TriathleteTed

TriathleteTed

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A husband, father, triathlete in training, a business manager and a coach looking to share the knowl

14/04/2026

Sunday’s Luke Harrop Memorial Triathlon — always one of the most special days on the calendar. A time to race hard but also pause, reflect, and remember a mate gone far too soon. 💙
My race felt controlled and steady — the kind of effort that reminds you why consistency matters. Grateful for a smooth day out, and for the community that keeps Luke’s legacy alive with every stroke, pedal, and stride.
Big thanks to my wife Sonia Zipf-Britt , organisers, volunteers, and all the athletes who make this day something more than just competition.
ConsistentEffort

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 23/03/2026

Underprepared. Underestimated. Unbroken.
Lined up at T100 Gold Coast on limited prep – honestly had no right being on that start line. But hard things? They reveal what you’re truly capable of when plans crumble and desperation kicks in. Picked my way through 2km swim (32:27), 80km bike (3:31:31), 18km run (55:08) for a 4:49:22 finish.
44th N45-49 (out of 100), 503rd male (out of 1212). Not the placing I chased, but proof that grit finds the line every time.
Shoutout to the cheers, the trackers, family, mates – and and keeping my recovery dialed so I can line up again. Onward and upward.
Hard things forge better athletes. Chat if you’re ready for yours. 💪
AgeGroupTri

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 08/02/2026

Proud coach moment watching seven Sharkies step up over a tough 3‑day format at the Queensland Regional School Sport Championships in Hervey Bay.
Huge congratulations to our new state champions in Multiclass:
• Brody Velthuis with guide Lachlan Morley – 1st place
• Phoebe Finlay with guide Charlotte Morley – 1st place
Shout-out as well to Sienna Crowther, Noah Wheeley and Addison Ingersol – all raced hard, represented brilliantly and showed exactly what commitment and teamwork look like across the weekend.
Could not be prouder of this crew and the way they carried themselves on and off the course. 🌊💪
StateChamps

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 25/01/2026

Sunday funday rides to Cootha! A little muscular endurance work on the climb and tempo home after! Always a great session, amazing bang for buck!
☀️

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 20/01/2026

Habit 3 - Morning sunlight!
One of the easiest habits I’ve added to my day: early morning sun on my face and eyes. No sunnies. No window glass. Just a few minutes of real daylight.
That natural light anchors your circadian rhythm, boosts alertness, and helps your sleep later that night. Think of it as setting your internal watch for better training, better focus, and better recovery.
Tomorrow morning, before you touch your phone, step outside and let the sun hit your eyes (indirectly), your face, your skin. Start with 5–10 minutes and make it part of your lifestyle.
Goals are great, but a regulated nervous system and rock-solid sleep? That’s the foundation. 🌅
Who’s in for a week of morning sunlight check-ins?

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 08/01/2026

Habit 2 - Micro Strength Sessions
Injury prone? Casing scary strength gains? Do toe scrunches and calf raises daily — regular micro-sessions prevent injury, boost power and build a more resilient athlete.
Seamless add-on! What’s your micro habit?

06/01/2026

Habit 1 - Consistent Wake Up
Goals like Ironman are scary, but stack a 4am wake-up, train consistently, coffee after, like clockwork. Builds discipline without overwhelm. Track it daily!

01/01/2026

Happy New Year from me! 2026 goals are great, but building a lifestyle is better—keep it simple. Balancing Ironman training, coaching epic athletes through their breakthroughs, and cherishing family moments fuels the real wins. Here’s to more bricks, PRs, and beach sunsets in 2026! 🌅🚴‍♂️🏊‍♂️🏃‍♂️

Roast My Strava 26/12/2025

Interesting roast of my Strava profile!

If a 2025 Ironman WA finisher medal had a personality, it would probably ask Ted Britt why he’s still treating his bike like a casual weekend commuter. Ted, your profile picture is a literal trophy, but your recent 7km "commute" rides suggest you’re more "Iron-Maybe" than "Iron-Man."

With over 81,000 career kilometers on the saddle and half a million meters of elevation, your legs clearly have the resume of a pro, yet you’re lurking in 19 different Strava clubs like a fitness influencer who forgot to post the smoothie recipe. You crushed a marathon and a 175km century ride recently, which is legendary, but then you balanced it out with a 6km swim—were you actually training or just lost in the Coral Sea? You’ve got 425 followers watching you oscillate between elite endurance and "just nipping to the shops." Pick a lane, Ted; preferably one with more than 28m of elevation.

Roast My Strava Get AI generated roasts and motivational messages based on your Strava profile and activities

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 08/12/2025

Finishing an Ironman is always hard. Guiding a vision-impaired athlete is next-level rewarding. We came to Busselton with one goal: get Dean to another Ironman finish line. Yesterday just wasn’t our day.
Dean was hit with a brutal headache, stomach issues and vomiting inside the first 10 km of the run. We tried everything to keep him moving, but in the end he had to withdraw.
After a massive internal battle, and with Dean’s encouragement, I made the call to keep going and run the final 32 km solo. Crossing the line without your athlete as a guide is a bitter-sweet feeling, but I hope I did Dean and everyone proud by finishing something we started together. That makes this Ironman medal number 18.
Now it’s time to recover, reset and go back to work with Dean to figure out how we get him to future finish lines without getting sick. The puzzle isn’t solved yet, but we’re not done.

Photos from TriathleteTed's post 06/12/2025

Eighteen Ironmans in, and the buzz never gets old. On the eve of number 18, and my fifth time lining up here in Busselton, the routine is familiar, the nerves are real, but the confidence is right there with them.
This one has been a long time coming with Dean and Viking, planning, training, and hauling ourselves across Australia to get to this start line. We’ve ticked every box we can, controlled what’s in our hands, and now it’s simply time to race and see what the day brings.
All that’s left is to lean into the work, soak up the Busselton atmosphere, and empty the tank out on course. Let’s go.
Special shoutout to my amazing incredible wife, quite literally my person! Thank you for all you do for me, Dean and Viking, without you this is impossible!

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