This webinar offers insight into the mental aspect of racing. Learn how to get the most out of your fitness by improving your internal landscape and your mental outlook, how to deal with disappointments, and recover after “bad” races. From understanding how to make goal setting work for you, gaining a “champion’s mindset,” and embracing nerves; this webinar explores what the optimal “race space” really is and gives you the extra edge to race great.
Who Is Mark Allen?
Mark Allen
Mark Allen is an American Triathlete who won the sport’s inaugural ITU World Championships in 1989 in Avignon, France. However, longer distances were his specialty, becoming only the second six-time Ironman Triathlon World Champion.
Allen graduated from UC San Diego, where he was an All-American swimmer, with a degree in biology. After competing and losing in the Ironman Triathlon Championships six times (often to Dave Scott), Allen emerged victorious in 1989, winning one of the most difficult one-day sporting events in the world. It would be the first of six Ironman victories for Allen, the last coming in 1995 at age 37. From 1988-1990 he put together a winning streak of 20 races.
Over the course of his racing career, which ended in 1996, he maintained a 90% average in top-three finishes. He was named Triathlete of the Year six times by Triathlete magazine, and in 1997 ‘Outside’ magazine tabbed him The World’s Fittest Man.
"I became an experiment of one in the trial and error method of becoming world class. I tried everything sensible and certainly a few things that were fairly insane. If something worked, I kept it in my program. If it didn’t make me stronger and faster I dropped it. In the end I developed what proved to be extremely effective ways to reach new heights year after year."