In this episode of Race Ready, Brian Halligan and Andy Newell answer listener questions centered around one of the most important times of the year for endurance athletes: the transition into summer training. The conversation focuses heavily on building the right foundation for long-term development, including how athletes should approach equipment, strength work, training structure, and recovery during the early offseason months. The hosts break down why proper gear matters more than many athletes realize, discussing roller skis, poles, boots, running shoes, watches, and heart rate systems. The proper equipment is not just for performance, but critical for injury prevention and training quality. Brian and Andy also dive deep into ski-specific offseason training strategies, including bounding, roller skiing, speed development, and strength training for both elite and masters athletes. They explain how athletes can create highly effective home gyms without expensive setups, using tools like kettlebells, TRX systems, pull-up bars, roller boards, and plyometric work to build ski power and durability. The episode also explores the importance of training specificity during the offseason, why ski walking and bounding remain underrated tools for developing classic technique, and how athletes can manipulate roller ski speed and training environments to improve both technique and group training quality. One of the biggest themes of the episode is managing stress and training load intelligently during the month of May. Responding to a listener question from a college athlete navigating finals week, Brian and Andy discuss the concept that “stress is stress,” emphasizing that academic pressure, work, and life responsibilities must all be considered when planning training. Rather than obsessing over hitting huge training volume immediately on May 1st, the hosts advocate for consistency, smart recovery, and maintaining ski-specific movement while gradually building fitness. They also explore the idea of introducing speed and neuromuscular training earlier in the offseason than many traditional endurance programs typically recommend, arguing that spring can be one of the best times of year to improve athleticism, power, and movement quality before summer volume ramps up. Video of young Andy on the Roller Board: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvFHIn4IUas