Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Marathon-Training”
How To Build The Ideal Marathon Plan Without Overtraining Or Burnout
How To Build The Ideal Marathon Plan Without Overtraining Or Burnout
A great marathon plan is simple, flexible, and recovery-first. For most beginners, the ideal marathon training plan runs 16–24 weeks, leans on easy mileage, anchors progress with one long run each week, and adds only small amounts of quality when you’re sleeping well and feeling good [1][2][4]. Keep four to five run days, short strength, and cross-training, and use conservative progression to avoid overuse injuries and mental fatigue [1][4]. This guide lays out Hiking Manual’s resilient, beginner-first system so you can arrive at the start line healthy, confident, and motivated.
How to Build Your Ideal Marathon Plan: Mileage, Pace, Recovery
How to Build Your Ideal Marathon Plan: Mileage, Pace, Recovery
A strong marathon plan balances the right mileage with smart pacing and deliberate recovery. Start by setting your race date and goal, then map phases that build from easy aerobic work to marathon-specific sessions. Use recent performances to calibrate training zones so easy days stay easy and quality workouts land precisely, and structure each week to absorb stress rather than stack it. Below, you’ll find a clear, step-by-step framework—timeline, zones, phases, long runs, fueling, taper, and tools—to help you arrive fit, fresh, and confident on race day. This mirrors Hiking Manual’s keep-it-simple approach: do the right work, recover well, and repeat.