Sports
Hyrox champion Alexander Roncevic reveals his race
Hyrox is the darling of the fitness world right now. By the oldest objective measure – head-to-head competition – Alexander Roncevic is currently the best at it, having romped to victory at the 2024 World Championships in a time of 56min and 21sec.
Now, as he gears up to defend his title in Chicago on 12 June, the Austrian athlete tells The Independent about the training tweaks and techniques he has employed to ensure he maintains the top spot.
His preparations have included a shift in training focus – linked to the addition of smoother-moving turf on the sled sections of the race – as well as a training camp in Kenya and some brutal workouts to improve on any (relatively) weak spots in his game.
Below, he shares insights into a week in the life of a Hyrox world champion who’s hungry for more and reveals the race-winning secret that sets him apart from competitors.
Who is Alexander Roncevic and what sets him apart as Hyrox world champion?
Roncevic is an interesting character. Given Hyrox is still in its fledgling years, the 32-year-old is a relatively old head in the game, having been competing since 2018 – the year after its conception.
But, until recently, the ESN athlete was balancing his fitness commitments with a career as a primary school teacher in his native Austria. Doing this, he was able to become world champion. “I want to win the grand slam of majors,” he tells. me. So this season, he’s quit his job to become a full-time athlete.
As a result, he has more hours to dedicate to his training, and my quads start shivering at the mere description of his gruelling workouts. But, he tells me, his background as a swimmer has made this a seamless adjustment. The consequent strength of his “mental game” is his secret weapon, and the main thing he believes sets him apart as an athlete.
“I used to swim for almost 20 years, and the work I did is still in my brain,” he says. “Waking up early in the morning for training, going to school, then training again after school for 15 years straight every day – this taught me a lot of discipline.”
These swimming sessions were a far cry from a few zone two lengths of breaststroke. Roncevic would often hit a hard 400m for 25 rounds, or 1,500m for eight rounds, covering distances many of us couldn’t imagine running. Comparatively, he says, the variety of Hyrox training is rather fun.
“Swimming back and forth in the same pool for years and years and years gets boring, but it does teach you mental toughness,” he laughs. “Now I’m enjoying training more because of the diversity. [In Hyrox] you have the running part and the strength part; I can go for a bike ride, or I can meet friends for some tennis or badminton. You can just do whatever makes you better as an athlete.”
Read more: How endurance sports are taking India by storm: ‘It’s the feeling of being alive’
Alexander Roncevic: running training
The sled push and sled pull sit in a crucial position during a Hyrox race – stations two and three. If you’re ready for them, you can run the remainder of the race with fairly fresh legs. If you’re not, you’ll lose valuable time, not only on the stations themselves but also the subsequent runs.
For the 2024/25 Hyrox season, Roncevic planned to tackle all four of the sport’s majors (Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Las Vegas and Glasgow) with the aim of scooping a tennis-esque grand slam. But his plan was put on hold when he, in his words, “struggled with the sleds” in Hong Kong.
However, for the 2025 World Championships, competition organisers announced they would be introducing a “new Hyrox carpet”, and Roncevic adapted his training accordingly.
“For all of us, we know now it’s going to be way easier on the sleds,” he says. “That’s why I changed my training a bit, doing more runs, more intervals, trying to get faster, trying to build more endurance and trying to work more on the compromised running side of things [a Hyrox-popularised phenomenon which simply means racking up the miles on already tired legs].”
This involved four to five running sessions per week, comprising short (up to 400m) and long (up to 2km) intervals at varying paces, tempo runs covering 10-12km at slightly above his Hyrox pace of 3min 30sec/km, and a long run. The long run is usually around 25km or two hours, Roncevic says, and he likes to hit the trails to perform this at altitude.
Combined, these running sessions leave him with a weekly mileage of about 60-70km per week.
Read more: Hyrox vs CrossFit: Which one should you choose?
“It’s not that much – there are elite athletes running a lot more – but for me it’s enough,” he says. “I used to swim before, then I started running when I was about 22, so at the beginning 20km per week was enough to improve. Over the years I added more kilometres every week, and now I’m at around 60km, so there is still plenty of room to do more and get better.”
During his preparations for the 2025 Hyrox World Championships, Roncevic skipped the Las Vegas event to spend 10 days training in Kenya and “run with the best”. Due to the shortness of his stay, he says training adaptations were limited from this trip, yet he still learned a lot from his fellow runners.
“Their only dream is to be the best runner and help their family,” he says. “You can see them chasing this every day, training two or three times a day. They are dedicating their life to this.”
Alexander Roncevic’s tempo run for improving Hyrox performance
Complete the session below at a consistent pace:
Run 10-12km at a slightly faster pace than you can hold during a Hyrox race.
Alexander Roncevic: Hyrox-specific training
Each week, Roncevic tends to do two or three Hyrox-specific workouts and one “erg session” where he focusses on improving his ability on the exercise machines involved in the race.
“What I would recommend to people is working on each station separately, even if you do shorter sessions,” he says. “Let’s say you have 30 minutes; just focus this 30 minutes on the SkiErg. Do an interval session, eight rounds of 500m or whatever, then do another [mixed-modal] session later in the week. For example, you could use the SkiErg with running, wall balls and burpees.”
He applied the same approach to the burpee broad jump station in a Hyrox race, and you can try his capacity-building session using the protocol below.
Alexander Roncevic’s 20-minute capacity-building burpee workout
EMOM (every minute, on the minute) for 20 minutes:
- Burpee x 10
“In each minute, you’re done after about 30 seconds, but continue for 20 minutes and you’ve done 200 burpees,” Roncevic says. “That’s a quality session, and means you have done your burpee work for the week, almost, in 20 minutes.”
However, he admits these specific workouts were a larger part of his training earlier in his Hyrox career.
“This year I have almost the same strength numbers as I did in 2024, and station-wise there was not much to improve,” he explains. “Now, at the point I’m at most of my effort is trying to get better on the running side. When I look back at this last year, I ran so much and I really improved, so I’m looking forward to the World Championships and seeing how it can translate on the track.”
Alexander Roncevic: strength training
Roncevic’s aim in the gym is to “get stronger, not build muscles”. For this reason, he lifts heavy weights for low reps twice per week.
“As a Hyrox athlete, you want to gain strength, but the most important thing is to find the right balance between being a fast runner, being light and being as strong as possible,” he says. “Having the power of a weightlifter and the weight of a Kenyan runner, that would be the perfect combination.”
Roncevic puts his strength sessions earlier in the day so he can attack them with fresh muscles, with running and Hyrox workouts following in the afternoon. To maximise efficiency, he also performs most exercises as complementary supersets – two exercises performed back to back without rest, which work different muscle groups and have minimal interference between them.
One of his favourite protocols involves performing a bench press and a rowing movement (both exercises “really heavy’) to build the strength necessary for pushing exercises like the sled push and wall balls, as well as pulling exercises like the sled pull. After completing this, he rests for 30-60 seconds, then goes again.
Alexander Roncevic’s Hyrox strength training workout
Perform the sequence below for five rounds:
- Dumbbell bench press x6
- Bent-over row x6
- Rest 30-60 seconds
Alexander Roncevic: training diet
A fairly recent change Roncevic has made, which has seen an uptick in his performance, is fine-tuning his nutrition.
Wholefoods dominate his diet, but he doesn’t have any strict number of calories, protein or carbs he shoots for. Instead he has developed more general habits over years of learning how his body works.
“I was never 100 per cent into hitting certain numbers, like bodybuilders used to be, counting their carbs,” Roncevic explains. “But what I have learned is, if I have a longer endurance session one day, I’m going to make sure my carb intake is a bit higher than usual. Then, if I do specific strength sessions, I’ll make sure I have my creatine and maybe an extra protein shake.”
Working with supplement company ESN has also helped him dial in his nutrition, particularly before, during and after training sessions.
“When I was younger during my swimming career, I didn’t know anything about nutrition, and nobody is going to tell you about it – your coach just keeps yelling, ‘Go faster’,” he says. “Now as a professional, if you’re trying to find those last percentages of your performance, I think it’s really important.”
“Being with ESN for more than a year now has changed my whole view of nutrition. I have a really nice routine to make sure I get enough protein and carbs. For example, ESN has this new crazy performance line with the pre-workout, the Base [a formula of peptides, amino acids, plant extracts and creatine], the gels and the Carb Loader.”
Alexander Roncevic: recovery
The pillars of Roncevic’s recovery efforts are simple: sleep and mobility. He aims to hit between eight and 10 hours of good quality sleep each night, adds targeted mobility work into his warm-up for most workouts, and works with a physiotherapist to ensure his body is operating at its best.
“If you sleep for just four hours, you don’t need to do any sauna, cold plunge, compression boots, massages or whatever,” he says. “First, try to take care of your sleep, and then you can always add in some other recovery techniques.”
“And then working on your mobility is important because it doesn’t just help you as an athlete. It will make you better at your sport, but also help you later in life. We are all getting older, and if you are 50, 60 or 70, you still want to move well, so now is the time to take care of it.”
What’s next for Alexander Roncevic?
Roncevic is already a consummate athlete, but his future plans involve improving further, with the grand goal of achieving “the perfect season”; a grand slam year with wins at all four majors (Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Las Vegas and Glasgow), topped off with victory at the Hyrox World Championships. He already has grand ideas in mind to achieve this in the coming years.
“My training camp in Kenya was a nice first impression, but we were only there for 10 days, so training-wise there was not a big outcome” he explains. “Running at 2,200 or 2,400m [elevation], your body needs time [to get used to it] if you come from Europe, so at the beginning you run very slowly waiting for your body to arrive. If you want the biggest benefit from it, you are going to stay for at least three or four weeks.”
However, for now, his eyes are firmly on the 2025 Hyrox World Championships in Chicago.
“It’s my sixth World Championships, so I’m not as nervous as the first time,” Roncevic tells me. “I feel good, I’m looking forward to it and it’s been two or three months since my last event, so I can’t wait to race.”
Read more: The exact training plan Anya Culling used to run a 2.5-hour marathon

Sports
Deniz Dakak Named an AVCA All-American
WASHINGTON – Deniz Dakak adds an AVCA All-American honorable mention selection to her outstanding sophomore season, announced on Wednesday morning by the American Volleyball Coaches Association. She is the ninth player in program history to receive the honor in addition to her All-Region selection on Dec. 9.
Dakak’s young career was put into the spotlight this season after she led the Patriot League in assists each week of the 2025 campaign. She was the quarterback of AU’s offense, which put up staggering numbers. The Eagles hit .294 at the end of the regular season, ranking 12th in the country before they hit a Patriot League Tournament record .500 in the conference championship match.
The Istanbul, Turkey native averaged 10.53 assists per set this year, and finished the season with over 1,028 after the NCAA Tournament. Dakak was named the Patriot League Player and Setter of the Year, just the third player to ever earn both awards. With two seasons left, Dakak is on pace to finish in the top 10 of AU’s all-time assists list.
AVCA All-American Awards
Keep up With Us
- For the latest on American University Volleyball, stay tuned to AUEagles.com and follow the team on Twitter (@AU_Volleyball), Facebook (/AU.Volleyball) and Instagram (@au_volleyball).
Sports
Skinner, Sheffield Set to Meet in NCAA Volleyball Semifinals – UK Athletics
In Thursday night’s NCAA Volleyball national semifinals, two coaches who are very familiar with one another will square off in the night’s second match. Kentucky head coach Craig Skinner and Wisconsin skipper Kelly Sheffield have a relationship that goes back decades.
Skinner and Sheffield are both from the Muncie, Indiana, area. In 1990, they led a Muncie Burris High School junior varsity team to an undefeated record.
Skinner and Sheffield would go their separate ways before both eventually became Division I head coaches. Skinner was named the head coach at Kentucky in 2004, while Sheffield was the head coach at Albany and Dayton before landing the Wisconsin job in 2012.
The UK head coach had nothing but praise for his counterpart in Thursday’s match.
“Kelly has earned everything he’s gotten,” Skinner said. “He’s come from humble beginnings, both in school and in coaching. He’s been on — coached and packed his car in an evening, had to be in Houston 20 hours later to start his first coaching job probably making about $10,000 a year. I have a lot of respect for someone that earned their way to this point in time.”
Skinner is also appreciative of the Muncie roots that both he and Sheffield have.
“You have to give a lot of credit to the Shondell family and Don Shondell for starting the Ball State program,” Skinner said. “Steve Shondell, the oldest Shondell son, played in and started the Muncie Burris program and Munciana Volleyball Club. When I started coming through Ball State, yeah, I’ll try this coaching thing. I just fell in love with what they were about.
“Ball State University started as a teacher’s college. Coaching is teaching,” Skinner said. “The joy and passion and interest in helping players do something better than they have ever have before. You really felt the essence of what coaching is.”
Skinner believes that his early beginnings showed him just how much he really wanted to be a coach.
“I tried to get away from coaching for a while,” Skinner said. “I had an accounting degree, got into banking. It sucked me back in because I love the competition and the teaching aspect. That started in Muncie, Indiana, in 1988 or ‘89 for me.”
For those who want to get into to coaching, starting off the way Skinner and Sheffield did is not rare. But Skinner knows that it has to be something you love.
“I always tell people that if you’re going to get into coaching, don’t get in it because you like it and you can make some money,” he said. “Get into it because you have a passion for helping people go above and beyond where they are. Kelly has demonstrated that for a long time.”
Two coaches who once coached a high school junior varsity team together square off in Thursday’s national semifinals when Kentucky plays Wisconsin. It’s a lesson in how much hard work and dedication can pay off.
Sports
Colyer, Booth earn AVCA All-American honors
Colyer led the way with a First Team All-American award at outside hitter, followed by Booth with a Third Team All-American nomination at the middle blocker position. In head coach Kelly Sheffield‘s tenure, 21 individual athletes have garnered 47 separate All-American honors in 13 seasons.
Colyer joined that group of athletes, putting together one of the most impressive individual seasons in UW history en route to her fourth All-American award of her career. The Lincoln, California, native recently eclipsed the 2,000-kill mark in her career against No. 2 Stanford in the NCAA Regional Semifinal—combining for 50 kills over the Badgers’ pair of matches in Austin, Texas.
The outside hitter broke the school record for most kills in a season, as she enters this week’s National Semifinals with 566. Colyer has accumulated double-digit kill totals in every match except for one this season, as she currently holds a 19-match streak of 10 or more kills, good for the second-longest streak in program history.
In the national ranks, Colyer places third in kills per set at 5.39. No other Badger in the Rally Scoring Era (since 2008) has finished the season with over five kills per set. She also ranks third in points per set at 5.97.
In leading the Badgers to a second-place finish in the Big Ten Conference, Colyer broke the school record for most kills at 345. Sarah Franklin was the only other athlete at UW to surpass 300 kills in the 20-match span.
Colyer excelled on the defensive end as well, recently surpassing the 1,000-dig mark in her storied career. The senior accumulated nine double-doubles in digs and kills in the 2025 season.
Right by her side, Booth strung together another impressive campaign for the Badgers—notching her second-career All-American award.
Offensively, the 6-foot-7 middle blocker has been efficient in her attack, as she is currently on pace to shatter UW’s record for highest hitting percentage in a single season. Booth sits at .454 entering the National Semifinal match, good for second-highest in the country. She has turned in zero errors in 11 matches this year.
The Denver, Colorado, native recently put together her strongest weekend of the season, highlighted by a .700 (14 – 0 – 20) swinging percentage turned in against No. 2 Stanford. Her 14 kills tied a career-best, as she followed it up with 11 more versus No. 1 Texas to help punch the Badgers’ ticket to Kansas City.
The 6-foot-7 middle blocker currently leads the team in blocks (123) and blocks per set (1.17) as well—showcasing her continued physical presence at the net.
Booth and Colyer are set to be teammates next season for the Dallas Pulse of Major League Volleyball, as they were recently selected in the draft less than a month ago.
Badger fans can catch both All-Americans in action on Thursday, Dec. 18, as UW will look to continue their postseason run. The Badgers are slated to face No. 1 Kentucky at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, as first serve will take place 30 minutes after the conclusion of the first National Semifinal between No. 3 Texas A&M and No. 1 Pittsburgh, which is set to start at 5:30 p.m. CT. Both matches will be televised on ESPN.
Sports
Pitt volleyball reaches Final Four again but can it win championship?
Updated Dec. 17, 2025, 11:38 p.m. ET
KANSAS CITY, MO ― Upon arriving at last year’s NCAA volleyball Final Four in Louisville, Kentucky, Pittsburgh Panthers head coach Dan Fisher received several commemorative Louisville Slugger bats.
Throughout the 2025 season, they would sit in his office in special holders, serving as a reminder of what could have been. Last December, Pitt’s title push ended shy of the championship game. After making four consecutive Final Four appearances without winning a trophy, the No. 1 overall seed fell short ― again. The Panthers lost 3-1 to the Louisville Cardinals in the semifinals and went home empty-handed.
On Wednesday, Fisher, well aware that Pitt let a potential chance at a championship slip away, reflected on the disappointment he felt.
“I can simultaneously be proud of making the Final Four and disappointed we didn’t advance,” he said. “I can hold those two thoughts at once.”
The balancing act of holding space for pride and disappointment has likely been something the Panthers coach and his team have been silently juggling all season. At some point, it probably had to become a small part of what fueled them to get back to volleyball’s biggest stage and return for a fifth straight Final Four ― even if they may never admit it out loud. Multiple opportunities to win a championship don’t happen often, and when a team can’t bring home any hardware, the questions about winning inevitably become louder.
Will Pitt ever be the “bride” and not the “bridesmaid”? Is this the year the Panthers finally put it all together?
Six total players at the 2025 Final Four have experience playing at this level. Fisher’s roster has five of the six Final Four veterans. Pitt opposite Olivia Babcock and middle blocker Bre Kelley have been to two prior Final Fours. Several other Panthers players have been to at least one. Wisconsin Badgers middle blocker Carter Booth, with one appearance, is the remaining player. With so many young and new faces on all four tournament rosters, Pitt’s experience could prove valuable if it wants to reach the national championship on Sunday. Babcock addressed the potential advantage during Wednesday’s Panthers press conference.
“Since so many people have been here before, we were able to prepare the newer players coming into this experience what to expect,” Babcock said. “We’re also able to just remind them constantly that even though there will be a lot of media ― things there wouldn’t typically be ― stay locked in at the goal at hand. It is very easy to get distracted. I think those players are going to help our newer players be able to hone in on the task.”
Babcock stressed that it’s an honor to be on the Final Four stage. Still, she says the Panthers are focused. Their preparation has been better, including how they practice and scout opponents and visualize matches. Kelley shed a bit more light on how the Panthers are staying grounded as they approach Thursday’s semifinal match.
“In the past, I feel like we’ve always made it a point that we have to win the Final Four. This year, we have really emphasized, especially with our sports psychologist, to play ball,” Kelley said. “Obviously, we’re trying to embrace this moment and be where our feet are. This game is supposed to be fun. It’s not supposed to be severely taxing on your mind and body.”
The Panthers revealed that the team has broken down every intense matchup, as far back as a September regular-season sweep against the No. 1 Kentucky Wildcats, to just one point at a time. The team said even in a dominant 3-0 win like that one, the focus this year has been on being “good” after getting to 20 points in a set. Once the Panthers get to that point, Babcock says they are “able to flip a switch”. Then, it becomes a matter of which team gets to 25 first. She believes that if Pitt is playing “the best points of (their lives)”, they’ll find a lot of success. Fisher seemed to be in lockstep with that thought process.
“The main message is just to stay in the moment,” he said. “Along with that, we were touching on it earlier about what’s different about this team, and I think when we’re playing our best, we’re really good. So just knowing that we don’t know what the outcome will be, but we certainly know how good we can be…”
Pitt takes on No. 3 Texas A&M during the 2025 NCAA volleyball Final Four at 6:30 p.m. ET Thursday on ESPN.
Sports
Utah State Volleyball Quartet Named to CSC Academic All-District Team
Kofe earned the distinction via a 3.81 GPA while majoring in marketing and leading the Aggie offense to a program-record .274 hitting percentage this season, ranking third in the nation with 11.08 assists per set and also earning Mountain West Player of the Year honors. Kofe is the only player in the nation with three matches of 60 or more assists. Her 1,330 total assists this season ranks fifth all-time at USU while she already sits in eighth for career assists at Utah State with 2,290. Kofe also added 32 kills, 28 aces, 285 digs and 37 total blocks on the year.
Barlow received the honor after posting a 3.97 GPA while majoring in integrated studies. This season, Barlow Utah State’s single-season program record for hitting percentage with a mark of .444, shattering the previous mark of .375 (min. 5 attempts per set) held by Denae Mohlman and set in 1997. Barlow is now the career record holder for hitting percentage, sitting at .418 for her career at Utah State, topping current assistant coach/director of operations Kennedi Hansen’s career mark of .362 (min. 1,000 attacks). Barlow recorded six matches of at least 17 attempts and zero hitting errors this season while no other player in the nation had more than four according to ESPN research. Barlow finished with 321 kills, 18 aces, 51 digs and 93 blocks on the season. She earned All-MW honors for the fourth time in her career.
Helgesen earned the award after recording a 3.57 GPA while majoring in psychology. Helgesen finished the season with 391 kills on a .295 hitting percentage, the 10th-highest hitting percentage in program history with at least five attempts per set. Helgesen also ranks seventh all-time for career hitting percentage at USU (min. 1,000 attempts) with a mark of .275 as an Aggie. Helgesen broke USU’s single-game hitting percentage record with at least 20 attempts, hitting .704 against Grand Canyon. Helgesen also added 26 aces, 96 digs and 68 blocks on the year. She earned All-MW honors for the first time in her career this season.
Štiglic earned the honor after posting a 3.68 GPA and majoring in marketing. Štiglic finished the season with a team-high 3.56 kills per set, totaling 431 kills alongside 29 aces, 146 digs and 63 blocks. Štiglic earned all-MW honors this season after ranking seventh in kills per set (3.63) and fourth in points per set (4.27) during conference play. Štiglic also ranked sixth in the MW with 0.31 aces per set, totaling 21. She hit double-digit kills in 17 of 18 matches during MW action, totaling nine kills in her lone match not reaching the plateau. Štiglic also recorded seven matches with multiple aces.
Fans can follow the Aggie volleyball program on Twitter, @USUVolleyball, on Facebook at /USUVolleyball or on Instagram, @usuvolleyball. Aggie fans can also follow the Utah State athletic program on Twitter, @USUAthletics, Facebook at /USUAthletics and on Instagram, @USUAthletics.
– USU –
Sports
Ptacek, Zelenovic Named AVCA All-Americans
The Honorable Mention All-America honors come after both Ptacek and Zelenovic were named First Team All-Big 12, leading one of the league’s most efficient and balanced offenses. Under first year head coach Matt Ulmer, the Jayhawks finished with a 24-11 and the program’s fourth appearance in the NCAA Sweet 16 all-time.
Ptacek, a native of Prescott, Wis., earns her first career All-America honors after hitting .314 with 331 kills, 136 blocks and 27 service aces during the 2025 season. Ptacek was recently named to the AVCA All-Region Team and was named to the AVCA Player of the Year Watch List during the 2025 season.
Zelenovic, a freshman from Novi Sad, Serbia, finished a standout freshman season for the Jayhawks, leading the team with 485.5 total points, 375 kills, 46 service aces and a .276 hitting percentage. Defensively, Zelenovic posted 123 total blocks. Zelenovic was also named to the AVCA All-Region Team and was named as the Central Region’s Freshman of the Year.
Ptacek and Zelenovic are the latest Jayhawks to earn All-America honors, becoming the 14th and 15th Jayhawks to earn All-America honors all-time. Kansas has had multiple All-Americans in just eight seasons all-time, including 2025, 2024, 2023, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014 and 2013.
See below for a full list of Kansas volleyball All-American honors:
Josi Lima 2003 Honorable Mention Caroline Jarmoc 2013 Third Team 2012 Second Team Chelsea Albers 2014 Honorable Mention 2013 Honorable Mention Sara McClinton 2013 Honorable Mention Erin McNorton 2013 Honorable Mention Cassie Wait 2016 Honorable Mention Ainise Havili 2017 Honorable Mention 2016 Third Team 2015 First Team 2014 Honorable Mention Kelsie Payne 2017 Third Team 2016 First Team 2015 First Team Madison Rigdon 2017 Honorable Mention 2016 Honorable Mention Caroline Bien 2021 Honorable Mention Reagan Cooper 2023 Third Team Camryn Turner 2024 Third Team 2023 Honorable Mention Toyosi Onabanjo 2024 Honorable Mention
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