182: Joseph Ogacion - The Mindset of a Dual-Sport Athlete: From Manila Streets To Olympic Start Lines
Tue Feb 03 2026
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Joseph Ogacion grew up in the Philippines, once averaging 0.5 points per varsity basketball game, watching the Sydney Olympics on TV and dreaming of racing there one day. He wasn’t the tallest, the strongest, or the most resourced. But he had something else: the ability to suffer more than anyone else.
Today, Joseph is a marathoner headed to the Paris 2024 Olympics and an elite time trial cyclist, juggling two world-class disciplines while working full-time in pediatric physiotherapy in Australia.
What You’ll Hear
Why his average of 0.5 points per game in high school basketball became the unexpected beginning of his running careerHow skipping meals to afford a secondhand bike became the gateway to elite cyclingWhat it means to be “fair to your sport” and honest with your effortThe link between his physiotherapy training and athletic edgeWhy he trains at an average heart rate of 181 and what that says about his physiologyHow he learned to channel self-doubt into world-class enduranceWhy switching nationality from the Philippines to Australia opened the door to greater competitionWhat every athlete can learn about adaptability and controlThe surprising crossover between hitting Olympic splits and sales quotas at workHow he balances ambition, fatherhood, and a demanding careerWhy breaking down big goals into daily 3.52-hour training blocks changed everythingWhat meeting childhood idol Steve Moneghetti meant after 25 years of dreamingGolden Nugget
“Be fair to the sport. Every step, every rep, do it with intent. The sport is always fair. You may not see the rewards next week, but after ten or fifteen years, they show up.”
Want to Go Deeper?
If you are looking for career clarity for your next step, visit www.2ndwind.io
to learn more or book a consult.
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Send us a text Joseph Ogacion grew up in the Philippines, once averaging 0.5 points per varsity basketball game, watching the Sydney Olympics on TV and dreaming of racing there one day. He wasn’t the tallest, the strongest, or the most resourced. But he had something else: the ability to suffer more than anyone else. Today, Joseph is a marathoner headed to the Paris 2024 Olympics and an elite time trial cyclist, juggling two world-class disciplines while working full-time in pediatric physiotherapy in Australia. What You’ll Hear Why his average of 0.5 points per game in high school basketball became the unexpected beginning of his running careerHow skipping meals to afford a secondhand bike became the gateway to elite cyclingWhat it means to be “fair to your sport” and honest with your effortThe link between his physiotherapy training and athletic edgeWhy he trains at an average heart rate of 181 and what that says about his physiologyHow he learned to channel self-doubt into world-class enduranceWhy switching nationality from the Philippines to Australia opened the door to greater competitionWhat every athlete can learn about adaptability and controlThe surprising crossover between hitting Olympic splits and sales quotas at workHow he balances ambition, fatherhood, and a demanding careerWhy breaking down big goals into daily 3.52-hour training blocks changed everythingWhat meeting childhood idol Steve Moneghetti meant after 25 years of dreamingGolden Nugget “Be fair to the sport. Every step, every rep, do it with intent. The sport is always fair. You may not see the rewards next week, but after ten or fifteen years, they show up.” Want to Go Deeper? If you are looking for career clarity for your next step, visit www.2ndwind.io to learn more or book a consult.