Pros are so lucky. They get to devote their lives to the sport they love, and completely focus on training and eating well. Wouldn't it be nice if we could all be so successful? Look鈥攜ou can. It's not that laundry list of obligations holding you back from being an amazing athlete, and our 2014 Fittest Real Athletes are living proof. They're power players at home, in the office, and competing alongside the pros themselves. And they're nice enough to share how they do it all, so start taking notes.
Train with a Buddy

Case Study: Ironman Clay Emge, 30
Bona Fides
Last year, Emge, an engineer at an oil and gas company in Tyler, Texas, won the 25鈥29 age group at the in Kona, Hawaii.
How He Does It
Emge has always been a strong runner鈥攈e completed a one-hour 22-minute half marathon in college. After getting into triathlons in 2009, he steadily improved his multisport performance through committed training: 6 A.M. swims at the YMCA, lunchtime runs and strength training, and grueling evening bike rides. But when he missed qualifying for Kona by just ten seconds in 2012, he decided to ramp up his approach鈥攅specially on the bike, his weakest discipline. 鈥淩ealizing I was that close to something most triathletes only dream of made me dedicate myself to making it the following year,鈥 he says. Emge began riding with a friend who was also targeting Kona and was a strong cyclist but a slower runner. 鈥淗e pushes me on the bike, and I push him on the run,鈥 says Emge. 鈥淗aving a partner makes it that much more bearable鈥攁nd makes you faster and more competitive, too鈥 He also does weekly group rides. 鈥淚 would never have won my age group at Kona without those steps,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 not motivated enough to push myself to the limit.鈥
Follow His Lead
Endurance coach Jesse Kropelnicki, who has guided several Ironman champions, strongly endorses working out with partners, particularly as a way to address weaknesses. But he cautions that doing so can result in overtraining. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e working on improving one aspect of your sport, you need to decrease volume in others,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 triathlete who adds two hours a week of swimming needs to cut back on biking and running. Your body can only handle so much stress.鈥
Be More Efficient

Case Study: Endurance Runner Blake Benke, 37
Bona Fides
In 2009, Benke, who lives in Connecticut and works in financial services on Wall Street, finished tenth place at the notorious , a 135-mile race through California鈥檚 Death Valley. Last September, he completed the 153-mile Spartathlon in Greece in 28 hours and 29 minutes, earning him 13th place鈥攖he top American finish.
How He Does It
Benke has a 90-minute commute and two small children. Finding the time to train takes discipline, which he developed at the U.S. Naval Academy and later as a Marine in the Iraq war. It also demands creativity. 鈥淚 think part of the fun is making it all fit,鈥 Benke says. He uses the seams in his schedule to train. He works from 鈥8 a.m. to 6 p.m., 鈥渨ith no breaks,鈥 but will often run eight miles from his lower Manhattan office to Harlem to catch a commuter train home. Usually, he does his longer runs on weekends. 鈥淭hen, as soon as I get home, I鈥檓 taking my kids to birthday parties, giving them baths, and doing everything I can to pull my weight,鈥 says Benke, who is currently training for November鈥檚 . 鈥淚t helps that I really only need about six hours of sleep.鈥
Follow His Lead
鈥淚f something is important to you, you鈥檒l find time to do it,鈥 says David Allen, author of . 鈥淎nd often it will benefit the other things in your life.鈥 Pack your day, as Benke does, and you can鈥檛 afford to waste a single moment, which helps you focus. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e with your kids all the time but looking at your phone constantly, that鈥檚 no different than not being there at all,鈥 says Allen. It鈥檚 all about balance. 鈥淚f one part of your life starts to suffer, it鈥檚 important to reevaluate and figure out what needs to change.鈥
Set Goals鈥攁nd Stick to Them

Case Study: Climber Andrew Palmer, 27
Bona Fides
In October 2013, Palmer, a Boston-based data analyst at creative agency , climbed Jaws II, 鈥╝ 70-foot Class 5.15a route at 鈥∟ew Hampshire鈥檚 famed Waimea crags. He was the fourth person 鈥╰o scale Jaws and one of a small number of Americans to send 鈥╝ 5.15a climb.
How He Does It
Palmer relies heavily on detailed goal setting, a habit he picked up 鈥╥n Richmond, Virginia, where he began climbing at 13, and honed as a student at Dartmouth College. These days he spends three nights 鈥╝ week at the climbing gym, training evenings from 8 to 10:30, always with a specific objective in mind. 鈥淚 keep track of every workout,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 not improving, I analyze variables like diet, sleep, and stress. If none of those things are to blame, I鈥檒l take a different approach.鈥 Almost every weekend, Palmer travels to Waimea鈥攚ith a plan. 鈥淚鈥檒l set a big goal, but start with smaller goals. When I was working on Jaws, I鈥檇 have a goal 鈥╰o make it a quarter of the way 鈥╱p, then halfway, then to just stay 鈥╫n the wall for a minute longer.鈥
Follow His Lead
鈥淗e鈥檚 doing everything correctly,鈥 says Edwin Locke, professor emeritus at the University of Maryland business school and author of . 鈥淗e has a distant goal, some proximate goals, a plan to reach his goals, and a way to evaluate his goals.鈥 Locke especially likes that Palmer tracks his progress on paper. If you do that and still can鈥檛 figure out what鈥檚 hampering your headway, he suggests reach-ing out to an expert like a coach or boss for help. 鈥淎nd make sure that the goal is for you,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 鈥╰o impress somebody else, you鈥檒l fail 鈥╫r get hurt, or when you reach the goal it will feel empty.鈥
Multitask

Case Study: Obstacle Racer Amelia Boone, 30
Bona Fides
Bankruptcy attorney Boone was 鈥╰he top woman and second-place overall finisher in the 2012 , a 24-hour event that had competitors completing 鈥300 obstacles over 90 miles. Last year, Boone won the , a 14-mile course 鈥╳ith some 40 obstacles.
How She Does It
During her interview for this story, Boone was rolling around on a lacrosse ball to smooth out some knots in her back. So goes training for a Chicago lawyer who occasionally puts in 80-hour workweeks at , one of the country鈥檚 largest firms. Boone has become a master at getting fit while cranking out billable hours. 鈥淚鈥檒l do phone calls as I walk home,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I always tell people that a conference call is the best time to get in a ten-minute squat test.鈥 Of course, she also has to find time for dedicated training sessions. She often wakes up at 4 A.M. to go for a run or work out at her local CrossFit gym. If her ever changing work schedule allows, she plans to tackle at least 鈥20 obstacle races across the country this year鈥攗p from 12 in 2013. 鈥淚 always make sure my travel bookings are refundable,鈥 she says.
Follow Her Lead
Art Markman, a psychology professor at the University of Texas at Austin, says you can get away with Boone鈥檚 brand of aggressive multitasking if the exercises you鈥檙e doing feel habitual. 鈥淵ou can easily complete a task that you don鈥檛 need to think about, like walking or brushing your teeth, while also having a conversation,鈥 Markman says. Plus, 鈥渆xercise is really good cognitively,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t releases dopamine, which is associated with focused attention.鈥 But things get tricky when you try to accomplish multiple tasks that tax your brain, like shopping online while talking to someone. 鈥淵our brain will shift back and forth between the two tasks,鈥 he cautions, 鈥渁nd you鈥檒l become inefficient at both.鈥
Eat Smarter

Case Study: Triathlete Sami Inkinen, 38
Bona Fides
Since launching the real estate website Trulia in 2005, Silicon Valley resident Inkinen has climbed to the top of the amateur triathlon ranks. He鈥檚 a two-time overall amateur champion at the highly competitive , near Paso Robles, California, and was the 2011 world cham-pion in the 70.3 distance for 鈥╰he 30鈥39 age group. In June, Inkinen and his wife began their attempt to row a 5-by-20-foot boat from San Francisco to Hawaii.
How He Does It
Though his company is now well established, Finland native Inkinen still keeps a startup schedule, regularly putting in 70-hour weeks. So how does he maintain elite-level endurance fitness? 鈥淩eally intense hour-long workouts,鈥 he says. Inkinen will bust out ten intervals of minute-long sprints on a treadmill or stationary bike followed by a minute of jogging or spinning, then jump in the pool and swim 100-yard sprints. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all the time I can afford,鈥 he says. But the most dramatic improvement in his racing came when he rebooted his nutrition plan. Disillusioned with a low-fat, high-carb diet that left him constantly hungry and caused his weight to fluctuate dramatically, Inkinen experimented with different foods, ultimately adopting a high-fat diet made up of ingredients like olive oil, macadamia nuts, and avocados. 鈥淎fter a few months, I started becoming healthier and performing better,鈥 he says.
Follow His Lead
According to Dina Griffin, a sports dietitian at , which counsels elite athletes on nutrition, there are four key signs that you might be ingesting too many carbs: you frequently bonk, you鈥檙e hungry all the time, your stomach hurts, and you鈥檙e not recovering well from workouts. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing that most athletes鈥攆rom weekend amateurs to serious professionals鈥攑erform better with moderate carbohydrate intake,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you eat pasta every night, cut back to once or twice a week and see if you notice a difference.鈥