If breathwork for performance was as simple as it’s often presented online, more athletes would be improving — not ending up more stressed, fatigued, or second-guessing their breathing under pressure.

Yet in practice, I regularly see high-performers using CO₂ drills, hypoxic breathing, nasal-only training, and breath holds in ways that actually make performance worse.

In this video, I explain what typically goes wrong.

We’ll unpack how popular breathwork methods are often misapplied in performance settings, why forcing control can backfire, and how physiology and real-world coaching experience reframe these tools.

In this video, you’ll learn:

  • Why forcing “CO₂ tolerance” work can increase stress and threat perception

  • The difference between useful exposure and physiological overload

  • Why air hunger becomes a psychological stressor when poorly dosed

  • How hypoxic breathing is often unrealistic outside controlled environments

  • Why trying to consciously control breathing during exercise disrupts coordination

  • How rigid breathing cues can increase cognitive load under intensity

  • When nasal breathing supports regulation — and when it limits output

  • Why breath holds and hypoxic sprints can create maladaptation instead of resilience

  • Where inspiratory muscle training fits (and where it doesn’t)

  • Why dysfunctional breathing in sport is often a nervous system response to demand, not just a gas exchange issue

Breathwork for performance doesn’t usually fail because the tools are useless.
It fails because they’re applied out of context, over-prescribed, or layered on top of already high stress loads.

Real performance breathing isn’t about forcing control or chasing shortcuts — it’s about sequencing stress, respecting state, and allowing efficient breathing to emerge under load rather than micromanaging it.