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The Distance Dr: In Practice

The Distance Dr: In Practice

Von: Kate Baldwin
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The Distance Dr: In Practice brings endurance research down to earth and into your actual training week.
I’m Dr Kate Baldwin (physio + researcher + strength coach), and each episode I take a real performance or injury question and work through what the evidence says, what it doesn’t say, and how to apply it without turning your life into a spreadsheet.

Expect science you can trust, practical sessions you can use, and honest conversations about the grey areas: strength training for runners and triathletes, tendon/overuse issues, load management, endurance performance, and what matters most when you’re trying to get fitter and stay on the road.

2026 Kate Baldwin
Fitness, Diät & Ernährung Gymnastik & Fitness Hygiene & gesundes Leben Laufen & Joggen
  • Ep 14: How Heavy Should Endurance Athletes Lift? Measuring Strength Training Intensity
    Apr 17 2026

    If you are a runner, triathlete, or endurance athlete who has ever walked into the gym and thought, how much weight am I actually supposed to lift? this episode is for you.

    In endurance sport, we usually have clear intensity markers like pace, power, heart rate and cadence. In the gym, it often feels much less obvious. In this episode, I break down the 3 main ways to measure strength training intensity: percentage of repetition maximum, RPE, and reps in reserve.

    I explain what each method means, where each one can be useful, and why I generally prefer reps in reserve for endurance athletes. We also cover how to apply these methods to heavy strength work versus muscular endurance work, why gym intensity often gets confused with cardio effort, and the common mistakes that can leave endurance athletes underloading their strength training.

    If you want your gym work to actually transfer to performance, durability and meaningful adaptation, this episode will help you stop guessing your loads and start training with more intent.

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    21 Min.
  • Ep 13: Time Off Running? How to Come Back Still Feeling Like a Runner
    Apr 9 2026

    If you’ve been told to stop running because of injury, illness, travel, surgery, or just life being life, your first instinct is usually, “I don’t want to lose my fitness.”

    That makes sense. But fitness is only one part of what makes you feel good when you run.

    In this episode, I unpack the four key ingredients that help you still feel like a runner when you return:

    • aerobic fitness
    • strength
    • tendon stiffness and elastic energy return
    • tissue tolerance to running loads

    We cover why cross-training can maintain fitness but still leave you feeling flat, clunky, and heavy when you get back to running, and what to focus on instead so your return feels smoother, stronger, and more springy.

    If you’re in a phase where you can’t run right now, this episode will help you think differently about what to train and why.

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    20 Min.
  • Ep 12: Does Lighter = Faster? Body Weight, Body Fat and Performance Readiness | Dr Grant Landers
    Mar 24 2026

    A lot of endurance athletes have heard the same message for years: lighter is better, leaner is faster, and body fat is the thing standing between them and better performance.

    But is it really that simple?

    In this episode, I am joined by Dr Grant Landers, Senior Lecturer in Sport Science at The University of Western Australia, to unpack one of the most deeply ingrained beliefs in endurance sport: that lower body weight automatically means better performance.

    Together, we discuss what body composition actually means, why endurance sport has historically become so focused on fat mass and adipose tissue, and why that conversation is often far more simplistic than the science supports. We also explore the roles of lean mass, bone mineral density, fuelling, robustness, recovery, and athlete health, plus what tools like DEXA, skinfolds, ultrasound, body fat scales, and standard scales can and cannot actually tell you.

    This is a thoughtful and practical conversation about moving away from “race weight” as the goal, and towards something much more useful: performance readines

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    46 Min.
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