Abstract
The present study was carried out in order to quantify the athlete's endurance impairment
after two out of three sequential events of Olympic Triathlon (OT). Furthermore the
significance of ventilatory threshold (Tvent) and peak of oxygen uptake (VO2peak) as triathlete's performance predictors was assessed. Tvent and VO2peak were measured in six male triathletes performing an incremental treadmill test
a week before an ad hoc triathlon event. The same test was applied immediately after the first two segments
of the triathlon (1.5 km swim, 32 km bike). VO2peak and Tvent measured during the latter test were reduced compared to the first
test. VO2peak decreased from 69 to 64 ml · kg-1 · min1' and Tvent from 58 to 51 ml · kg-1 · min-1 (p<0,01), respectively. VO2peak and Tvent measured in the first test were well correlated (P<0.05) to both running
and cycling times. The Tvent measured during the second test was related to the running
time but with a higher significance (p < 0.01) than in the first test. The impairment
in the endurance performance induced by the first two segments of OT is an important
aspect to consider both in training and in race strategy. These results also provide
evidence that VO2peak and Tvent are good predictors of triathlon performance at least in cycling and
running events.
Key words
Olympic triathlon - ventilatory threshold - maximal oxygen uptake - endurance