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the morning shakeout podcast

Episode 117 | Andy Blow

the morning shakeout podcast

the morning shakeout podcast

Coaching, Marathons, Sports, Olympics, Running, Ultrarunning

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 22 June 2020

⏱️ 78 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“I definitely don’t have any regrets in pursuing sport to the level that I did because I think one of the wonderful things about sport is that it’s a very simply definable thing and mostly it’s a quite healthy thing for a young person to go all-in on. I fully went all-in on sport—at one point, I lived, breathed, I must have bored people around me as a lot of us as athletes probably have done with my obsessive level of interest in it. When you go all-in on something, you gain so much learning from that, the kind of learning that you don’t get when you do anything half-assed. If you just go at it fully, full commitment, you learn and you get so much back.”Andy Blow is a friend of mine from the UK. He’s a sports scientist with a degree in Sports and Exercise Science from the University of Bath and he specializes in sweat, dehydration and cramping. A former elite-level triathlete, Andy won an XTERRA age-group world title and he also has multiple top-10 finishes at Ironman and 70.3 races to his name. He’s worked as a sports scientist and advisor in the world of motorsports, but it was overcoming his own struggles with cramping and hydration as an athlete that led to him specializing in electrolyte replenishment and founding the company Precision Hydration.In this conversation, we talked how dropping out of a cross-country race as a kid had a profound impact on him and helped shape his approach to sport and life, letting his identity get tied up in sport and how he learned to separate the two, why it’s hard for him to be objective and analytical sometimes even though he’s a scientist, where athletes are missing the mark with hydration and how solving his own problems as an athlete led to the founding of his company, battling burnout in his career and strategies for catching yourself before falling into a deep hole, and a lot more.This episode of the podcast is brought to you by Tracksmith, which makes classically stylish, cutting-edge apparel for real-world athletes. Visit tracksmith.com/mario and use code Mario15 at checkout to save $15 on your first purchase of $75 or more. It’s also sponsored by WHOOP, a fitness wearable that helps you sleep better, recover faster, and train smarter. Learn more at WHOOP.com and enter “Mario” at checkout to save 15% on a membership.Complete show notes: https://themorningshakeout.com/podcast-episode-117-with-andy-blow/Sign up here to get the morning shakeout email newsletter delivered to your inbox every Tuesday morning: www.themorningshakeout.com/subscribe/Support the morning shakeout on Patreon: www.patreon.com/themorningshakeout

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Transcript

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0:00.0

I definitely don't have any regrets in pursuing sport to the level that I did because I think one of the wonderful things about sport is that it's very it's a very simply definable thing and mostly it's quite a healthy thing for a young person to go all in on.

0:14.0

I fully went all in on sport.

0:16.0

At one point I lived, breathed, I must have bored people around me as a lot of us,

0:21.0

as athletes probably have done, with my obsessive level of interest in it and

0:26.3

when you go all in on something you sort of I don't know you gain so much learning from that

0:34.9

the kind of learning that you don't get when you do anything half-fast. If you just go at it fully, full commitment, you learn and you get so much

0:41.8

back.

0:45.9

That's Andy Blow.

1:02.4

And this is the morning shakeout podcast. Hey what's up everybody I'm your host Mario Freoli and my guest this week is Andy Blow.

1:03.0

Andy is a friend of mine from the UK.

1:05.0

He's a sports scientist with a degree in sports and exercise science

1:08.0

and he specializes in sweat, dehydration, and cramping.

1:12.0

A former elite level triathlete, Andy won an Exetera Age Group World title, and he also

1:16.8

has multiple top 10 finishes at Iron Man and 70.3 races to his name.

1:22.0

He's worked as a sports scientist and advisor in the

1:24.4

world of motorsports but it was overcoming his own struggles with

1:27.4

cramping and hydration that led him to specializing in electrolyte

1:30.7

replenishment and founding the company, Precision Hydration.

1:34.6

In this conversation, we talked about how dropping out of a cross-country race as a kid had a profound

1:39.2

impact on him and helped shape his approach to sport in life, letting his identity get tied up in sport

1:44.8

and how he learned to separate the two, why it's hard for him to be objective and analytical sometimes

1:49.8

even though he's a scientist, where athletes are missing the mark with hydration and how solving

...

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