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2025: A Season of Accomplishments for Our Triathlon Team

 

The 2025 season provided us with a great reminder that success in endurance sports isn’t defined by a single finish line, but it's built through consistency, curiosity, and the courage to step outside of what feels comfortable.

At Trimarni, we specialize in endurance sports, with triathlon at the core of what we do. What sets our athletes apart is their willingness to explore beyond traditional boundaries. This year, our team showed up across a wide range of events: off-road triathlons, cycling races, open water swims, road and trail running races, and sprint and Olympic-distance triathlons. Each start line allowed for growth, adaptability, and a commitment to becoming more complete athletes.


While long distance triathlon success is created from consistency, endurance athletes thrive off adaptability. Racing across disciplines and formats offers benefits that "long" training sessions alone can’t replicate.

Off-road triathlons and trail runs build strength, resilience, and technical skills. Cycling races sharpen terrain management, pedaling mechanics and quick thinking. Open water swims develop confidence and efficiency under unpredictable conditions. Sprint and Olympic triathlons teach athletes how to manage intensity, transitions, and race-day decision-making.

Most importantly, stepping into unfamiliar territory forces athletes to grow. Comfort zones feel safe, but progress lives just beyond them.


One of our core beliefs at Trimarni is that athletic success doesn’t come from obsessing over outcomes. Here are a few guiding principles we encourage our athletes to embrace:

1. Focus on execution, not results
You can’t control who shows up on race day or how the conditions will unfold. You can control pacing, fueling, mindset, and effort. Success comes from executing your plan to the best of your ability. 

2. Use racing as feedback, not judgment
Every race provides feedback and learning lessons. Some will confirm your strenghts, others will reveal areas to improve. Neither defines your worth as an athlete.

3. Chase experiences, not results
Trying new race formats builds perspective and keeps the training process fun. Enjoy the challenge of learning something new (and feeling like a beginner).

4. Don't be afraid to fail 
Failure is not a reflection of your potential, it’s feedback. Racing with curiosity rather than fear allows you to take smart risks and discover what you’re capable of.

5. Stay curious, consistent and patient
Endurance development is a long game. Athletes who stay curious, adaptable, and patient are the ones who last and thrive.


Our athletes experienced personal bests, completed first-ever races, qualified for the World Championship, tackled intimidating courses, and learned how to race with intention. Some celebrated podium finishes while others measured progress through breakthroughs and overcoming obstacles that don’t always show up in results.



We’re proud of our athletes not just for what they accomplished, but for the mindset they brought to every start line. They showed up prepared, curious, and unafraid to test themselves, even when the result wasn’t guaranteed.

As we move into the 2026 season, our mission remains the same: train with purpose, race with curiosity (not pressure), embrace failure as part of growth, and keep finding joy in the process.

Success has a way of following athletes who refuse to never give up.