: 10-14 hours. Swimming: 3 times per week, 3,000-4,000m. Cycling: 3 times per week + 1 long ride (2.5-3.5 hours). Running: 3 times per week + 1 long ride (90-120 minutes). Intensity: Mostly Zone 2.

Phase 2: Development (Weeks 9-18)

Focus: Increase volume, specific work. Weekly: 14-20 hours. Swimming: 3-4 times per week, 3,500-5,000m, including open water. Cycling: 3-4 times per week + 1 long ride (3.5-5 hours), including tempo work. Running: 3-4 times per week + 1 long ride (2-2.5 hours), including tempo work. Brick workouts: 1-2 times per week. Key sessions: Long bike rides (4-5 hours). Long runs (2-2.5 hours). Long brick workouts (4 hours cycling + 60-90 minutes running).

Phase 3: Specific (Weeks 19-26)

Focus: Race simulation, peak fitness. Weekly: 18-25 hours (peak in weeks 22-24). Key sessions: Extra-long bike ride (5-6 hours, race-pace segments). Extra-long run (2.5-3 hours). Race simulation: 140+ km bike + 90+ min run. 70.3 as a preparation race (optional, 8-10 weeks before Ironman).

Phase 4: Taper (Weeks 27-30)

Focus: Recovery, freshness. Volume: Gradually reduce to 50-60%. Intensity: Maintain short, intense sessions. Final week: Only light exercise. Carb loading: 3-4 days before the race.

Example week (Phase 3, approx. 18 hours)

Mon: Swim 4,000m. Tue: Bike 90 min (tempo) + Run 30 min (brick). Wed: Run 60 min (easy) + Swim 3,000m. Thu: Bike 2 hrs (endurance). Fri: Swim 3,500m + Run 45 min (easy). Sat: Bike 5 hrs (endurance + nutrition). Sun: Run 2.5 hrs (long).

Competition strategy

A 10-16 hour race requires meticulous planning – here is your race plan.

Before the race

Study the course: swim route, bike profile (where are the climbs?), run route. Know the aid stations and Special Needs Points. Create a schedule: realistic target times for each discipline. Allow for buffer time – something always goes wrong at an Ironman. Prepare equipment: go through the checklist the day before. Pack transition bags. Prepare Special Needs Bags.

Swimming

Warm-up: If possible, swim a short lap 10-15 minutes before the start. Start: Choose your position according to your ability. In a mass start: Play it safe. Pacing: Start in a controlled manner, find your own pace. Navigation: Sight regularly. Goal: Get out of the water with energy reserves.

T1

No rush – you have time. Wetsuit off, sunscreen on (essential for 10+ hours!), helmet on. Maybe a toilet break. Aim: 5-10 minutes is fine.

Cycling

The first 30 km: Hold back extremely. Feeling: 'Way too slow'. Pacing: 65-70% FTP, Zone 2 heart rate. NOT faster! Nutrition: Start after 20-30 minutes. Refuel every 15-20 minutes. Target: 60-90g carbs per hour. Hydration: 500-1000ml per hour, electrolytes! Mental: Divide the race into segments (30 km, 60 km, 90 km, etc.). Last 10 km: Still paced. Easy walking, loosen up your legs.

T2

Bike off, helmet off, running shoes on. Toilet break if needed. Reapply sunscreen. Goal: 5-8 minutes.

The marathon

Km 1-10: Hold back extremely. Walking at the first aid station is perfectly acceptable. Km 10-30: Run at your own pace. Eat and drink regularly. Km 30-42: This is where your preparation pays off. One step at a time. Walking is fine: Strategy at aid stations: Walk, drink, eat, then continue. Mentally: Use mantras, visualization, and focus on the next section.

The finish line

Enjoy it. Slowly, consciously, arms up. 'You are an Ironman!'

After the Ironman – Recovery and Perspectives

You've finished an Ironman. You are an Ironman. What's next?

Immediately afterwards

Celebrate! You've achieved something extraordinary. The first night: Sleep will be difficult (adrenaline, caffeine, pain). Nutrition: Your body needs calories – eat what you enjoy.

Recovery

An Ironman is a massive intervention in the body. Weeks 1-2: Active recovery. Short, light exercise. Plenty of sleep. Weeks 3-4: Slow return to training. Short sessions, slow pace. Weeks 5-8: Gradual build-up. Listen to your body! Full recovery can take 4-8 weeks.

Post-Ironman depression

Many athletes experience an emotional low after achieving their major goal. Months of training, a day of triumph – and then: emptiness. This is normal. Setting new goals helps. Time with friends and family, who were neglected during the preparation.

Option 1: Ironman again

Most Ironman finishers want to do it again. Improve their time. Try different courses (Kona qualification?). Use their experience to train more effectively.

Option 2: Other Ultra Adventures

The Ironman opens doors: ultramarathons, ultra-cycling races, adventure triathlons. The endurance foundation is there.

Option 3: Back to shorter distances

Some discover that one Ironman is enough. Back to 70.3 or Olympic distance – with better fitness and faster times. Less training, more quality of life.

The Ironman Legacy

Once an Ironman, always an Ironman. You've proven you can achieve 'impossible' goals. This experience will stay with you – no matter which path you choose afterward. Welcome to a special community.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

For amateur triathletes, it typically takes 10-16 hours. Fast age-groupers: 10-12 hours. Professionals: 8-9 hours. The time limit is usually 17 hours.

Typically, 15-20 hours per week over 24-30 weeks of preparation. Peak weeks can reach 20-25 hours. The minimum is around 12-14 hours, but more is generally better.

The entry fee is between €700 and €1,000. Additional costs include travel and accommodation (depending on the event), equipment (bike, wetsuit, etc.), and training (possibly including a coach, pool access, and a cycling trainer). A budget of €3,000 to €10,000 is recommended for a first Ironman, depending on the participant's starting point and the event location.

Not absolutely necessary, but it helps considerably. Over 180 km, aerodynamics can save you 30+ minutes. An alternative: a road bike with good aero bars. More important than the bike itself: a professional bike fitting.

60-90 grams of carbohydrates per hour (trained athletes can manage 90-120g). This equates to approximately 300-500g of carbohydrates or 1,200-2,000 calories for 5-6 hours of cycling. Plus sufficient fluids and electrolytes.

Conservative! 65-70% of your FTP or Zone 2 heart rate. That feels too slow – but it isn't. Anyone who rides too fast on a bike will die in a marathon.

Yes, and almost everyone does it! Walking at aid stations is a strategy, not a weakness. It allows you to eat and drink without choking. Many finish in very good times despite walking breaks.

Visualize the competition, including the difficult moments. Develop mantras for dark phases. Divide the race into sections. The long training sessions are also mental training – use them wisely.

Reduce pace, stop at the next aid station, analyze the problem. For stomach problems: drink only liquids. For cramps: consume salt, stretch, slow down. For mental lows: one step at a time, use a mantra, think about the finish line.

Ideally: After completing at least one 70.3 (preferably several). With several years of triathlon experience. If you can train 15-20 hours per week. If your environment (family, work) supports you. If you are mentally ready for a 6-9 month commitment.

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