国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Ryan Hall breaks the U.S. half-marathon record in Houston, Texas, January 14, 2007
Ryan Hall breaks the U.S. half-marathon record in Houston, Texas, January 14, 2007 (Photo: Victah Sailer)

Yes You Can: Run a Half-Marathon

Everything you need to run a personal best, including a 12-week training plan, a race-day nutrition plan, and advice from U.S. record holder Ryan Hall

Published: 
Ryan Hall breaks the U.S. half-marathon record in Houston, Texas, January 14, 2007
(Photo: Victah Sailer)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

On the top of his hand, he鈥檚 written 4:42 and 4:37 in black ink. If he averages 4:42 pace, he鈥檒l likely win the race. If he averages 4:37 pace, he鈥檒l break the American record. The gun goes off and his legs begin spinning. He averages 4:33 pace for the first five miles, faster than he's ever run before, but he goes with it: it doesn鈥檛 feel any harder than his training runs. Hall鈥檚 parents and wife watch silently from the lead vehicle. They can鈥檛 cheer or they鈥檒l interfere with the race.

Interactive Training Plans

Track your workouts, get email reminders, and watch video tutorials in our two interactive 12-week training plans from coach Matt Ebersole. |

Ryan Hall leads the 2009 Boston Marathon

Ryan Hall leads the 2009 Boston Marathon Ryan Hall leads the 2009 Boston Marathon

Around mile nine, Hall鈥檚 stomach feels unsettled. He worries about cramping, so he prays. His stomach settles down by mile 10, and he crosses the finish line at 59:43, a new American record, and the crowd goes wild. He鈥檚 crushed Mark Curp鈥檚 22-year-old American record by more than a minute. His family screams and runs out of the pace car and over to hug him.

鈥淭here was just pure joy coming out of me,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淚 was so excited.鈥

Fast forward to 2012. The half marathon is the fastest growing road race in the United States, with almost 1.4 million finishers in 2010 and more than 30 new half-marathons popping up every year, according to . You don鈥檛 have to run 4:30 miles to feel the euphoria Hall experienced, but learning from the American record holder will help you achieve own personal best. In the following pages, you鈥檒l find a nutritional guide, training plans, and tips from Hall, Curp, and .

听鈥淭he half marathon hits the sweet spot between being manageable and being a challenge,鈥 says Ebersole, owner of Indianapolis-based coaching company . 鈥淎nd when distance is no longer a challenge, time can become the challenge.鈥

10 Tips To Run Your Best Half-Marathon

Train like a pro with tips from Ryan Hall, Mark Curp, and coach Matt Ebersole

Start of the 2011 Chicago Half Marathon
Start of the 2011 Chicago Half Marathon (Courtesy of The Chicago Half Marathon)

The marathon鈥檚 little brother has been bumper-sticker branded 13.1. The distance is half that of a marathon, but that doesn鈥檛 mean running one is half the achievement. To run a good half, you鈥檒l need the speed of a 10Ker, the endurance of a marathoner, and the wisdom of those who have gone before.

Your Coaches:
, current U.S. record holder with a time of 59:43
, former World and U.S. record holder with a time of 1:00:5
, 20-year coaching veteran of more than 5,000 runners

10. Understand your goal
鈥淧eople who aren鈥檛 clear on why they鈥檙e doing this really struggle,鈥 Ebersole says. Take a moment to reflect on why you want to run 13.1 miles. Is it for weight loss, a sense of personal achievement, or to motivate yourself to get more exercise? 鈥淚f you can be clear on that, you鈥檒l see how each day鈥檚 training fits into the goal you鈥檝e set out, and you won鈥檛 have too many motivation problems,鈥 he says.

9. Make it social
Get a group together, or join a local running club. When you鈥檙e socially and emotionally invested in your workouts, it鈥檒l be harder for you to skip them. 鈥淥ne day you鈥檒l want to run because you鈥檙e fired up about being a runner,鈥 Ebersole says. 鈥淭he next day, you might run so you can go to Starbucks and not feel guilty.鈥 Having running buddies will help keep you from burning out or slacking off.

8. Slow down
Don鈥檛 be that guy or girl who dominates every workout and then fizzles on race day. 鈥淧eople who have the tendency to train too hard leave their races in their workouts,鈥 Curp says. 鈥淵ou have to make sure you get enough rest along the way.鈥 Rest days and easy runs are built in to the training plan for a reason. And if you鈥檙e a speedster stepping it up from a 10K, give yourself permission to run slower as the distances increase. 鈥淲hen the distance is no longer a big deal for you, you can worry about speed again,鈥 Ebersole says.

7. Race
Nothing will prepare you for the big day like racing in a smaller event. You can practice your nutrition plan, work through pre-race jitters, and learn what it feels like to push hard. 鈥淭he trick is to learn to love running and racing,鈥 Ebersole says. 鈥淭he other 23 hours of the day feel so much better when you put that hour in.鈥 His beginner plan has a 5K and a 10K race. Advanced runners should experiment with negative-split runs鈥攔unning the last half of a race faster than the first half.

6. Get outfitted
Even in 1985, Curp wore moisture-wicking fabric that wouldn鈥檛 soak up his sweat. Skip cotton and wear clothes made from materials like COOLMAX or Nike鈥檚 Dri-Fit. Same goes for your socks. 鈥淎nd avoid something you鈥檝e never worn before,鈥 Curp says. Test your race outfit on a long run, paying attention to any chaffing or fit issues. You don鈥檛 want comments about bloody nipples detracting from comments about your accomplishments when you post your official finisher photo on Facebook.听

5. Train your brain
鈥淥ften we think we need to train our bodies, but then we leave out the mind,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淲e all have negative thoughts, but it鈥檚 what we do with them that makes a difference.鈥 Hall recommends developing the habit in training of turning every negative thought into a positive thought. When mental lows creep up during the race, you鈥檒l be prepared to combat them.

4. Pace yourself
鈥淭he half-marathon is in the gray zone, where it isn鈥檛 really comfortable but it鈥檚 not really hard, either,鈥 Ebersole says. New to pacing? Here鈥檚 Ebersole鈥檚 half-marathon rule of thumb: For the first five miles, err on the side of feeling a little too relaxed. For the second five miles, adjust your effort to maintain that speed, or turn it up a notch. Then, with 5K left, kick it into high gear. 鈥淭his is where the real racing starts,鈥 Ebersole says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 where you鈥檒l start thinking about other people and trying to squeeze out as many seconds as you can.鈥

Need help determining your goal pace? Try plugging 5K and 10K results into these pace-predicting calculators: and . They鈥檙e not perfect (each one will give you a slightly different goal time), but you鈥檒l get an idea of what to shoot for in the half-marathon.

3. Get a tattoo
Before Hall ran his record-setting race, he wrote out two pace charts on the back of his hand, outlining what his splits should be at different points during the event to hit his goal time. Tell your half-marathon goal time, and they鈥檒l send you a temporary forearm tattoo with mile splits mapped out at your goal pace.

2. Keep an open mind
鈥淒on鈥檛 limit yourself on the start line,鈥 Hall says. Although he did have those pace charts on his hand, he wound up feeling better than expected, and ran faster than either pace he had outlined. Don鈥檛 be a slave to your watch on race day. Pay attention to how you feel, and you may end up surprising yourself.

1. Celebrate
Enjoy the moment when you cross the finish line. Hall hung around and hugged his family, while Curp ran straight back to his hotel to call his loved ones. Then post that finisher photo on Facebook and tag us so we can join in the praise. But don鈥檛 be surprised if you, like Curp, find yourself haunted by the old runner鈥檚 adage: You鈥檙e only as good as your next race. That鈥檚 the beauty of the half-marathon. 鈥淵ou can recover relatively quickly and be back racing a week or two later, 鈥 says Curp.

The Ultimate Half-Marathon Nutrition Plan

Everything you need to fuel up for the race

Horizon organic chocolate milk
Horizon organic chocolate milk (Courtesy of Horizon)

You can put in the physical and mental training, but if you don鈥檛 train your stomach, you could end up spilling your guts instead of sprinting for glory. We spoke with Denver-based Registered Dietician, , to create a nutritional guide that鈥檒l take you the distance.

NIGHT BEFORE
Continue to eat the same as you did when you were in the full swing of training and your body will store the glycogen you need to fuel your race. Jauquet recommends that you eat balanced meals, meaning they contain about 50 to 65 percent complex carbs, like brown rice, quinoa, potatoes, corn, squash, and fruits and vegetables, and 30 percent fat. The rest of your calories should come from lean protein, like chicken, pork tenderloin, shellfish, or tofu.

鈥淧asta isn鈥檛 bad,鈥 Jauquet says. 鈥淏ut have what your body is used to, and make it a balanced meal.鈥 If you want pasta, think pasta with marinara sauce, a lean protein, and some saut茅ed or roasted vegetables. Stay away from high-fiber foods the night before, as well as dairy if you know you have a hard time digesting it.

RACE MORNING
鈥淭he general rule of thumb is to eat breakfast two to four hours before the race starts,鈥 Jauquet says. Eat something familiar and easy to digest. For some people, that may be oatmeal with fruit and milk. For others, that may be cereal with yogurt and fruit, or a bagel with peanut butter and fruit. And don鈥檛 forget to hydrate. Jauquet recommends drinking 16 to 24 ounces of water two hours before the race, and an additional 8 ounces of water about 15 to 30 minutes before.

DURING THE RACE
鈥淔ind out ahead of time what food will be provided at your race,鈥 Jauquet says. That way, if you trained with Gatorade and the aid stations have Cytomax, you won鈥檛 be thrown for a loop. If your event provides liquids or foods you can鈥檛 stand, consider wearing your own hydration belt.

Once you figure out what you鈥檒l use for fuel, follow this plan: Drink something every 15 minutes, starting 15 minutes into your race. Most people need between 30 and 60 grams of carbs per hour, Jauquet says. That鈥檚 120 to 240 calories. Figure out how many carbs you need to sustain your running during long training runs by taking in 30 grams per hour (spread throughout the hour, not all at once) then adjusting the amount by how you feel. If you bonk on 30 grams, you need to take in more. Try alternating between a sports drink and water, taking in other food, like gels, blocks, or bites of banana, with the water as needed. That said, if you鈥檙e running hard and not too much longer than an hour, you might not need any calories. Hall says he only took in a couple ounces of water on his record-breaking run. Experiment to see what works best for you.

Jauquet also recommends you determine your sweat rate, so you can aim to replace the fluids you鈥檙e losing as you run. Figure it out by weighing yourself naked, running for a half hour without drinking, then stepping on the scale again. For every pound lost, figure you鈥檝e lost 16 ounces of fluid. Multiply that number by two to get your sweat rate per hour, then aim to drink that much as you run. Don鈥檛 worry if that seems difficult, as most people have a hard time making up for their sweat rate during their run, Jauquet says. If you can take in 80 percent of what you鈥檙e losing, you鈥檒l be in good shape. You can replace the rest after you cross the finish line.

Example sweat rate calculation: You lost one pound during your half hour test run. One pound = 16 ounces x 2 = 32 ounces per hour. 32 / 4 = 8 ounces every 15 minutes.

Want a simpler rule of thumb? Tim Noakes, a professor of exercise and sports science at the University of Cape Town in South Africa, has recommended drinking according to your thirst.

POST RACE
鈥淵our muscles are most susceptible to recovery immediately after you finish exercising,鈥 Jauquet says. Protein is particularly important right now, as it will help repair damaged muscle fibers. Replace protein and carbs all at once by drinking lowfat chocolate milk as soon as possible. If you can鈥檛 digest dairy, chocolate soy milk will also work. Single-serve cartons of and don鈥檛 need to be refrigerated, so you can toss one into a bag to drink at the finish. Once your stomach is settled, eat a balanced meal, just like you have all week.

Half Marathon Training Plan

12-weeks to your best half marathon, whether you鈥檙e a beginner or a seasoned pro

Beginner Half-Marathon Training Plan
Beginner Half-Marathon Training Plan

Advanced Half-Marathon Training Plan

Advanced Half-Marathon Training Plan

Download PDF

Matt Ebersole, owner of Indianapolis-based , has coached over 5,000 runners and is something of a half-marathon expert, having prepared many of those runners to compete in Indianapolis鈥檚 , the largest half-marathon in the United States鈥攚ith more than 30,000 finishers in 2011. If this is your first shot at running 13.1 miles, go with the beginner training plan. If you鈥檙e a pro looking for another race, try the advanced training plan and check out one of our five favorite half marathons below.

For the best training experience, sign up for the interactive version of our or in the 国产吃瓜黑料 Fitness Center.

The Top 5 U.S. Half Marathons


WHEN: May 5, 2012
WHERE: Indianapolis, IN
# of FINISHERS: 30,649


WHEN: Jan. 13, 2013
WHERE: Houston, TX
# of FINISHERS: 9,375


WHEN: Jan. 20, 2013
WHERE: Phoenix, AZ
# of FINISHERS: 15,663


WHEN: Jan. 12, 2013
WHERE: Lake Buena Vista, FL
# of FINISHERS: 22,417


WHEN: Sept. 9, 2012
WHERE: Chicago, IL
# of FINISHERS: 11,886

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online