As Paul Felder prepares for 70.3 Atlantic City on September 10, he鈥檚 not just using the event as a farewell to the half distance before jumping to full Ironman in 2023. Felder, a former top-ten ranked fighter in mixed martial arts, says he simply loves a challenge.
鈥淚 may do it a couple times just to do it, because I like the half distance,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think where it is a war of attrition as well as a speed game.鈥
Felder is familiar with wars of attrition. For nearly a decade, he competed as a professional mixed martial artist鈥攖he last six-plus years spent at the height of the sport in the . Felder built a reputation as not just one of the best lightweights (155 pounds) in the world, but one of the most exciting.
But when it was all over and Felder officially announced his retirement in May 2021, he needed to fill that competitive void. He found it in triathlon, which he had already started dabbling in before his final fight against Rafael Dos Anjos in November 2020. 鈥淒abbling鈥 may be the wrong word, since Felder is unsurprisingly all-in on everything he does.

鈥淲hen I first started, I wanted to have something that was just kind of fun to do in between MMA training and something that was going to keep me a little bit fitter in life,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen I stumbled upon triathlons, and I was like, I鈥檒l do this for fun. And then like anything, since I had a bit of pro sports experience, guys took me under their wing and would chat with me, and I just got sucked into the culture of it. And these guys are way more badass than people give them credit for. The s*** they鈥檙e doing is grueling. It鈥檚 brutal.鈥
The 38-year-old Felder is now a committed triathlete himself, and he also commentates on UFC events, and acts (he recently appeared on ), in addition to spending family time with his girlfriend and their two kids. And while nothing is easy about triathlon training, there is one benefit to having hung up the gloves.
鈥淭he difference off the bat is the impact,鈥 Felder said. 鈥淵our armor has to be different in MMA. You鈥檙e conditioning for damage and your durability has to be locked in. You might not have the same gas tank as a triathlete, but your ability to grind and push through circumstances for survival purposes, it鈥檚 a whole different level of cardio when a guy鈥檚 trying to choke you out versus me trying to run this mile really hard.鈥

While fighting, Felder would only run three days a week, which was supplemented by three days of sparring and grappling practice. Today, a typical day might see him focus on his running, followed the next day by a visit to the pool, and, of course, bike work. None of which includes getting punched, kicked or choked.
And though swimming was an early issue, once he hit the Ironman 70.3 course in Virginia in June, he was a natural, finishing in 5:27:26, good enough for 135th听overall and 23rd in his age group. He鈥檚 continued to improve in each of the four 70.3s he鈥檚 raced since, and he鈥檚 hoping to PR in Atlantic City this month.
鈥淚 want to do 29 to 32 minutes on the swim, bike right around two hours, maybe 2:05. And I gotta hit at least 1:28 for the run,鈥 said Felder, who is coached by David Tilbury-Davis, who also coaches 听鈥淚 raced this race last year and this is always one of my 鈥楢鈥 races because it鈥檚 close, it鈥檚 flat, it鈥檚 in Atlantic City, I fought there so many times, and it鈥檚 easy for me to go and do. My PR is 4:42 for a half, so I鈥檇 definitely like to get sub 4:30 for AC. And if I want to come close to the top five, I鈥檓 gonna probably have to do that even closer to 4:12-4:15, which might be a bit pushing it, but f*** it. If you don鈥檛 have a crazy goal, why am I even doing this stuff?鈥

Sounds like Paul Felder the fighter, not just Paul Felder the triathlete. And that鈥檚 precisely the point.
鈥淚 like that feeling of overcoming stuff and I鈥檝e always preached that,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s a fighter, you鈥檝e got to just dig your feet into the ground sometimes and go for it. And that鈥檚 how I am with this sport. If I quit, everything I鈥檝e ever talked about is just BS. Sometimes it鈥檚 really scary and it really sucks, but you鈥檝e got to persevere.鈥
A Look At Felder鈥檚 Training
鈥淢onday, Wednesday, and Friday in [MMA] camp I would do a very specific lifting program with my coach鈥攍ots of Olympic lifts combined with explosive movements,鈥 Felder said. 鈥淒eadlifts straight to or broad jumps.
鈥淥n Fridays, we would do a circuit focusing on high levels of intensity鈥30 second, one-minute bursts of ball slams, farmer鈥檚 carries, sprints, and lots of sled pushes. Sometimes we would mix in pad work with these workouts, as well.
鈥淥n Tuesdays, Thursdays, and weekends I would swim or run. On Saturday, I would do a hard treadmill sprint interval with lots of uphill work. Mixed in with this would be all of our MMA work.鈥
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