Another Triathlon Podcast

Jenna-Caer

ATP, or 'Another Triathlon Podcast,' is a fresh voice in the world of endurance sports. Our name is a playful nod to the abundance of triathlon podcasts out there and also stands for Adenosine Triphosphate, the energy source of our bodies, symbolizing the relentless energy of triathletes.  We want to have some fun with triathlon, not take ourselves too seriously while delivering insight, answer your training and racing questions and give you everything you need from inspiration to information that can help your race day.At ATP, we dig deeper than race recaps and gear reviews. We explore the untold stories, the science, the ridiculous, and the trials of triathlon. We feature inspiring interviews, expert advice, and innovative training strategies, aiming to inspire, educate, and entertain athletes of all levels. If you're a triathlete, ATP is your fuel to keep moving forward

  1. HACE 5 DÍAS

    Episode 128: Super Tri shake up, Mauna Founders and Challenge Wanaka chat

    Send a text This week’s episode goes inside Mauna Apparel with co founders Gonzalo and Philip. They break down why the brand started, what was broken in the custom kit world, and what it actually takes to develop fast kit that holds up on race day. Jenna Caer (@jennacaer) is joined by Josh (@joshmvernon) and Fede (@fedemultisport), with the crew also sharing training updates, Team Mauna camp prep, and a clear rundown of Supertri’s major changes for 2026. A shorter bonus segment closes the episode, Fede sits down with Jane Sharman, Race Director of Challenge Wanaka, to unpack why this race has become one of the sport’s most iconic destination events. Highlights Guests Gonzalo and Philip share how Mauna Apparel started from a real gap in club kits, quality, pricing, design flexibility, and missed turnaround timelines What product development really looks like, fabric sourcing, prototyping, athlete testing, and why new product lines can take a year or more Wind tunnel testing, why aerodynamics are personal, and what it means when off the shelf suits consistently test well across multiple athletes Pro athlete partnerships and why trust, fit, innovation, and long term commitment matter when signing top talent Team Mauna camp scouting in Scottsdale, dry desert conditions, hydration, and what athletes can expect Why the Mauna Racing community keeps growing, global presence, race weekend meetups, and the value of having people in your corner on race day Industry insight from inside the business side, where the sport is thriving but professionalism often lags behind athlete commitment Supertri changes for 2026, three qualifier races feeding a Grand Final, more draft legal sprint racing, and a major prize purse at the final Challenge Wanaka Interview Fede interviews Jane Sharman, Race Director of Challenge Wanaka, ahead of the event’s 20th anniversary. She shares how the race began with early discussions in 2006 and the first edition in 2007, making it one of the first Challenge Family events outside of Challenge Roth. Today it has grown into a three day festival with racing for every age and ability, from preschool kids on scooters and slip and slides, to juniors, to seniors, and a full pro field. Jane explains how the event is run by a charitable trust that uses community grants to subsidise junior racing, keeping the festival accessible for local kids. She also walks through sustainability initiatives, including major waste minimisation efforts and a push toward a disposable cup free event. On the course, she highlights a lake swim in Lake Wanaka, a two lap 90k bike course with one lane bridges and cattle grids to be aware of, plus a two lap run course that is flatter and faster than the previous Glen Dhu version. She also shares why the event hub design is a win for spectators, with swim, bike, and run all lapping through the same central point. Follow The Show Another Triathlon Podcast is brought to you by Mauna Apparel (@maunaapparel) Host, Jenna Caer Seefried, @jennacaer Josh, @joshmve Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    1 h y 24 min
  2. 30 ENE

    Episode 127: Ironman’s 20 Metre Draft Zone! Samla 100

    Send us a text Jenna and Josh catch up on training, travel, and the early season triathlon buzz. Josh is rebuilding his run carefully ahead of Tokyo while stacking big swim and bike weeks. Jenna-Caer is back from Qatar and still feeling the Samla 100, a wild 100 km multi sport race that delivered five transitions, deep sand, and a finish rate that made the cutoff times feel very real. They also dig into one of the biggest pro racing updates of the year, Ironman officially moving the pro draft zone from 12 metres to 20 metres, plus a quick look ahead to Challenge Sir Bani Yas and the rest of the season’s chaos. Highlights  • Josh’s training update, back running after 10 to 11 days off, with short easy runs, strong swim consistency, and big bike volume  • Tokyo mindset shift, prioritizing getting to the start healthy over chasing a risky time goal  • Jenna’s Samla 100 recap, 3k ocean swim, 21k run, 22k mountain bike, 4k kayak, 22k mountain bike, 28k desert run  • Why Samla felt harder than an Ironman, 49k of running with long stretches in soft sand and a day that moved slower than expected  • Surprise pro start line in Qatar, including Rachel Klamer and Jess Learmonth, plus a stacked men’s field  • Pre race chaos and highlights, course preview in the desert, riding camels, and getting the full “pro treatment” experience  • Mountain bike reality, constant dismounts, pushing up sand dunes, and shoes full of sand  • Race logistics and broadcast notes, impressive production for a first year event in the desert, including multi box coverage  • The number that stuck, an estimated 30 percent finish rate  • Race preview, Challenge Sir Bani Yas with a strong early season pro field and an unusual cruise ship travel setup  • The big news, Ironman moves the pro draft zone from 12 metres to 20 metres for the 2026 season  • What Ironman shared, testing indicated a meaningful reduction in draft benefit at 20 metres, plus a more transparent media call with Scott Derue  • Age group note, no change for age group draft rules at this time  • Bingo board segment, predictions on doping news, first time world champions, Paula Findlay’s full distance debut, Supertri short shoot impact, and whether Cam Wurf can win a pro series race Quickfire Q and A  • What was Josh’s biggest win this week? Building swim fitness fast, and returning to running without the old pain flaring  • What surprised Jenna most about Samla 100? How much of the running was soft sand, and how quickly pace stopped mattering  • What was the easiest leg? The kayak, unless your kayak sinks  • What is the biggest rule change discussed? Ironman shifting the pro draft zone from 12 metres to 20 metres  • Does this change anything for age group racing? No, it applies to pros only at this point  • What are they most excited to see this season? How the 20 metre rule reshapes race tactics and creates more genuine come from behind stories Follow the show on instagram or Youtube @anothertriathlonpodcast Jenna @jennacaer  Josh, @joshmvernon  Fede, @fedemultisport Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    53 min
  3. 15 ENE

    Episode 126: DC Rainmaker on triathlon tech, what matters, what’s noise, and what to buy next

    Send us a text This week on Another Triathlon Podcast, Josh (@joshmvernon) and Fede (@fedemultisport) sit down with Ray Maker, aka DC Rainmaker (@dcrainmaker), who you will know from his popular YouTube gear reviews HERE, for a no fluff conversation about the gear choices triathletes obsess over every off season. Ray joins from Amsterdam, mid move, surrounded by boxes and pallets, and still manages to deliver exactly what he has built his reputation on for 15 plus years, honest reviews, clear explanations, and consumer first advice. Jenna (@jennacaer) is deep in race prep for Qatar, so this one is a Josh and Fede episode, and it hits every big question athletes ask when they are trying to buy speed, buy simplicity, or just avoid wasting money on something that looks cool but does not work. From beginner watch setups and bike computers, to heart rate straps vs armbands, HRV trends, crash detection, satellite SOS, and why swim tech has barely moved in a decade, Ray lays out what actually matters and why. Highlights • How DC Rainmaker started, from an Ironman training blog to the most trusted tech reviews in endurance sport • Why price matters, and why every product review should be framed through value • What makes a product good, does it do what it claims, do new features work, do old features break, is it worth upgrading • Swim tech reality check, why innovation has been minimal, what breaks open water GPS tracks, and why Form goggles are the one company pushing forward • Bike tech today, what has improved, what hasn’t, and why pacing tools and course planning are the real gains • Beginner triathlon setup, what to buy first, where to save money, and why older top tier watches can be incredible value • Power meters, why Favero pedals are the sweet spot, and when it makes sense to add a power meter at time of bike purchase • HRV, what it’s good for, why trends beat day to day obsession, and how alcohol, sickness, and poor sleep show up instantly • Optical heart rate in 2026, when wrist sensors are great, when they struggle, and why armbands might be the accuracy king • Ray’s simple race day gear list, mid range bike computer, power meter pedals, and a high end watch, plus why Coros wins on value Quickfire Q&A • What should a beginner triathlete buy first, a good value triathlon capable watch, then decide if a bike computer and power meter actually match your goals • Chest strap, wrist, or armband, armband is often most accurate, especially when sweat and cold weather mess with chest straps • Is HRV worth paying attention to, yes, but use it as a trend and an early warning, not a daily scoreboard • What is the hardest part of auto transitions, T2 to run, because the watch cannot know where that exact line is • What is Ray showing up with in a few years, a trusted mid range bike computer, Favero power meter pedals, and a high end Garmin watch as a reference level setup Guest: Ray Maker Instagram: Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    59 min
  4. 7 ENE

    Episode 125: Triathlon Bingo, Big Predictions, and a No-Filter Catch Up with Mark Matthews

    Send us a text This week on Another Triathlon Podcast, we’re joined by Mark Matthews from ProTriNews for one of our most fun and wide ranging conversations yet. From racing plans and off season chaos to bold predictions for the year ahead, this episode is built around our first ever Triathlon Bingo card, where we put the sport under the microscope and call our shots for what we think will actually happen next. Mark brings the straight talk takes you’d expect, as we dig into everything from Ironman draft zones and Hayden Wilde’s dominance to Alex Yee’s marathon temptations, Kat Matthews’ plans, and whether the sport is headed for real change or just louder debates. This one is opinionated, self aware, and very much not trying to sit on the fence. Highlights  • Mark Matthews on getting back into racing and lining up for 70.3 New Zealand  • Why the pro season starting earlier is both smart and brutal  • Triathlon Bingo explained, our free square and why “most stacked field ever” is inevitable  • Will Jelle Geens three peat at 70.3 Worlds, or does long course change everything  • Hayden Wilde skipping 70.3 Worlds on purpose, stubbornness or strategy  • T100 race locations, will they finally stay put  • Ironman draft zones, bad faith arguments, real data, and why 20m isn’t a magic fix  • Alex Yee marathon vs triathlon, temptation, timing, and Olympic reality  • Texas winners and Kona winners, myth or outdated logic  • Lionel Sanders and inevitable training philosophy shifts  • Sub eight Ironman, when, where, and who actually does it  • Matt Hauser, WTCS dominance, and the short course hierarchy  • Why Hayden Wilde is still untouchable at T100  • Kat Matthews and a potential pro series three peat  • Norwegian podium sweeps, are we done or just getting started Quickfire Q&A  • Will Ironman actually change the pro draft zone, probably, eventually, but not for the reasons people think  • Is 20m fairer, no, it just changes who benefits  • Who is most likely to upset the Norwegians, Martin Van Riel gets the nod  • Will we see a woman go sub eight, yes, and sooner than people expect  • Does Mark care who the biggest triathlon podcast is, absolutely not Follow the show  📸 @anothertriathlonpodcast Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    55 min
  5. 17/12/2025

    Episode 124: T100 Qatar finale, the Triathlon World Tour news, and Ironman draft zone testing

    Send us a text This week on Another Triathlon Podcast, Jenna Caer, Josh, and Fede break down the final T100 race in Qatar, what the results mean for the series standings, and why 2026 is already shaping up to be a chaos calendar for the best athletes in the sport. The crew also reacts in real time to Ironman’s breaking news about comprehensive draft zone testing with Race Ranger, and digs into the bigger question behind it, are we finally about to see pro racing get the spacing it deserves. We also hit the ripple effects of Alex Yee’s ridiculous marathon jump, what that means for LA 2028, and why the future of short course and middle distance might be heading toward a full rebrand under a new “Triathlon World Tour” umbrella. Highlights  • T100 Qatar recap, Hayden Wild wins again, Morgan Pearson second, Marten Van Riel third  • Jelle Geens has an off day after a huge travel stretch, and what that says about backing up worlds  • Women’s race, Kate Waugh takes the win, Georgia Taylor Brown second, Julie Derron third  • Lucy Charles Barclay fights through a tough day, and the fine margins that decide these races  • Ashley Gentle racing through a heavy personal week, and the respect that deserves  • What GTB’s late season run tells us about fueling, not fitness  • Top 10 series standings and why invitations next year could change who shows up early season  • 2026 T100 schedule talk, Gold Coast, Singapore, San Francisco, Vancouver, Dubai, plus another long season to Qatar  • Alex Yee’s 2:06 marathon and the future Olympic triangle, swim speed, bike dynamics, and what comes next  • PTO and World Triathlon announce the Triathlon World Tour for 2027, and the T50 question  • Ironman draft zone testing in Tucson with Race Ranger and Mark Gravlin, 12 vs 16 vs 20 metres, and what comes next  • Off season side quest, the new Ineos kit, and why cycling brands love a loud pivot Quickfire Q and A  • Who looks untouchable right now in T100 racing, the crew agrees Hayden Wild is forcing everyone to level up  • What is the biggest limiter for Olympic athletes coming back from a marathon block, swim speed, and the ability to make the front group  • What do we want from the future of triathlon growth, fewer paywalls, better broadcasts, and more ways for new athletes to enter the sport  • What draft zone change do we actually want, longer spacing at the biggest races, especially championship level events Follow the show  📸 @anothertriathlonpodcast Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    59 min
  6. 10/12/2025

    Episode 123: The Qatar Grand Final, Golf Carts Gone Rogue, and Rules No One Can Agree On

    Send us a text This week on Another Triathlon Podcast, brought to you by maunaapparel, Jenna Caer and Josh unpack a wild stretch in the triathlon world. The T100 Grand Final in Qatar is finally here and the season is ending with maximum tension, from winner takes all battles in the women’s field to Hayden Wilde’s stranglehold on the men’s series and a stacked crew of contenders trying to blow the script apart in brutal heat at the end of a very long year. Before they dive into Qatar, the episode runs through a heavy mix of racing and industry storylines. Josh clocks his first sub twenty 5k in years and locks in his road to Tokyo and Berlin, Jenna Caer is navigating snowy Canadian bricks and an unconfirmed Qatar multisport race, Precision Hydration is announced as the new Ironman North America hydration sponsor, Team Mana camp in Scottsdale opens with a big apparel bundle incentive, and Ironman 70.3 La Quinta delivers a full what the f moment with a runaway golf cart destroying the pro women’s bike rack and a controversial DQ for Lionel Sanders over a half unzipped race suit. Highlights  • Josh’s first sub twenty 5k and building toward Tokyo and Berlin  • Winter training chaos in Canada and coaching outdoor bricks in the snow  • Precision Hydration becomes Ironman North America’s hydration sponsor  • Team Mana training camp in Scottsdale and early registration perks  • The La Quinta golf cart disaster and how it wrecked multiple pro bikes  • Lionel Sanders DQ over a half unzipped suit and the debate over outdated rules  • Talbot’s explosive reaction and the larger conversation about consistency  • Ironman Western Australia recap including Lottie Wilms’ Kona qualification  • Georgia Taylor Brown and Vincent Luis taking wins in Bahrain  • T100 Qatar preview and why the women’s race is winner takes all  • The case for Julie Derron, Lucy Charles Barclay and Kate Waugh  • How heat, travel and end of season fatigue may decide the race  • Yelle Geens’ path to the men’s title and what Hayden Wilde needs to do  • Outside picks like Martin Van Riel, Morgan Pearson and Jonas Schomburg  • Why top ten matters most this year for 2025 T100 race invites  • The rise of surprise contenders and the danger of assuming predictable outcomes Quickfire Q and A  • Who we think lands on the podium in both races  • Athletes most likely to disrupt the favourites  • How heat and swim dynamics change the entire race  • Who benefits most from a run heavy showdown Follow the show: @anothertriathlonpodcast  Jenna Caer: @jennacaer  Josh: @joshmvernon  Fede: @fedemultisport Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    58 min
  7. 01/12/2025

    Episode 122: Pro Files with Georgia Taylor-Brown

    Send us a text This week on Another Triathlon Podcast, brought to you by maunaapparel, we sit down with Olympic medalist, SuperTri superstar, and long course newcomer Georgia Taylor-Brown. Fresh off a year that has taken her everywhere from Dubai to Phuket to Bahrain, Georgia joins us to talk about her transition season, the joy of racing without pressure, and why this unexpected year of gravel racing, T100 experiments, and twenty two races has completely reset her love for the sport. In this conversation, Georgia takes us from her early days as a swimmer who never loved swimming, to being terrified on group rides, to becoming one of the most consistent forces in WTCS racing. She opens up about learning how to ride a bike from scratch, the years where she doubted she belonged, the Tokyo Olympics and how stepping away from the intensity of Olympic qualification has helped her rediscover why she started triathlon in the first place. Highlights  • Growing up swimming twelve to eighteen hours a week and building the engine that carried her career  • Learning to ride a bike in cotton T shirts and hand me down shorts and getting dropped on every climb  • Joining the British talent squad with no triathlon experience  • The moment she finally felt she belonged in WTCS racing  • Tokyo 2021 from injury to puncture to an Olympic silver medal  • How gravel racing and park runs brought joy back into her training  • Why 2024 was the year she needed to reset mentally  • Her first impressions of the T100 series and what she learned the hard way about nutrition  • Training alone, self coaching, and trying to fit intensity around twenty two races  • Plans for 2025 including World Series racing, qualifying for Nice, potential T100 starts, and the long road back to LA 2028  • Advice she lives by: don’t look sideways, focus on your own path  • Life after triathlon and her dream of working in gravel or trail event organisation Quickfire Q and A  • The strangest thing she has eaten mid ride  • The pro she would choose as a relay partner and why it is Jess Learmonth  • The fourth discipline she would add to triathlon and why she would be world champion at faffing  • Her pump up playlist from Whitney Houston to Nicki Minaj  • The best advice she has ever been given Follow the show: @anothertriathlonpodcast  Jenna Caer: @jennacaer  Josh: @joshmvernon  Fede: @fedemultisport Guest: Georgia Taylor-Brown  Instagram: @georgiatb Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    57 min
  8. 26/11/2025

    Episode 121: Qatar Chat, and is there even an Off Season?

    Send us a text This week on Another Triathlon Podcast it is just Jenna-Caer and Josh on the mic, catching up on everything happening in the triathlon world. With only one major race left in the season, the big question now is simple. Who is actually going to make it to the T100 Qatar start line? Between illnesses, injuries, heat stress, travel fatigue and the tightest schedules we have ever seen, the final battle is shaping up to be unpredictable. Jenna Caer and Josh break down the ripple effects of Dubai, the nonstop pro calendar, early season Ironman choices, the strategies athletes will use to lock in Kona and 70.3 Worlds slots, and how the T100 shake ups are pulling more pros into long course than ever. They also dive into the newest start lists, Taylor Knibb’s decision to pull the plug on Qatar, who benefits, and who suddenly has an opening for a top ten series finish. If you want to register early for T100 Vancouver you can get access here: https://in.registrations.protriathletes.org/vancouver-t100-2026/?campaign=69247ed336c80950c6c89249 Highlights  • Josh recovering from illness, podcast crossovers, and off season vibes  • Why the pro offseason is disappearing with Qatar, New Zealand and Texas stacked so early  • The strategy behind choosing races for Kona or Nice qualification  • Early predictions on which big names will target New Zealand and Texas  • The women’s T100 Qatar start list and why Taylor Knibb’s absence changes everything  • Paula Findlay’s uncertain start and how that affects series rankings  • Imogen Simmonds’ return, food poisoning, and the chaos at Laguna Phuket  • Cozumel Ironman recap and Lisa Perter’s massive twenty minute win  • Why pros are skipping late season Ironmans and saving effort for the Pro Series  • T100’s new Spain location and what it means for 2025  • Vancouver T100 preview and early sign ups  • Indoor training season, treadmill grade myths, and winter survival  • Gear talk, Bont shoes, custom insoles and a teaser for a DC Rainmaker episode  • Race Ranger’s newest data and why drafting is finally being policed  • Ironman’s retroactive Kona slot emails, the forty eight hour acceptance window and how it may impact women’s participation  • Age group changes we want to see including elite waves and clearer racing dynamics Quickfire  • The races Jenna Caer and Josh are targeting next season  • Indoor training preferences and music versus no music  • The best and worst parts of winter prep  • What they want to see Ironman implement before 2026 Follow the show: @anothertriathlonpodcast  Jenna Caer: @jennacaer  Josh: @joshmvernon  Fede: @fedemultisport If you want a social media caption for this episode or a teaser script for a reel, I can write that next. Support the show Stay connected with us! Follow us on social media - @anothertriathlonpodcast with hosts Jenna-Caer, Fede and Josh to keep up with the latest. And if you have any burning questions for the coaches, feel free to shoot them over to Jennacaer@maunaendurance.com https://www.instagram.com/anothertriathlonpodcast/

    55 min

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ATP, or 'Another Triathlon Podcast,' is a fresh voice in the world of endurance sports. Our name is a playful nod to the abundance of triathlon podcasts out there and also stands for Adenosine Triphosphate, the energy source of our bodies, symbolizing the relentless energy of triathletes.  We want to have some fun with triathlon, not take ourselves too seriously while delivering insight, answer your training and racing questions and give you everything you need from inspiration to information that can help your race day.At ATP, we dig deeper than race recaps and gear reviews. We explore the untold stories, the science, the ridiculous, and the trials of triathlon. We feature inspiring interviews, expert advice, and innovative training strategies, aiming to inspire, educate, and entertain athletes of all levels. If you're a triathlete, ATP is your fuel to keep moving forward

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