Data is useful when it changes decisions. Track a handful of metrics that map to training quality and ignore vanity graphs that don’t.
What to track (and why)
- Resting HR + HRV trend: recovery readiness and stress
- Session RPE + duration: training load without fancy models
- Key splits: 1k run repeats, Ski/Row 1k, wall ball total time for target reps
- Sleep duration/consistency: foundation for performance
Hardware tips
- Chest HR strap improves accuracy for intervals vs wrist sensors
- Calibrate pace by using the same route or the same erg settings
Minimal dashboard (weekly)
- 2–3 key sessions hit? (Y/N)
- Progression: did one variable increase? (volume, density, or intensity)
- Readiness: HR/HRV stable? Mood okay?
Pitfalls
- Chasing “readiness” scores instead of how you feel and perform
- Comparing week‑to‑week with different routes/conditions
- Over‑analyzing garbage data (e.g., wrist HR in burpees)
Race day
- Minimal tech: time of day and splits; no mid‑race deep dives
- Use HR only as a cap early; race your plan later
Bottom line Metrics should simplify decisions. Track the few that influence training quality, then get back to work.



