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COACHING INSIGHTS · MOTIVATION · JUNE 2026

Once a month the TeamCPNZ coaches sit down together, sharing experiences, discussing the latest research, and talking through what’s actually making a difference for the athletes they work with every day. Real conversations. No fluff.

The Coaches Resource Series turns the best of those conversations into something you can use. Collective knowledge, distilled into practical takeaways — because better-informed athletes get better results.

This month: MOTIVATION. 

Every long training build has a middle section where the goal feels distant and the novelty has worn off. Here’s how to stay on track — and how to know if you’re overdoing it.

TeamCPNZ Athlete Resource  ·  June 2026

KEEP THE FIRE BURNING : STAYING MOTIVATED THROUGH A LONG BUILD-UP

You signed up. You were fired up. The plan is in your hands and race day is circled on the calendar. And then — somewhere in the middle of the build — life happens. Work gets busy. The weather is terrible. You miss a session and it somehow becomes three. Or the opposite: you’re smashing every session and adding extra ones because you feel amazing, right up until you don’t. Both ends of this spectrum are completely normal. And both are manageable.

It All Starts With Your Why

Before anything else — before the training plan, before the gear, before the first session — the most important question is this: why are you doing this?

Not just the surface answer. Not “to finish Coast to Coast” or “to run a marathon.” The real answer. What does crossing that finish line actually mean to you? What does it feel like if you get there? And what does it feel like if you don’t?

WORTH ASKING YOURSELF

Write your why down somewhere you’ll see it. On your phone screensaver, on a Post-it on the fridge, in your training app notes. On the days it feels hard, that answer is what gets you out the door.

A strong why is the single most reliable motivational resource you have across a long build. When the why is vague or borrowed from someone else’s expectations, motivation is fragile. When it’s personal and genuine, it’s remarkably durable — even through the hard weeks.

Which One Are You?

Motivation problems in training tend to fall into one of two categories. Be honest with yourself about which one you recognise:

  • The Under-Committed: You want the goal badly — but when it comes to the actual sessions, life keeps winning. You skip things, shorten things, and tell yourself you’ll make it up later. The training is happening, just not quite as planned.
  • The Over-Stoker: You’re absolutely smashing it. More than prescribed, harder than prescribed, adding extra events because you feel great. Your enthusiasm is real — but you’re potentially building a debt that will show up as injury, burnout, or a very bad race day.

Most athletes lean one way or the other. Knowing which tendency is yours helps you manage it — because the fix for each one is completely different.

If You’re Under-Committed: Get Honest With Yourself

Missing the odd session is not a crisis. Missing sessions consistently, while still holding onto the goal, is. The gap between what you’re doing and what the goal requires is something worth facing directly.

  • Reconnect with the finish line: Close your eyes and picture how race day goes if training continues exactly as it is right now. Then picture how it goes if you commit properly from here. The gap between those two images is usually more motivating than any amount of logic.
  • Make the trade-off explicit: When a social commitment is competing with a key training session, ask yourself honestly: “How much does this goal matter compared to this?” Sometimes the goal wins. Sometimes life wins — and that’s okay. But making the choice consciously, rather than by default, keeps you in control.
  • Break it into smaller targets: A race that’s six months away is too abstract to motivate you today. Find the nearer milestone — a long run benchmark, a target time on a key route, a training test — and make that the focus for the next four weeks.
  • Count the small sessions: A 20-minute run when you only had 20 minutes still counts. Fitting something in when you could easily have done nothing is exactly the habit that gets you to the start line. Don’t dismiss it.
  • Be honest if the goal needs revisiting: Sometimes what surfaces during a long build is that the goal itself has shifted. Changing the goal isn’t failure. Grinding through the wrong goal for months is.

KEY PRINCIPLE

Consistency over months beats perfection for a few weeks. An athlete who shows up reliably — even imperfectly — will almost always outperform one who trains brilliantly for a month, then crashes. Small and steady wins the build-up.

If You’re Over-Committed: More Is Not Always More

If you’re reading this and thinking “this doesn’t apply to me, I train plenty” — this section is probably the most important one for you.

Over-training is seductive because it feels like virtue. The problem is that fitness isn’t built during training — it’s built during the recovery that follows. Without adequate recovery, you’re accumulating fatigue without locking in adaptation. The body needs time to absorb the work.

  • Easy sessions need to be easy: If your program has an easy hour run and you’re turning it into a hard 90 minutes because you feel good — you’re not doing the session. Easy sessions allow recovery and build aerobic base without adding stress. Going hard on an easy day means the hard day that follows is compromised.
  • Watch what happens to your quality sessions: The tell-tale sign of over-training is that the sessions that are supposed to be hard start to feel impossible. If your interval targets are slipping, if you can’t hold a pace you’ve held before, if everything just feels harder than it should — these are signals. Pull back.
  • Rest is a training stimulus: Rest days aren’t doing nothing. They are the days when the fitness gains from your hard work actually get locked in. A rest day isn’t lost training — it’s where the training becomes fitness.
  • Be honest about extra events: Get clear on what each race is for. Is it an A race? A B race? Or a training day in race clothing? Without being honest about this, every event becomes an excuse to go all out, and the cumulative load adds up fast.
  • Look at the numbers: If you’re using Training Peaks, your Performance Management Chart shows the relationship between training load, fatigue, and form. When fatigue stays chronically high and form stays low, the chart is telling you something your enthusiasm is ignoring. Trust the data.

The Middle of the Build: The Hardest Part

Every long training build has a middle section that nobody talks about enough. The novelty of starting has worn off. Race day is still too far away to feel real. The sessions are hard and the question “why am I doing this again?” starts to surface.

This is completely normal. It doesn’t mean anything is wrong. It means you’re in the middle of a long build-up, which is exactly where you’re supposed to be.

GETTING THROUGH THE MID-BUILD TROUGH

•      Go back to your why — re-read it, remind yourself of it, talk about it with someone who gets it

•      Find a training partner for the sessions you’re dreading most — suffering shared is suffering halved

•      Set a near-term milestone to aim at — a benchmark run, a test ride, something with a result attached to it

•      Change the scenery — a different route, a new loop, a long session somewhere different

•      Look back at how far you’ve come, not just how far you have to go — progress is motivating, and it’s easy to forget you’ve already built significant fitness

•      Talk to your coach — they’ve seen this before, they know it passes, and they can adjust the program if something genuinely isn’t working

When Life Gets in the Way

A long build-up will encounter at least one period where life takes over properly. When this happens, the instinct is often to panic about the training being lost. That panic is usually worse for the build-up than the disruption itself.

  • One bad week doesn’t undo months of work: Fitness built over months is not lost in a week. A reduced or forced rest week is absorbed by a well-conditioned body. What matters is what you do when things settle down.
  • The 3 Day rule:  Aim to not have more than 3 days off in a row if possible.  Consistency is the key and having extended breaks mean that our body starts detraining.  Slot a mid-week session on a Wednesday and you will make it to the weekend without breaking the 3 day rule. This will also keep the habit alive.  A complete training break is psychologically harder to come back from than a reduced week.  NB. Not if you are sick though – you need to rest properly if you are not well.
  • Protect quality over quantity: The 15min rule counts.  15minutes is the minimum time to call a session a session. This creates consistency as we can always fit in 15minutes somewhere somehow.  So when time is short, prioritise the one or two quality sessions that actually build fitness. A 30-minute interval session does more for your fitness than a two-hour easy run when you’re time-crunched.
  • Focus on the sessions: If you are training for a multi-disciplined race like a triathlon or multisport event focus on getting a variety of each discipline in.  Rather than completing 60min run session complete a solid bike with a run off the bike to hit two of your disciplines in the session.
  • Communicate with your coach: If life has genuinely disrupted the build, tell your coach early. A plan adjusted in advance is always better than a plan ignored and then apologised for.

Five Questions Worth Answering Now

Whether you’re just starting a build-up or deep in the middle of one, these are worth sitting with. Write the answers down — they’ll serve you on the days when motivation is harder to find:

  • What’s my goal, and why does it genuinely matter to me? Not the surface answer — the real one.
  • What does it look like if I don’t get there? Picture it specifically. That discomfort is motivating.
  • Am I an under-committer or an over-stoker? Be honest. The answer shapes how you manage yourself through the build.
  • What’s my biggest risk over this build? Life getting busy? Going too hard? Injury history? Knowing the risk helps you plan around it.
  • What will I do when motivation dips? Have an answer before you need it. A training partner, a playlist, a route, a ritual — something that gets you out the door even on the days you don’t want to go.

Motivation goes up and down – Dedication is a constant.  Follow the tips above to stay dedicated to your next goal and ride through the motivation peaks and troughs.

 

QUICK REMINDERS

Your why Write it down somewhere you’ll see it on the hard days
Small sessions 15 minutes beats zero every time — count them
Easy = easy Hard efforts on easy days compromise the sessions that matter
Rest days This is when fitness is built — not lost
Bad week Doesn’t undo months of work. Keep the habit alive.
Mid-build dip Normal. Set a near-term target and keep moving.
Life interrupts Protect quality, let volume drop, tell your coach early
The goal If it no longer excites you, that’s worth examining honestly