Marathon Questions?
Marathon answers here.
Home
Marathon Training
Marathon Q & A's
Triathlon Q & A's
Nutrition
Running Shoes
Running Apparel
Site map
About Us
 
 
 
   
Half-marathon, training distance shorter than race?

Question:
The general advice I've seen on websites is that one is ready for a distance race when his training "long" run is somewhat shorter than the race distance, say ten miles for a half-marathon. Based on this advice I'm ready to attempt the half-marathon.
But, this seems to be counter- intuitive.

Baseball hitters practice swinging with weighted bats so that when they step up to the plate the regulation bat seems lighter. Is it really sound to attempt a race that is some 30% longer than one's longest training run? Logically, I would think it makes sense to train at longer distances than the race. Then, when it comes to the real thing you've routinely and regularly done that distance and feel comfortable with it.

ere I come, but should I go for 13 miles a couple of weeks
Answer:
There are a few "rules of thumb" for long runs. Long runs should not be more than 1/3 of your weekly mileage. Long runs shouldn't be done more than once per week. The last long run before a race shouldn't be closer than 2 weeks away. For races less than marathon length, begining runners should run 2 or 3 runs of 66% to 100% of the race distance during the 8 weeks before the event.

Over-distance training (a training run that is longer than your goal event distance) is OK for events shorter than the half-marathon. But for beginners, anything longer than half-marathon distance requires too much recovery time to make it a productive training run. You are also increasing your chances of getting injured by running too long of a distance.

You don't have a whole lot of time to train for this event. So I'd suggest just getting in a "time on your feet" run, no closer than 2 weeks before the event. That means that you wouldn't run at your half marathon pace, just run for the length of time that you think it will take you to complete a half-marathon.

Your 22:51 5K suggests that you could run a half-marathon in about 1:46, which is about an 8:06/mi pace. Of course, this implies that you've been doing training that is appropriate for the half-marathon, such as long runs, tempo runs, weekly mileage. But since you haven't been doing that and your goal is simply to run the distance without stopping or walking, then you should probably plan on a 2 hour finish time and just have fun.

For your next race after the half, you might consider following a more structured plan. A good place to start is with Bob Glover's book "The New Competitive Runners Handbook."








 
Marathon Training | Triathlon | Sports Nutrition | Running Shoes | Running Apparel | Ask a Running Question
Privacy Policy