Hi,
Just joined the platform and noticed I have long run sessions with a title like
SE 35’ and 60’.
Does that mean I’m suppose to run 95’? 35’ or 60’ pending fatigue? Or is this a double run day?
Hi,
Just joined the platform and noticed I have long run sessions with a title like
SE 35’ and 60’.
Does that mean I’m suppose to run 95’? 35’ or 60’ pending fatigue? Or is this a double run day?
Hi, do you have a screenshot of the session?
I would think it means run 35 mins and then 60 mins at different paces, not specifically a double run day (although I don’t think that would make too much of a difference)
I checked the paces/heart rate/power and it’s the same for each block. I’m on an olympic training plan… so this session seems long. I would imagine a long run would top out around 9-10 miles… maybe 75-90 minutes.
This looks like a bug to me. It’s suggesting you run off the bike in the middle of a run session?!? That’s not right.
Do you have other sessions in the plan similar to this or is it a one off?
Almost all my Sunday run sessions look like this, but most are missing the wording of running off the bike. Here’s another example:
Again… running almost 2 hours for a olympic distance triathlon seems like A LOT.
Yeah that’s most definitely a bug
I’d just take the longest session as one for now and hopefully the team can sort the bug out @Prof @Marjaana @moderators
Thanks so much for reaching out — and great eye catching those run session details. You’re absolutely right that running close to 2 hours every Sunday would feel a bit much, especially on an Olympic-distance triathlon plan.
What you’re seeing (the “SE 35’ and 60’” structure) is not a bug — it’s how the system currently structures sessions based on the daily availability you’ve set. In this case, it looks like AI Coach may be trying to “optimize” your longer weekend windows by stacking sessions to catch up on load. While your availability settings are totally reasonable (1.5 hrs weekdays and 4 hrs on weekends), the way the AI is using that weekend buffer isn’t ideal, and we’re actively working on smoothing this logic out.
For now, I’d suggest sticking to a single steady effort in those double-block sessions — use your judgment based on how you’re feeling that day. You absolutely do not need to run for 2 hours on an Olympic plan. We’ll keep refining this so your training stays aligned with your goals, available time, and common sense.
Thanks again for raising this — feedback like yours helps us improve the experience for everyone.
Let us know if you’d like help tweaking your settings or want a second pair of eyes on your plan!
Thanks @jockefc23 for pitching in here! ![]()
Warmly, MJ