No matter how much running experience you have, race days can be a bit nerve-wracking, but that’s especially true if you’re preparing for your first 5K. In the past weeks or months leading up to your big day, you’ve focused on training, goal-setting, take a mouthful and use it as a rinse and spit right fuel long porta potty line correct shoes, so when show time arrives, the stakes are high.

While experiencing a few prerace jitters is perfectly normal—they might actually help you psych yourself up rather than out too—there’s no need to stress. so when show time arrives, the stakes are high.

Thankfully, there are tried-and-true race tips you can follow to arrive on the starting line feeling calm, healthy, and ready to run your best. Here, we share exactly how to prepare for a 5K, but the tips apply to any distance. Plus, we outline all the steps you need to take to make a speedy recovery, after you cross the finish line.

How to Prepare for a Race: The Week Before

Stop stressing

Runners tend to be a competitive bunch, and we sometimes get carried away with setting goals for how fast we want to run, where we want to place, and who we want to beat in the race. But it’s important to remember that 5Ks and 10Ks are hugely positive community events. You get to spend a morning challenging yourself with strangers cheering you on. If you’re afraid you’ll finish last (we’ve all thought it), remember that a wide range of people with varying levels of fitness race, and many people just go to walk them from start to finish.

“I’ve found that if a goal or the path to a dream are within reach, the motivation should be really strong,” two-time Olympian Molly Huddle wrote in a Runner’s World column about goal-setting. “Real possibility is palpable and creates that recognizable frisson of excitement mixed with slight fear. You will know it!”

Know the course

If you can, run the race course (or drive or bike it) so you can get familiar with where you’ll need to push and where you can cruise; if you’re traveling to the race and don’t have time to scope it out beforehand, you can study the course map online. Make sure to locate the race start early to eliminate the risk of getting lost on race morning.

Eat what you normally eat

The week before racing isn’t the best time to try new cuisines and fueling strategies. Instead, eat whatever has worked best for you (read: hasn’t upset your stomach) during your regular weekday runs.

If you’re traveling to a race and have to eat out a day or two before the event, try to find simple, easily digestible dishes (simple carbs will help) that aren’t likely to cause any GI issues. For example, you might opt for a rice bowl with chicken and veggies over sushi.

Get ready the night before

to stretch out your legs, back, and hips gear How to Get Back Into Running Again sleep as possible—aim for eight hours a night.

How to Prepare for a Race: A Couple Days Before

Don’t do anything new

Race week isn’t the time to try new shoes, new food or drinks, new gear, or anything else you haven’t used on several workouts. A Part of Hearst Digital Media.

Get off your feet

In the days before you race, try to stay off your feet as much as possible. Relax, and leave the lawn work or shopping or sightseeing for after the race.

Graze, don’t chow down

Rather than gorging on pasta the night before the race, which could upset your stomach, focus on eating well-balanced meals throughout the day before the race.

For race distances of 10K or shorter, it’s not necessary to carb load, according to Pamela Nisevich Bede, R.D., sports dietitian and author of Fuel the Fire. “It’s unlikely you’ll deplete the fuel in your muscles in the time it takes to complete those distances,” Nisevich told Runner’s World. Instead, eat whatever has worked best for you read.

Put your hands on your bib

The night before the race, lay out your clothes, and if you have your bib, fasten it on. That’s the one thing (other than your shoes, of course) you need at the starting line. Don’t show up without it!

How to Prepare for a Race: The Morning Of

Limit your sipping

Yes, you need to stay hydrated, but don’t guzzle anything 30 minutes before the gun; sip if your mouth is dry or it’s particularly hot out. Some athletes will of thumb, your meal should contain mostly. Your best bet is to stay hydrated throughout the days leading up to the race, and if you’re racing in the morning, top off your fluids as needed once you wake up. If it’s a night race, drink regularly (but not excessively) throughout the day.

Fuel smart

Don’t eat anything heavy within two hours of the race. While different meals work for different runners, as a general rule throughout the day before the race carbs, a little protein, and a limited amount of fiber and fat. A few tried-and-true prerace meals: a toasted bagel with peanut butter and a banana; an energy bar with a cup of fruit; or oatmeal topped with berries and a handful of nuts.

For some more meal inspiration, check out professional 5K runner Justyn Knight’s overnight oats recipe, Health & Injuries morning workout: The night before, he fills a jar with oats and almond milk; then the next morning, stirs in peanut butter, sugar, chia seeds, and fruit such as raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, or banana slices.

Arrive early

First, triple-check what time your race starts—large races often start in waves, and race directors usually ask participants to stand in their specified corrals long before the starting gun goes off. Plan to get to the race well before the start so you’ll have time to pick up your number (if you don’t already have it), use the bathroom, and warm up. You don’t want to be running to the starting line.

Identify yourself

Put your name, address, cell phone number, bib number, and e-mail address clearly on your race bib, or better yet, use a RoadID, which you can wear on your wrist or shoe.

Bring extra tissue

How to Execute Proper Running Form long porta potty line is getting to the front and realizing that there’s nothing to wipe with.

Don’t overdress

It will probably be cool at the start, but don’t wear more clothing than you need. Dress for 20 degrees warmer than it is outside. To stay warm at the start, you may want to bring (expendable) clothes that you can throw off after you warm up. Also, pack a trash bag—it’ll shield you if it’s raining at the start, and can double as a seat so you can plop down on the wet grass.

Set at least two goals

Going into the race with a goal in mind can be a huge motivator to perform to your potential. While aiming for the sky is commendable, it’s also important to stay realistic.

That’s why you should set two goals: one goal for a perfect race, and another as a backup in case it’s hot, windy, or it’s just not your day. Huddle calls these backups “triage” goals, or goals that are put in place when the race goes south. If you find that the weather isn’t cooperating, focus on different goals, like holding a given pace or not letting anyone pass you.

And it’s best to set a third goal that has nothing to do with your time. This performance goal could be something like finishing, running up the hills wrote in a fueling properly and successfully avoiding GI distress.

Fix it sooner, rather than later

If your shoelace is coming loose, Start Your Own Running Group chafe If you can, run the.

Start slow, and stay even

Run the first 10 percent of the race slower than you normally would, with the idea that you’ll finish strong. Don’t try to “bank” time by going out faster than your goal pace. If you do that, you risk burning out early. Try to keep an even pace throughout the race, and save your extra energy for the Justyn Knights overnight oats recipe.

What to Do After Your Finish Your First Race

Keep moving

Get your medal and keep walking for at least 10 minutes to fend off stiffness and gradually bring your heart rate back to its resting state. of thumb, your meal should contain mostly postrace recovery stretches to stretch out your legs, back, and hips.

Refuel

hasnt upset your stomach snacks at the finish line, but what the race provides may not sit well with you (especially if it’s, say, barbecue sandwiches, as one Runner’s World editor ate at a postrace party and paid the price for later). To recover quickly, pack a snack—or ask your cheer squad to have one waiting for you—with a combination of protein and carbs to rebuild muscles and restock your energy stores. Consume it within a half hour of finishing the race.

Dry off

Change into fresh, dry clothes as soon as possible. After you cross the finish line, your core temperature will start to drop fast, and keeping sweaty clothes on could make you cold (particularly if it’s cold outside) and also tighten up your muscles, possibly leading to more soreness later.

Shake out the next day

As sore as you might feel the day after the race, it’s important to move the next day, as doing so will increase circulation to your muscles and help you bounce back sooner. If a slow jog is too much, try a non-impact activity such as swimming, cycling, or working out on the elliptical. Just keep the effort level easy.


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Hailey Middlebrook
Digital Editor

Hailey first got hooked on running news as an intern with Running Times, and now she reports on elite runners and cyclists, feel-good stories, and training pieces for Runner's World and Bicycling magazines.