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Coaching & RetentionJun 9, 20268 min read

How to Program HYROX Training Blocks for Your Clients (A Coach’s Guide)

HYROX is not just “CrossFit with running”. It’s a specific mix of running volume, machine work, strength endurance, and pacing under fatigue. For coaches, that means structuring training blocks around race demands, not random hard workouts. In this article, we break down how to think about HYROX demands, how to structure 4–8 week blocks, and what a sample week can look like for your athletes.

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1. What makes HYROX unique (from a programming perspective)

A HYROX race has a very particular DNA:

  • Fixed structure: 1 km run + a station, repeated 8 times.
  • Stations like sled push/pull, ski, row, burpee broad jumps, wall balls — all under fatigue.
  • Total time that often sits in that “too long to sprint, too hard to jog” zone.

From a programming point of view, it’s demanding because:

  • You need running economy over 8 km.
  • You need strength endurance for sleds, lunges, wall balls.
  • You need machine capacity (ski, row) under pre‑fatigue.
  • You need pacing intelligence so athletes don’t blow up after station 3.

So HYROX programming isn’t just about “doing more metcons”.
It’s about preparing the specific combo of:

Repeated efforts at submax pace + heavy-ish work + accumulated fatigue over 60–90 minutes.

2. The key physical qualities to train

When you design HYROX blocks, you’re really targeting five main buckets:

  1. Aerobic base and running volume
    Your athlete needs to be comfortable running 8–12 km per week minimum (often more) at easy to moderate intensity, then layering tempo and race‑pace work on top.
  2. Strength and strength endurance
    Sleds, lunges, wall balls and farmer’s carries demand not just absolute strength, but the ability to repeat loaded work without breaking down.
  3. Machine efficiency
    Row and ski can make or break a race. Good technique + sustainable power saves minutes and keeps heart rate under control.
  4. Transitions and “hybrid engine”
    The ability to shift from run to station and back without losing pacing — and without mentally collapsing after the heavy stations.
  5. Race pacing and mental toughness
    Knowing how “hard” each part should feel, where to push and where to hold, and how to avoid going full send on station 1.

When you see it like this, it becomes easier to structure blocks around specific priorities instead of just throwing random HYROX‑style WODs at your clients.

3. Block structure: 4–8 weeks with a clear focus

A simple and effective way to program HYROX for general clients is to think in 4–8 week blocks, each with a primary emphasis, for example:

  • Block 1 (4 weeks): Aerobic base + strength foundations
  • Block 2 (4–6 weeks): Strength endurance + machine capacity
  • Block 3 (4 weeks): Race pacing + simulations / taper

Depending on the athlete’s starting point, you might:

  • Spend more time on base and strength for beginners.
  • Shorten the base and lean into race specifics for more advanced athletes.

The important part:
Each block has a clear answer to the question:

“What is the #1 adaptation we’re chasing here?”

4. Weekly structure for a HYROX athlete

Let’s take an example of a 4‑week “Strength endurance + machine capacity” block for a general HYROX client training 4x/week.

A sample weekly structure could be:

  • Day 1 – Strength + short engine
  • Day 2 – Intervals / machine focus
  • Day 3 – Easy run + technique / accessory
  • Day 4 – HYROX simulation / longer piece

This lets you touch:

  • Strength and strength endurance.
  • Machine technique and power.
  • Running volume.
  • Race‑like density at least once a week.

5. Example: 1 HYROX week (4 sessions)

Disclaimer: adjust volumes, loads, and paces to your client’s level.

Day 1 – Strength + short engine

A. Strength
Back squat
4 x 5 @ ~75%
Rest 90–120”

B. Strength endurance superset
3–4 sets:

  • 10–12 reverse lunges (DB or barbell) per leg
  • 30–40 m heavy sled push (if available)
    Rest 2–3’

C. Short engine finisher
For time:
4 rounds

  • 250 m row
  • 10 wall balls
    Rest as needed to maintain quality.

Day 2 – Machines & threshold

A. Technique primer
10–15 min technique work on ski + row (drills, stroke focus).

B. Threshold intervals (machine focus)
Every 4:00 x 6:

  • 500 m row @ controlled hard
  • 200 m run @ relaxed
    Rest until 4:00 mark.

Goal: teach the athlete to find sustainable but challenging machine pace, then flow back into running.

Day 3 – Easy run + accessory

A. Easy run
30–45 min Zone 2 (conversational pace).
Optional: small race‑pace pickups (4 x 20–30” @ HYROX pace).

B. Accessory / robustness
3 sets:

  • 12–15 DB RDL
  • 12–15 Copenhagen plank each side
  • 30–40” side plank
    Rest 60–90”.

Day 4 – HYROX‑style simulation

“Mini HYROX”
For time (or cap it at e.g. 50–60’):

  • 1 km run
  • 1,000 m ski
  • 1 km run
  • 50 m sled push (moderate load)
  • 1 km run
  • 1,000 m row
  • 1 km run
  • 60–80 wall balls (break as needed)

Coaching focus:

  • Pacing (no sprint starts).
  • Transition quality (no wandering between stations).
  • Mental notes on what feels weakest (running, machines, strength) for future block focus.

6. Coaching tips for HYROX blocks

A few practical guidelines when programming HYROX for clients:

  • Don’t turn every session into a race
    If every day feels like max effort, athletes will burn out mentally and physically. Use a mix of easy, moderate, and hard days.
  • Teach pacing early
    Use RPE scales, talk about “sustainable hard”, and do partial simulations so clients learn how race pace actually feels.
  • Respect strength progression
    HYROX isn’t bodybuilding, but under‑estimating strength work (especially for sleds and lunges) is a mistake. Keep at least 1x pure strength focus per week for most people.
  • Use data, but keep it simple
    Track key metrics (e.g. 1k time trial, 1k machine splits, sled loads) and show clients progress over each block to keep buy‑in high.

7. How a good program builder helps (and where most tools fail)

If you’re coaching several HYROX athletes, doing all this in spreadsheets or in a basic app quickly becomes painful:

  • You need to see entire weeks at a glance.
  • You reuse certain structures (e.g. “Mini HYROX” on Day 4 every other week).
  • You need flexibility to write mixed formats (strength + machine + run) without fighting dropdowns.

A HYROX‑friendly program builder should let you:

  • Work in a weekly view with drag‑and‑drop blocks.
  • Use flexible quantities (meters, calories, minutes) without hacks.
  • Include free‑text sections for complex pieces and nuanced coaching notes.

That’s the approach we’re taking with Jimmy: building the “Skool of Fitness” with a program builder designed for the reality of functional, CrossFit, and HYROX coaching — not just clean marketing screenshots.

8. If you coach HYROX athletes today

You don’t need a new app to start programming better HYROX blocks. You can begin by:

  • Structuring your year in blocks (base → strength → race‑specific).
  • Giving each block a clear primary focus.
  • Using a consistent weekly template (e.g. strength, machines, easy run, simulation).
  • Tracking just a few key metrics and showing clients their progress block by block.

When you’re ready to centralize everything — programming, community, and education — into one fitness‑first home for your HYROX and functional athletes, that’s exactly the kind of environment we’re building with Jimmy.

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