MarathonITE: The Ultimate Guide for First-Time Runners

MarathonITE Training Plan: 12 Weeks to Your Best Race

This 12-week MarathonITE plan is designed for runners who can already run comfortably for 30–45 minutes and want a structured progression to finish a marathon confidently and with a strong performance. It balances endurance, speed, recovery, and race-week preparation while minimizing injury risk.

Training principles

  • Progressive overload: Increase weekly mileage gradually (about 10% max) with every third or fourth week as a recovery week.
  • Long run focus: Build one long run per week to develop endurance and fueling practice.
  • Quality sessions: Include one tempo or threshold run and one interval or hill session weekly to improve speed and lactate threshold.
  • Recovery: Two easy days and one full rest day per week; prioritize sleep and nutrition.
  • Adaptability: If you feel excessive fatigue or pain, reduce intensity or swap a session for an easy run or rest.

Weekly structure (typical)

  • Monday: Rest or cross-train (easy cycle, swim, yoga)
  • Tuesday: Intervals / hill repeats (speed)
  • Wednesday: Easy run (30–60 min) + strength (20 min)
  • Thursday: Tempo / threshold run
  • Friday: Easy run or rest
  • Saturday: Long run (progressing distance)
  • Sunday: Recovery easy run or cross-train

12-week plan (mile-based)

Note: Adjust paces to your ability—easy runs conversational pace; tempo at comfortably hard; intervals at 5K–10K effort.

Week Tue (intervals) Wed (easy + strength) Thu (tempo) Sat (long run) Sun (recovery) Weekly miles (approx)
1 6 x 400m (with 200m jog) 4 mi + 20 min 3 mi tempo 8 mi 3 mi 24–28
2 5 x 600m (200m jog) 4–5 mi + 20 min 4 mi tempo 10 mi 3–4 mi 28–32
3 6 x 800m (400m jog) 5 mi + 20 min 5 mi tempo 12 mi 4 mi 34–38
4 (recovery) 4 x 400m 4 mi + 15 min 3 mi tempo 8–9 mi 3 mi 22–26
5 6 x 800m 6 mi + 20 min 6 mi tempo 14 mi 4–5 mi 38–42
6 4 x 1K (400m jog) 6 mi + 20 min 7 mi tempo 16 mi 5 mi 44–48
7 8 x 800m 6–7 mi + strength 8 mi tempo 18 mi 5–6 mi 50–55
8 (recovery) 5 x 600m 5 mi + 15 min 5 mi tempo 12–13 mi 4 mi 34–38
9 6 x 1K 7–8 mi + strength 9 mi tempo 20 mi 6 mi 56–60
10 10 x 400m (faster) 6–7 mi + 20 min 6–7 mi tempo 14–16 mi 5–6 mi 44–48
11 6 x 800m 5–6 mi + light strength 5 mi tempo 10–12 mi 4–5 mi 34–38
12 (taper/race week) 4 x 400m easy 3–4 mi + light strides 3 mi easy Race (26.2 mi) Rest/light walk 30–40

Pacing guidelines

  • Easy runs: 60–90 seconds slower per mile than marathon goal pace.
  • Long runs: Start easy; last 3–5 miles can be at marathon goal pace for late-stage training.
  • Tempo: 20–40 minutes at lactate threshold (15–30 seconds slower than 10K pace).
  • Intervals: 3–5K effort with full recovery between reps.

Strength & mobility (sample, 2× weekly, 20 min)

  • Squats or goblet squats — 3×8–12
  • Single-leg deadlifts — 3×8 each side
  • Lunges or step-ups — 3×8 each side
  • Plank variations — 3×45–60s
  • Hip bridges — 3×12
  • Calf raises — 3×15
    Finish with 5–10 minutes mobility: hip flexors, IT band foam roll, hamstrings.

Nutrition & fueling

  • Practice fueling on long runs: 30–60 g carbs/hour from gels, chews, or sports drink.
  • Hydrate regularly; include electrolytes for runs >90 minutes.
  • Aim for 3:1 or 4:1 carb-to-protein within 30–60 minutes after long/hard runs to aid recovery.

Injury prevention & recovery

  • Prioritize 7–9 hours sleep.
  • Ice or contrast baths for sore areas; foam rolling daily.
  • If sharp pain persists >1 week, reduce load and consult a clinician.

Race week checklist

  • Final long run 10–14 days before race (last long run 14–10 days).
  • Taper mileage; keep sharp with short easy runs and a few strides.
  • Carb-load 48 hours before race (increase carbs to ~7–10 g/kg/day).
  • Lay out gear, plan pacing, and test nutrition during training.

Quick 4-week tune-up (if you only have 4 weeks)

  • Week 1: 10–12 mi long, tempo, intervals
  • Week 2: 14–16 mi long, threshold + easy runs
  • Week 3: 18–20 mi long, shorter quality sessions
  • Week 4: Taper to race

Good luck — stick to the plan, listen to your body, and use long runs to dial fueling and pacing for MarathonITE.

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