Common Mistakes Beginners Make When Preparing for a Marathon

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Runner resting on deserted highway under bright sunlight, wearing athletic gear

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At mile 20 of a first marathon, a runner who felt unstoppable at the start is walking. The legs will not fire, the stomach is in knots, and the finish is 6 miles away. Almost none of this is bad luck. The blowup was built during training and in the first 10 kilometers, through a short list of mistakes that beginners repeat every year. Each one is avoidable once a runner knows to look for it.

Starting Too Fast

The most common race-day error is running the first half too hard. Adrenaline and a fresh body make goal pace feel easy for the first few miles, so beginners bank time they think they will need later. That time rarely survives contact with the second half. Going out even 5 seconds per kilometer too fast in the first half can cost minutes in the final 10 kilometers, because the quick early pace burns through carbohydrate faster and builds up the fatigue byproducts in the muscles. The runners who finish strong almost always hold an even pace or run a slightly faster second half. A safe target for a first-timer is even pacing with a 2% to 3% margin held in reserve for the closing miles. The ones who fade started too fast and paid for it halfway.

Trying Something New on Race Day

New shoes, a new breakfast, an unfamiliar gel, a fresh pair of socks. Each one is a small gamble, and race day is the worst time to take it. A shoe that felt fine in the store can raise a blister by mile 8. A breakfast the gut has never handled at 6 a.m. can end the race in a portable toilet. Caffeine, which a runner does not normally take, can leave the stomach in revolt 15 miles in. The rule experienced runners repeat is simple. Nothing on race day should be new. Every item of gear and every food, down to the timing of each gel, should have been tested in training first, on days when a bad guess costs a training run instead of the race.

Practicing Race Fuel in Training

Marathons past 90 minutes run partly on what a runner eats mid-race, and the gut has to be trained to handle food on the move the same way the legs are trained to cover distance. Long runs are the place to rehearse it, testing options until a few reliable ones remain. Some runners settle on gels, others on chews, dried fruit, a flat cola, or energy waffles.

The goal is a plan that needs no thought on race day. Practice the exact foods, amounts, and timing you will use in the race, so the stomach meets nothing unfamiliar at mile 18. What works differs from person to person, which is why training is where you find out.

Mismanaging Fluids

Plastic water bottle and small bowl of salt on rustic wooden table

Hydration advice used to push runners to drink as much as possible, and that advice put people in the hospital. Drinking far more than thirst demands dilutes the sodium in the blood, a condition called hyponatremia that shows up in an estimated 7% to 15% of marathon finishers and can turn dangerous. It was first described in runners back in 1985, when doctors realized some collapsed athletes were overhydrated rather than dehydrated. The opposite error, running badly dehydrated, is also common and slows a runner down. The current guidance is unfussy. Drink to thirst, take in some sodium on long or hot efforts, and drop the habit of forcing fluids at every station. Sodium matters as much as water on long or hot days, because a runner loses salt in sweat, and replacing only the fluid is what tilts the balance toward hyponatremia. A pinch of electrolyte in a bottle is usually enough.

Skipping the Taper

In the last 2 to 3 weeks before the race, mileage should come down while the hard work of the block gets absorbed. Beginners hate this part. Cutting volume feels like losing fitness, and the surplus energy often turns into restlessness and phantom aches, sometimes called taper tantrums. Fitness is already banked by this point, and the taper is what lets muscles finish repairing and glycogen stores fill. Running big miles in the final fortnight does the reverse, delivering a runner to the start line tired for no gain at all. A sound taper trims weekly volume by roughly 20% to 30% while keeping a little intensity, so the legs arrive at the start line sharp and without built-up fatigue.

Never Practicing Goal Pace

Easy running builds the engine, but a beginner who only ever runs easy has no feel for race pace when it counts. Goal race pace is a specific effort, and it should appear in training, usually as segments inside some of the longer runs. A runner who has spent time at that pace knows what it feels like in the legs and lungs, which makes it far easier to hold steady when adrenaline pushes for something faster. Skipping this leaves a runner guessing on the one day guessing is most expensive.

Obsessing Over the Longest Run

Many first-timers treat a single 20-mile training run as the whole game. It matters, but it is one session among many. The marathon is built on months of steady, mostly easy mileage, and one heroic Sunday cannot stand in for that. A runner who nails a 20-miler after weeks of missed easy runs is far less prepared than one who ran consistently and topped out at 18. Most sound beginner plans cap the long run around 20 miles anyway, because the injury risk past that point outweighs the fitness gained. Consistency across the whole block predicts race day better than the length of the single longest run.

The Setup Behind a Strong Finish

Go back to the runner walking at mile 20. Almost every reason they are walking traces to a decision made earlier, an over-eager first 10 kilometers, a gel never tested, a taper skipped, a training block built around one long run. None of those mistakes require talent to avoid. They require a plan and the discipline to hold to it when adrenaline says go faster. Prepare for the parts of training that feel boring, and mile 20 looks like a different race.

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