Tim Hola will probably piss you off. It鈥檚 not on purpose鈥攈e鈥檚 a super nice guy. Like your听average 44-year-old, he has a full-time job, a听wife, and kids. But听in reality, he鈥檚 far from average, because he has a work ethic that is simply not human. A听member of , he听keeps an early-morning 鈥渇armer鈥檚 schedule鈥 so his workouts won鈥檛 interfere with family life, he听doesn鈥檛 touch alcohol, and he鈥檚听unfamiliar with the phrases 鈥渃heat day鈥 or 鈥渞est day.鈥 In his 24 years of racing, he鈥檚 completed more than 219听triathlons, has three masters-national-championship听and two world-championship titles听to his name, and has raced in the 16 times. We profiled Hola as one of our Fittest Real Men back in 2008. Since then, he鈥檚 only gotten stronger.
鈥淓verybody tries to tell you it鈥檚 all over when you turn 40, but I just decided not to listen to them,鈥 Hola says from his home in Colorado. 鈥淚 just try to keep it going. I feel like my body is made to move.鈥
Hola has been moving his whole life. He was a swimmer as a kid, then turned to rowing in college when he couldn鈥檛 make the swim team. After picking up running during crew training, Hola听raced his first triathlon听with his father, Ken, during his sophomore year. It鈥檚 a tradition they鈥檝e maintained ever听since, racing together at least once a year. 鈥淚 like the variety,鈥 Hola says. 鈥淚 like training for different sports. If I were just a runner, I think my career would already be over.鈥
He听also likes the Ironman format because he says the longer distance鈥攁 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bike ride, and a 26.2-mile run鈥攑lays into his strengths as an older athlete. 鈥淎s you age into your thirties, you get better at longer distances. You鈥檙e a smarter [racer],鈥 he says. 鈥淎 lot of pros in Ironman are well into the upper thirties and early forties. You鈥檝e done it for so long, you鈥檙e good at distance.鈥
鈥淓verybody tries to tell you it鈥檚 all over when you turn 40, but I just decided not to listen to them.鈥
Hola credits his training regimen with helping him avoid injuries.听Unlike听a traditional triathlete鈥檚 routine of听long training hours, Hola keeps his sessions short to accommodate his family and听his job as a听medical sales rep, knocking out just 15 to 16 total hours听a week. (Training plans for听other听pro Ironman triathletes often听have them spending听that much time on the bike alone).
But Hola makes up the听difference听by training really hard. 鈥淚 focus on quality over quantity, and I try to go anaerobic once a day,鈥 he听says, referring to workouts performed听at an intense pace that cause听lactate to form. Think sprints instead of jogging. While it鈥檚 common for younger athletes to spend regular time in this anaerobic zone, a lot of older athletes avoid going hard for fear of injury. But Hola听鈥嬧媠ays it鈥檚 crucial to his success.
Still, Hola听admits that he suffers from the same inevitable physical declines that come with age. While he鈥檚 gotten better at race strategy during his tenure, his pace on long runs has slowed. 鈥淢y body reaches its limit a little sooner, but that鈥檚 OK,听because I still feel strong. Sure, there鈥檚 a lot of physical stuff that happens as you age, but there are things you can do to lengthen your athletic career,鈥 he says.
In order to maximize his longevity,听Hola follows a next-level routine. He wakes up at 4:15 every morning to听train听before his 12-year-old twins听wake up. He splits each听session between two sports鈥攔unning and biking on one day, swimming and lifting听on the next. He does a recovery workout on Mondays (usually an easy swim), but he doesn鈥檛 necessarily adhere to the all-holy temple of rest that most aging athletes and trainers swear by; he only takes one rest day a month. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 just how my body works,鈥 Hola says. 鈥淚f I don鈥檛 get up and check the workout box, I won鈥檛 feel good.鈥
And the early-morning workouts are just the beginning. Hola drinks 40 ounces of water first thing when he wakes up, even before he brushes his teeth, then sips on water the rest of the day, taking in a total of 160 ounces. He calls himself a boring eater who likes fruit and yogurt and never reaches for the fried calamari.听And he hasn鈥檛 had a sip of alcohol in nine years. 鈥淓verything I put in my body has an effect on it, so I pay attention to what鈥檚 going in,鈥 Hola says. But he鈥檚 quick to add that he doesn鈥檛 consider himself a strict health nut. For instance, after a good race, Hola will treat himself to a cheeseburger and an听order of听fries听from McDonald鈥檚. Not a large order of fries. A small听order.
The cheeseburger and fries听is a tradition Hola shares with his father,听who鈥檚 still racing hard at the age of 75. In听September, the duo will attempt to earn a Guinness World Record for the fastest combined听father-son time to complete an Ironman.
Hundreds of triathalon finishes, national-championship听titles, and now, maybe, a world record. If anyone is still wondering how he gets it all done, Hola has a few tips. 鈥淚t鈥檚听all about will power and time management. That鈥檚 the key,鈥 Hola says. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also gotta be fun. I don鈥檛 have a coach, and I don鈥檛 crunch the data, because that would feel too much like work. The day I stop enjoying it听is the day I鈥檒l stop training and racing.鈥