Race guide

The hybrid race, explained

Eight 1 km runs, eight functional stations, one running clock. Here’s exactly what you’ll face, station by station — plus divisions, finish-time benchmarks, and where the free time hides.

8 km

of running, split into eight 1 km legs

8

functional stations, one after each run

1

clock that never stops — transitions count

  1. Run11k 1 SkiErg 1000 m
  2. Run21k 2 Sled Push 50 m
  3. Run31k 3 Sled Pull 50 m
  4. Run41k 4 Burpee Broad Jumps 80 m
  5. Run51k 5 Rowing 1000 m
  6. Run61k 6 Farmers Carry 200 m
  7. Run71k 7 Sandbag Lunges 100 m
  8. Run81k 8 Wall Balls 100 reps
The eight stations

Every station, in order

1

SkiErg

1000 mEngine

A 1000 m ski-erg pull. Pure engine — your first chance to settle into rhythm.

2

Sled Push

50 mLeg power

A heavy 50 m sled push. Leg drive and breath control — the classic heart-rate spike.

3

Sled Pull

50 mGrip

A 50 m hand-over-hand sled pull. Grip, back and legs, low and braced.

4

Burpee Broad Jumps

80 mFull body

80 m of burpee broad jumps. Full-body fatigue — pacing here makes or breaks the back half.

5

Rowing

1000 mEngine

A 1000 m row at the halfway mark. Hold power without redlining for the runs ahead.

6

Farmers Carry

200 mGrip

200 m loaded carry. Grip endurance and posture — minimise drops to save big chunks of time.

7

Sandbag Lunges

100 mLeg power

100 m of weighted walking lunges. Deep quad burn this late is brutal — grind a steady cadence.

8

Wall Balls

100 repsFull body

100 wall balls to finish. Legs and lungs on empty — break them smart, then bring it home.

Divisions

Open, Pro, Doubles, Relay

Open

Standard individual division and the usual entry point — one athlete, standard loads, sub-divided by gender and age.

Pro

Same format, heavier loads and stricter standards. Pro women’s loads often equal open men’s. For experienced, competitive athletes.

Doubles / Pairs

Two athletes run every kilometre together and split the station work between them — smart work-division wins.

Relay

A team of four divides the course, tagging in so the right athlete handles the right leg.

Rules checked for the 2025/26 season. Weights, reps and division standards change between seasons — always verify your event’s official rulebook.
Finish-time benchmarks

What a good time looks like

LevelGenderFinishAvg run pace
Elite Men 53–65 min 4:00-4:30 /km
Competitive Men 65–80 min 4:30-5:00 /km
Intermediate Men 80–105 min 5:00-6:00 /km
Beginner Men 105–135 min 6:00-7:00 /km
Elite Women 56–70 min 4:00-4:30 /km
Competitive Women 70–85 min 4:30-5:00 /km
Intermediate Women 85–110 min 5:00-6:00 /km
Beginner Women 110–140 min 6:00-7:00 /km

Don’t guess where you land — run your numbers through the simulator for a personalised prediction.

The free time most people leave on the table: the transition zone. The clock keeps running while you walk from the track to the next station. Elites spend ~3 minutes total here; recreational athletes lose 6–7. Aim for 10–15 seconds between finishing a run and starting the station — that’s minutes of free speed with zero extra fitness.
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