Tri Beginner‘s Luck
Tri Beginner‘s Luck

Tri Beginner‘s Luck

MichandaShines

Overview
Episodes

Details

We exist because we want you to Tri! We talk with coaches, professional athletes, beginner athletes, race and event directors and announcers, triathlon media, and other industry leaders who share their beginner stories, and what it takes to be successful in this sport - and life. We know and believe that we connect and grow when we share common experiences and recognize we aren’t on the struggle bus alone. Triathlon is a lifestyle, and we are here to help you tri until you die! While we are here for beginners, we believe you should always come to the sport with a beginner’s mindset. This will help athletes of all abilities and experiences so we can learn, grow, and constantly get better. Tri Beginner’s Luck is the podcast and community you need to start and continue your love affair with the Triathlon lifestyle! . Everyone wants to try their luck, and WIN and it’s possible when you TRI!

Recent Episodes

"That'll Never Work" to Sold Out in Months | Angi Klick's She Tris Story
APR 1, 2026
"That'll Never Work" to Sold Out in Months | Angi Klick's She Tris Story
What happens when someone tells you your idea will never work, and you build it anyway? What does it look like to create a space where trying matters more than finishing first?   Angi Klick didn't just start a triathlon event. She built a movement. After years of trying to convince other race directors that women needed their own welcoming space in the sport, she decided to do it herself. In 2016, while nine months pregnant, she directed the first She Tris Triathlon in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. A local timer told her it would never work. The event sold out before race day.   Now, 10 years later, She Tris has become a haven for first-timers, a celebration for returners, and proof that when you lead with community over competition, something powerful happens. Angi talks about surviving those early moments, managing rheumatoid arthritis while training for an Ironman, and why she never calls her events "races." She shares what it means to champion confidence in women who aren't sure they belong yet, and why the finish line is really just the starting line for what comes next.   This conversation is for anyone who's ever been told no and decided to build it anyway. It's for the beginner who thinks they need permission to start. And it's a reminder that belonging doesn't come before you try. It comes because you start.   Join the Tri Beginner’s Luck Community: Enjoyed this episode? The best way to support the show is to leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Follow us on Instagram: @TriBeginnersLuck Connect on Facebook: Tri Beginner’s Luck Page Questions or Feedback? We want to hear your story! Send your questions to [email protected], and we may feature them on a future episode. Let’s tri this!
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57 MIN
Choosing Family Over Podiums | Chelsea Sodaro’s Ironman World Champion Journey
MAR 25, 2026
Choosing Family Over Podiums | Chelsea Sodaro’s Ironman World Champion Journey
What does it look like to chase greatness without losing yourself along the way? How did Chelsea Sodaro win the Ironman World Championship just 18 months after giving birth?   In this episode, the triathlon world champion shares her powerful story of motherhood, mindset, and elite training, revealing what happens when choosing family first becomes the very thing that elevates you to the top of your sport. From early struggles with fear in open water to stepping away from competition at the height of her career, this conversation redefines what success can look like in endurance sports and reminds us that being a triathlon beginner at any stage requires courage, curiosity, and a willingness to start again.   Along the way, Chelsea opens up about what it really takes to grow in triathlon, from developing mental toughness in chaotic swim starts to embracing the long, quiet work behind every race. Her path is anything but linear, shaped by risk, reinvention, and the ongoing balance between ambition and personal values. Whether you are training for your first race or finding your footing in a new season of life, her story offers something to hold onto.   At its core, this conversation is about more than performance. It is about choosing what matters, staying grounded in your values, and trusting that the unseen work is shaping something greater. Wherever you are in your triathlon journey, this is your reminder that every time you try, you are already winning.   Join the Tri Beginner’s Luck Community: Enjoyed this episode? The best way to support the show is to leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Follow us on Instagram: @TriBeginnersLuck Connect on Facebook: Tri Beginner’s Luck Page Questions or Feedback? We want to hear your story! Send your questions to [email protected], and we may feature them on a future episode. Let’s tri this!
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69 MIN
I Am Not Just Getting Fit, I Am an Athlete | Jini Thornton's Triathlon Mindset Shift
MAR 18, 2026
I Am Not Just Getting Fit, I Am an Athlete | Jini Thornton's Triathlon Mindset Shift
What if the thing that scares you most is actually the doorway to your next chapter? And what if beginning again at 56 is exactly where your triathlon journey is meant to start?   In this episode, we meet Jini Thornton, a CPA, financial planner, and triathlon beginner who is redefining what it means to be an athlete in her 50s. As a founder who has helped over 500 women plan the transfer of more than $188 million in assets, she understands preparation and long-term thinking. But stepping into triathlon required something entirely different: courage, vulnerability, and a willingness to be new again.   Jini's journey began with community. Through Atlanta Tri Sisters, she found women in their 50s, 60s, and beyond who were thriving in endurance sports. With their support, she faced one of her biggest fears: open water swimming. She slowly rewrote the story she had been telling herself. From pool-based races to sprint triathlons and now setting her sights on an Ironman 70.3 relay, her path proves that growth doesn't come from comfort.   This conversation is about mindset, legacy, and starting before you feel ready. It's about claiming the word "athlete," embracing discomfort, and allowing community to carry you when doubt creeps in. For any triathlon beginner wondering if it's too late or too hard, this story offers a different truth: You don't have to have it all figured out to begin. You just have to take the first step.   Join the Tri Beginner’s Luck Community: Enjoyed this episode? The best way to support the show is to leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Follow us on Instagram: @TriBeginnersLuckConnect on Facebook: Tri Beginner’s Luck Page Questions or Feedback? We want to hear your story! Send your questions to [email protected], and we may feature them on a future episode.   Let’s tri this!  
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61 MIN
Spinal Fusion to Ironman 70.3 | Farrin Saba Reinvents Herself Through Triathlon
MAR 11, 2026
Spinal Fusion to Ironman 70.3 | Farrin Saba Reinvents Herself Through Triathlon
What happens when a Division I swimmer suffers a career-ending spinal injury and decides to try triathlon anyway? Twenty-two months after spinal fusion surgery, Farrin Saba crossed the finish line of Ironman 70.3 Maine.   In this episode of Tri Beginner’s Luck, you hear the story behind that moment. After a severe back injury required a double disc replacement and spinal fusion, Farrin’s future in sport was uncertain. What began as a way to reconnect with movement became a powerful journey of resilience, curiosity, and rediscovering what it means to be an athlete.   Along the way, Farrin discovered that triathlon is not just an individual sport. After volunteering to guide a visually impaired athlete, she found a deeper connection through the paratriathlon community, learning how communication, pacing, and trust transform racing into a team experience. She also shares her first winter triathlon at the national championships in Lake Placid, which included running on snow with spikes, fat-tire biking across icy terrain, and cross-country skiing. In true beginner’s luck fashion, that first attempt led to qualification for the Winter Triathlon World Championships in Italy.   Whether you are training for your first triathlon, navigating an injury comeback, or curious about the many ways people find their place in endurance sports, this episode is a reminder that sometimes the most meaningful journeys begin when you start over.   Join the Tri Beginner’s Luck Community: Enjoyed this episode? The best way to support the show is to leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Follow us on Instagram: @TriBeginnersLuck Connect on Facebook: Tri Beginner’s Luck Page   Questions or Feedback? We want to hear your story! Send your questions to [email protected], and we may feature them on a future episode.   Let’s tri this!  
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57 MIN
Women in Tri, The Blueprint: Changing the Race with Bianca Fernandez-Clark
MAR 4, 2026
Women in Tri, The Blueprint: Changing the Race with Bianca Fernandez-Clark
Listeners meet Bianca Fernandez-Clark, a seven-time Ironman finisher, co-founder of Women in Tri UK, and a tireless advocate for inclusion in endurance sport. What begins as a conversation about one woman’s journey into triathlon quickly becomes something bigger. This is a story about learning to swim at 29, navigating start lines as a Black Latino woman, and transforming isolation into impact for hundreds of women who deserve to feel seen in triathlon. Bianca did not grow up swimming or cycling. She entered the sport for her mental health and found herself in elite-focused spaces that did not always know what to do with a true beginner. Her first Ironman 70.3 was about making cutoffs rather than podiums. That experience as a beginner triathlete became the blueprint for change. After an unexpected opportunity to race at the Ironman World Championship in Kona, where she became the first Dominican athlete to compete, she realized that representation in triathlon matters more than most people understand. The visibility inspired others back home and clarified her mission moving forward. That mission evolved into Women in Tri UK, a thriving community of more than 700 members. What began as financial support for first-timers has grown into mentorship, research, advocacy, and race partnerships that are shifting the landscape for women in triathlon. From pushing for larger swim caps to advocating for pregnancy deferrals and more inclusive race policies, the work is practical and powerful. This episode reminds us that triathlon is not only about splits and transitions. It is fundamentally about belonging. If you have ever felt like the only one in the room or unsure of where you fit in the sport, this episode is for you. If you are a race director, coach, or teammate wondering how to build diversity and inclusion in triathlon, this conversation offers both heart and a blueprint. And if you are simply a beginner trying to figure it out one workout at a time, you will hear proof that your starting point can become someone else’s open door. Listen in, share with a training partner, and keep showing up. The sport grows stronger when more of us see ourselves at the start line. Let’s tri this !  Remember to leave a review, share it with your friends, and follow Tri Beginner's luck on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.  And send any questions or feedback you have to  [email protected]
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56 MIN