Story By Coach Bjorn Jansen
The indoor season is often viewed as a brief winter block, but with proper coaching, it becomes far more than that. At SpeedPro, we view indoor training as a crucial component of long-term development, a phase in which athletes refine their speed, enhance execution, and learn to perform under pressure.
When managed effectively, the indoor season enables athletes to peak indoors and then progress outdoors, transforming winter training into meaningful summer success.
Peak for Indoors with Purpose
Indoor racing challenges athletes in ways that build sharpness and resilience, with tight bends, short straights, and fast turnarounds between rounds. To perform well, athletes must be technically precise, mentally composed, and physically prepared to repeat high-quality efforts.
At SpeedPro, we plan the indoor season with clear progressions that allow athletes to peak for key meets. Training blocks focus on speed endurance, lactic control, acceleration, and race modelling, giving athletes the chance to deliver their best performances when it matters.
Peaking for the indoor season isn’t about chasing times; it’s about learning how to execute under championship pressure.
Why The Indoor Season Supports Outdoor Progress
Indoor success creates momentum. Athletes who take the indoor season seriously carry sharper speed, stronger efficiency, and better race awareness into the outdoor phase. This early-season confidence becomes a robust foundation for summer breakthroughs.
Without indoor training, many athletes spend the spring chasing fitness rather than developing race readiness. Indoor racing acts as a rehearsal space, where athletes test race models, understand pacing, and refine technique long before stepping onto the outdoor track.
Indoor work builds the qualities that are hardest to develop later in the year: composure, consistency, and technical sharpness.
Coaching Athletes Through the Transition
Transitioning from indoor to outdoor training requires balance. Push too hard, and athletes risk fatigue. Ease off too much, and indoor sharpness fades.
At SpeedPro, we manage this phase carefully, lowering race density, adjusting volume, and gradually adapting technical work to suit outdoor demands. Longer straights, different stride patterns, and event-specific race models all become part of the next phase.
This guided transition ensures that athletes leave the indoor season feeling confident and enter the outdoor season feeling ready.
The Indoor Season Builds Championship Qualities
Indoor racing fosters the traits championship athletes rely on:
- composure under pressure
- resilience in rounds
- consistent execution
- the ability to accelerate and maintain form under fatigue
These qualities are not built in isolation. They develop through deliberate training, targeted feedback, and the competitive experiences that indoor racing provides.
By the time athletes reach outdoor championships, they have already practised the behaviours that lead to success.
At the Finish Line
The indoor season isn’t a detour; it is a vital stage in the journey from winter preparation to outdoor championships. Athletes who commit to this phase learn how to peak and how to carry that momentum forward.
At SpeedPro, our coaching ensures indoor progress becomes outdoor success. Train consistently in the winter, and summer becomes the opportunity to show what you’ve built.




