Story By Coach Bjorn Jansen
When winter arrives, athletes often face a key decision: focus on the indoor season or commit to cross country. Both demand effort, discipline, and time, but are fundamentally different sports.
At SpeedPro, our coaching clarifies that you can only truly focus on one if you want to maximise your potential. Splitting energy between indoor training and cross country limits progress in both.
Why Indoor Training Requires a Different Focus
Training for the indoor season develops speed, technique, and racing sharpness, qualities that directly transfer into outdoor success. Our coaching prioritises this progression, building race rhythm, speed endurance, and tactical awareness.
Cross country, on the other hand, is endurance-based. The high mileage and uneven terrain build aerobic strength, but come at the expense of the explosiveness and precision required indoors.
Trying to train for both divides energy and can limit your progression. Athletes are neither sharp enough for the indoor track nor strong enough to dominate cross country.
Indoor Training Prepares You for Championships
In the indoor season, athletes learn to compete under pressure. Tight bends, short straights, and rounds demand speed, endurance, and focus. Each race is an opportunity to refine execution and build confidence.
At SpeedPro, training for the indoor season isn’t just about staying fit but also about developing championship habits. From block starts to pacing through lactic buildup, the goal is always the same: to perform when it counts.
Cross Country and Indoor Training Don’t Mix
While cross country offers valuable aerobic conditioning, it demands an entirely different type of preparation. High mileage can compromise the strength, coordination, and recovery needed for sprint and middle-distance work.
Athletes who try to balance both often become fatigued, injured, or struggle to adapt to the track rhythm. At SpeedPro, we coach athletes to choose based on long-term goals, not short-term activity.
Indoor training is the most direct and effective route if your ambition is on the track, from 100m to 800m.
Coaching Athletes to Commit to One Path
Choosing between cross country and indoor training isn’t just about the weekly schedule; it’s about purpose. Committing athletes to one focus creates structure, consistency, and measurable progress.
Our Wimbledon-based coaching helps athletes and parents understand how each phase of the season fits into the wider performance plan. When the direction is clear, the training quality improves dramatically.
Why the Indoor Season Builds Championship Potential
The indoor season gives athletes a head start in racing, technical control, and tactical awareness. Athletes who commit fully to this phase carry sharper speed, stronger finishes, and greater composure into the outdoor season.
Indoor training teaches you to manage rounds, recover fast, and deliver when high stakes are essential for championship racing.
At SpeedPro, we coach athletes to see this not as a winter add-on, but as a foundation for everything that follows.
At the Finish Line
Indoor and cross country are both valuable, but excellence requires focus. Athletes who dedicate their energy to one discipline progress faster and perform better when it matters most.
At SpeedPro, our coaching provides the structure and clarity to help athletes commit, develop, and succeed across the indoor and outdoor seasons.




