Greg Wells Profile
Dr. Greg Wells is the Founder and CEO of Wells Performance and acts as the performance physiologist on projects at the firm. He is based in Toronto, Canada and is responsible for leading the firm as we pursue the moonshot of helping organizations and their people get healthy, perform optimally, and reach their potential.
Greg continues to work as an executive coach while designing and delivering workshops, courses and programs that improve health and performance at the organizations that we partner with.
As a scientist, broadcaster, author, coach and athlete, Dr. Greg Wells has dedicated his career to understanding human performance and how the human body responds to extreme conditions.
Dr. Wells appears regularly on national television and radio and makes ongoing contributions to newspapers, magazines and scientific journals. He is the author of Superbodies: Peak Performance Secrets from the World's Best Athletes, The Ripple Effect, The Focus Effect, and his most recent, Rest, Refocus, Recharge: A Guide for Optimizing Your Life. He also hosted the award-winning Superbodies series, which aired on Olympic broadcasts worldwide in 2010 and 2012. As a speaker, Wells has travelled the world speaking at events such as TEDx and The Titan Summit, and has shared the stage with Robin Sharma, Richard Branson, Steve Wozniak, and Deepak Chopra.. Known for making complex science accessible, interesting and fun, Dr. Wells is helping us all sleep, eat, move, work and live better.
Throughout his career, Dr. Wells has coached, trained and inspired dozens of elite athletes to win medals at the Commonwealth Games, World Championships and Olympics. He has studied athletic performance in some of the most severe conditions on the planet. And he has personal experience with the challenges and opportunities of adversity and human extremes.
Late in his high school career, Greg broke his neck in a freak accident while swimming in the ocean and was in a halo brace before undergoing neurosurgery. Told by his doctor that he would never perform as an athlete again, he went on to compete at the international level in swimming. He has competed in events such as the Nanisivik Marathon 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle, Ironman Canada, and the Tour D'Afrique, a grueling 11,000-kilometre event that is the longest bike race in the world.
Dr. Wells served as an Assistant Professor in Kinesiology at the University of Toronto and an Associate Scientist of Physiology and Experimental Medicine at The Hospital for Sick Children. At U of T Dr. Wells studies elite sport performance, and at Sick Kids he leads the Exercise Medicine Research Program where his team explores how to use exercise to prevent, diagnose and treat chronic illnesses in children. Previously, he served as the Director of Sport Science at the Canadian Sport Centre, and taught elite sport coaches at the National Coaching Institute.