The Endurance Lab

The Proven Fueling Strategy Behind 2 UTMB Wins Applied to Your Next Race | Paul Booth

1 h 4 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Proven Fueling Strategy Behind 2 UTMB Wins Applied to Your Next Race | Paul Booth

Descripción

Everyone seems to be chasing 120 grams of carbs per hour at the moment. But the research says that performance actually starts to dip after 100 grams per hour. And the fuelling plan behind two UTMB wins proves it. Paul Booth is a sports nutritionist, exercise physiologist, and lead nutritionist for the Salomon International Team with 26 years in university academia and 92 ultras completed himself. In 2025 he built the customised fuelling strategies that won both the men's and women's UTMB 100. But what makes this conversation valuable is not what Tom Evans and Ruth Croft did. It is what you can take from it and apply to your next race. In this episode Paul breaks down exactly how much carbohydrate you actually need per hour based on your intensity and fitness level, why going above 100 grams per hour may actually hurt your performance, how to train your gut so it does not fail you on race day, the glucose to fructose ratio that the research actually supports, and the one fuelling hierarchy mistake most ultra runners are making right now. Whether you are racing a marathon, a 100k or a 100 miler this is the most practical fuelling conversation you will find. Paul Booth: Website: https://performancegainsnutrition.com/ Instagram: @ultra.endurance.nutritionist Show notes links: 1. Ricardo Costa — Gut Training Research (the key paper Paul references)https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/abs/10.1139/apnm-2016-0453 2. Ricardo Costa — Gut Training Systematic Review (most comprehensive overview)https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37061651/ 3. O'Brien and Rowlands — The 0.8 fructose to glucose ratio paper (2011)https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/ajpgi.00419.2010 4. O'Brien and Rowlands — Fructose Maltodextrin Ratio Governs Performance (2013)https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255958218_Fructose-Maltodextrin_Ratio_Governs_Exogenous_and_Other_CHO_Oxidation_and_Performance 5. Alan McCubbin — Sodium ingestion and endurance performance systematic reviewhttps://research.monash.edu/en/publications/impact-of-sodium-ingestion-during-exercise-on-endurance-performan/ 0:00 Why 120g/hr has no research behind it 1:11 The UTMB fuelling strategy explained 4:20 What lab testing actually reveals 13:06 How to deliver carbs during a race 16:35 Carb strategy for recreational runners 21:35 Do elites need more carbs than amateurs 28:36 Fuelling the second half of your race 33:30 Gut training and osmolality 38:18 Glucose to fructose ratios 43:05 More carbs does not mean better performance 50:47 Feeding frequency and electrolytes 57:54 The fuelling hierarchy 1:01:13 Final takeaway for your next race 1:03:46 What endurance means to Paul Booth

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17 episodios

episode The Proven Fueling Strategy Behind 2 UTMB Wins Applied to Your Next Race | Paul Booth artwork

The Proven Fueling Strategy Behind 2 UTMB Wins Applied to Your Next Race | Paul Booth

Everyone seems to be chasing 120 grams of carbs per hour at the moment. But the research says that performance actually starts to dip after 100 grams per hour. And the fuelling plan behind two UTMB wins proves it. Paul Booth is a sports nutritionist, exercise physiologist, and lead nutritionist for the Salomon International Team with 26 years in university academia and 92 ultras completed himself. In 2025 he built the customised fuelling strategies that won both the men's and women's UTMB 100. But what makes this conversation valuable is not what Tom Evans and Ruth Croft did. It is what you can take from it and apply to your next race. In this episode Paul breaks down exactly how much carbohydrate you actually need per hour based on your intensity and fitness level, why going above 100 grams per hour may actually hurt your performance, how to train your gut so it does not fail you on race day, the glucose to fructose ratio that the research actually supports, and the one fuelling hierarchy mistake most ultra runners are making right now. Whether you are racing a marathon, a 100k or a 100 miler this is the most practical fuelling conversation you will find. Paul Booth: Website: https://performancegainsnutrition.com/ Instagram: @ultra.endurance.nutritionist Show notes links: 1. Ricardo Costa — Gut Training Research (the key paper Paul references)https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/abs/10.1139/apnm-2016-0453 2. Ricardo Costa — Gut Training Systematic Review (most comprehensive overview)https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37061651/ 3. O'Brien and Rowlands — The 0.8 fructose to glucose ratio paper (2011)https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/ajpgi.00419.2010 4. O'Brien and Rowlands — Fructose Maltodextrin Ratio Governs Performance (2013)https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255958218_Fructose-Maltodextrin_Ratio_Governs_Exogenous_and_Other_CHO_Oxidation_and_Performance 5. Alan McCubbin — Sodium ingestion and endurance performance systematic reviewhttps://research.monash.edu/en/publications/impact-of-sodium-ingestion-during-exercise-on-endurance-performan/ 0:00 Why 120g/hr has no research behind it 1:11 The UTMB fuelling strategy explained 4:20 What lab testing actually reveals 13:06 How to deliver carbs during a race 16:35 Carb strategy for recreational runners 21:35 Do elites need more carbs than amateurs 28:36 Fuelling the second half of your race 33:30 Gut training and osmolality 38:18 Glucose to fructose ratios 43:05 More carbs does not mean better performance 50:47 Feeding frequency and electrolytes 57:54 The fuelling hierarchy 1:01:13 Final takeaway for your next race 1:03:46 What endurance means to Paul Booth

Ayer1 h 4 min
episode Tim Noakes: I Was Wrong About Carbs! 120g/hr Breaks World Records artwork

Tim Noakes: I Was Wrong About Carbs! 120g/hr Breaks World Records

In this episode we cover what his new paper actually claims about muscle glycogen versus blood glucose, why he now believes 120 grams of carbs per hour works — and why the mechanism is not what anyone thought, the difference between fueling your metabolism and stimulating your brain, why recreational runners may be unknowingly developing pre-diabetes, the central governor theory updated, and his single most important training recommendation for every endurance athlete. Prof. Tim Noakes is a South African sports scientist, physician, and Emeritus Professor at the University of Cape Town. He is the author of the landmark book Lore of Running, one of the most comprehensive references in endurance sport ever written. He ran the Comrades Marathon nine times. He pioneered research on hyponatremia in endurance athletes that has saved lives worldwide. He developed the Central Governor Theory of fatigue. And he has spent decades challenging mainstream thinking on carbohydrates, muscle glycogen, and what actually limits human performance. Professor Tim Noakes has spent nearly 50 years studying endurance performance. He helped build the science of carbohydrate loading. He championed low carb for athletes. And in this conversation, he changed his mind — live — about something he had argued against for years. This is one of the most scientifically dense and genuinely surprising conversations in the history of this podcast. The carbohydrate paper: "Carbohydrate Ingestion on Exercise Metabolism and Physical Performance" by Prof. Tim Noakes and colleagues https://academic.oup.com/edrv/article/47/2/191/8432248?login=false The best impact paper: "Carbohydrate ingestion eliminates hypoglycemia and improves endurance exercise performance in triathletes adapted to very low- and high-carbohydrate isocaloric diets" by Prof. Tim Noakes and colleagues https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/ajpcell.00583.2024 The debate paper:"Does a low-carbohydrate diet impede endurance sports performance? Debate Consensus" by Prof. Tim Noakes and Prof. Louise M Burke https://ajcn.nutrition.org/article/S0002-9165(26)00080-8/fulltext 0:00 Prof. Tim Noakes changed his mind 1:11 His new paper on carbohydrates and performance 9:44 Two glucose pools — muscles vs blood 17:11 Muscle glycogen vs blood glucose explained 21:34 Low glycogen fat burning and carbs during exercise 26:09 Does 120 grams per hour actually work 33:07 Practical carb strategy by athlete type 37:34 Should you carb load the liver 42:27 Practical advice for masters runners 53:06 The central governor theory updated 59:36 Mistakes runners will make after this conversation 1:02:18 The Norwegian method — final takeaway 1:07:23 What endurance means to Prof. Noakes

22 de may de 20261 h 10 min
episode Run Your Fastest Marathon After 45, Even If You Started Late | Matt Fitzgerald artwork

Run Your Fastest Marathon After 45, Even If You Started Late | Matt Fitzgerald

In this episode Matt breaks down exactly why recreational runners become their own ceiling, what he learned training alongside professional runners half his age in Flagstaff, why the 80/20 rule does not need to change as you get older, the carbohydrate debate that is dividing the endurance world right now, and the psychological edge that separates athletes who reach their potential from those who never do. If you want to run your fastest marathon after 40 this is the conversation you need to hear. Matt Fitzgerald's books - https://mattfitzgerald.org/books/ Dream Run Camp - https://dreamrun.com/ Matt Fitzgerald Coaching - https://mattfitzgerald.org/coaching/ 0:00 Fastest marathon after 40 3:31 Time as a limiter 6:06 Training with elites 9:00 More moderate intensity 10:51 The carb debate 18:05 Carbs per hour 21:15 Carb periodization 28:36 80/20 for masters runners 32:52 Low volume and 80/20 35:46 Hyperpolarized training 39:07 Psychology of endurance 47:46 Toughness vs smart racing 50:23 Mental lessons from elites 53:47 Dream Run Camp 1:01:47 What runners take home 1:04:26 What Matt is figuring out

15 de may de 20261 h 11 min
episode Physiotherapist: Do THIS To Stay Injury Free As A Runner Over 40 | Brodie Sharpe artwork

Physiotherapist: Do THIS To Stay Injury Free As A Runner Over 40 | Brodie Sharpe

Most runners think getting injured comes down to weak glutes, bad form, or worn out shoes. But physiotherapist Brody Sharp says the real reason is almost always something else entirely — and most runners over 40 are missing it completely. In this episode, Brody breaks down the load versus capacity model that explains 90% of running injuries, why strong and weak runners get injured at exactly the same rate, how to use carbon shoes and minimalist shoes as tools to build a more robust and durable body, and the one training ratio that could keep you running injury free for the next decade. Resources: Run Smarter Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/the-run-smarter-podcast/id1494778818 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RunSmarterwithBrodieSharpe Website and online coaching: https://runsmarter.online/ Run Smarter Book: https://www.amazon.com/Run-Smarter-Evidence-based-Guidance-Opinions/dp/0645520705 0:00 Why runners over 40 keep getting injured 2:42 Early warning signs of injury 7:46 What runners get wrong about injuries 10:05 Load vs capacity explained 13:40 How to measure your training load 17:59 Carbon shoes and injury risk 21:03 How to transition into carbon shoes 28:35 Barefoot and minimalist shoes 31:37 Protocol for transitioning to minimalist shoes 37:10 Heel striking — is it actually a problem? 39:15 Does prehab actually prevent injury 43:45 What to do when injured 48:38 Injury and mental health 51:50 The 80/20 rule for masters runners

8 de may de 202659 min
episode Lactate Scientist: Why MOST Runners Get Lactate Threshold WRONG | Dr Peter Tran artwork

Lactate Scientist: Why MOST Runners Get Lactate Threshold WRONG | Dr Peter Tran

Most runners train to improve their lactate threshold. But what if improving it is actually making you slower? In this episode, I sit down with Dr. Peter Tran — sports medicine PhD, 1:14 half marathoner, and co-founder of Athyx — to break down everything runners over 40 need to know about lactate, how to actually use it to guide training, and why most of what you've heard about lactate threshold training is wrong. We also get into fueling strategies, the truth about high carb versus low carb for endurance athletes, and the future of continuous lactate monitoring — including Peter's new wearable device that could change how runners train forever. Get your Hume Health Body Pod with up to 50% OFF 👉 https://humehealth.com//discount/ENDURANCELAB?redirect=/pages/hume-body-pod&utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=influencer&utm_campaign=ENDURANCELAB Use code: ENDURANCELAB Get 10% off the Athyx Flux 1 👉 https://www.athyx.com/ Use Code: ELAB10 To receive your discount, you need to create an account on the Athyx website. The Endurance Lab Training Plans (5K, 10K, Half & Full Marathon) 👉 http://theendurancelab.run/training-plans Check out all of the exclusive discounts from Partners of The Endurance Lab 👉 https://theendurancelab.run/exclusive-discounts 0:00 Why lactate matters 4:39 LT1 and LT2 explained 11:22 Lab vs real world testing 17:52 Maximal lactate steady state 24:11 Using lactate to guide training 29:48 One test tells you nothing 32:06 Shifting the lactate curve 36:29 Lactate data over time 39:42 Lactate vs heart rate 45:04 High carb vs low carb and lactate 50:46 Continuous lactate monitoring 56:15 Athyx Flux One #LactateThreshold #RunningScience #MastersRunners #EnduranceTraining #Zone2Training #LactateTraining #RunFaster #MarathonTraining #RunningOver40 #ContinuousLactate #Athyx #RunSmarter #EnduranceLab #FatAdaptedRunning #HighCarbRunning #TrainingLoad #RunningPerformance #VO2Max #LT1LT2 #NorwegianMethod

1 de may de 20261 h 9 min