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Train Your Body To Hold Up Better In Late-Race Stress - The Secrets To Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness Revealed

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Train Your Body To Hold Up Better In Late-Race Stress - The Secrets To Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness Revealed
Marathon TrainingLate-Race StressPhysiological Resilience

Discover the two most effective ways to train your body to withstand late-race stress and improve your marathon performance!

can crush even well-trained runners. A pace that once felt smooth and controlled suddenly feels almost impossible to hold onto. Your breathing rate picks up, yourBut that late-race fade is not just a matter of mental toughness.

You can actually train your body to hold up better when the race gets hard. Researchers are paying more attention to this factor—the ability to maintain performance through the later miles of a marathon—often known as.

While marathoners tend to focus on metrics like VO2 max, lactate threshold, and running economy, those numbers usually don’t tell the full story, especially when it comes to running for hours.experts in the distance running field to explain everything you need to know about this phenomenon, and they all came to the conclusion: The two best ways to improve how your body handles late-race stress are also the most straightforward. Here’s how to use them to run your fastest marathon.

At a basic level, physiological resilience is your body’s ability to hang onto its baseline fitness as fatigue builds,. The better you are at doing this, the more likely you are to stay strong and steady when other runners begin to fade.

For example, two runners can display similar metrics and feel equally smooth in the early miles of a marathon but look completely different when mile 22 rolls around. One runner may still be cruising along while the other is struggling. The difference may come down to how much their physiology deteriorates under hours of stress.simple, but it’s the heart of what durability is all about.

If you want your body to resist decline over time, you have to give it regular exposure to sustained effort,Of course, establishing consistency and high volume takes time. You don’t want to jump into running 100-plus miles in a week, like Sabastian Sawe, or even bump up from 25 miles a week to 50.

You may need to start with a base-building plan before you even begin a marathon program so you can maximize volume, without The key is finding the optimal mileage that still allows you to recover well, stay healthy, and get stronger from each workout you do.is the most race-specific workout marathoners do. It teaches your body to keep working as effort rises, fuel levels fluctuate, and muscles begin to fatigue.effort without actually doing two hours of sustained aerobic effort, Pittman wrote.

That’s why the long run matters so much. It’s where physiological drift actually shows up in training—the point of your run where you start to use more energy to sustain the same pace—and where your body learns to manage and improve durability. Matt Rudisill is an Associate Service Editor who has been with Runner's World since 2025.

A Nittany Lion through-and-through, Matt graduated from Penn State in 2022 with a degree in journalism and worked in communications for the university's athletic department for three years as the main contact and photographer for its nationally-ranked cross country and track & field teams. Matt was also heavily involved in communications efforts for Penn State football, men's basketball, and women's gymnastics.

In his role withMatt has interviewed Olympians, world champions, and countless experts in the field to create service content that helps runners of all ages and experience levels train smarter and race faster. When he’s not out jogging, Matt can be found tweeting bad takes about the Phillies or watching movies.

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Marathon Training Late-Race Stress Physiological Resilience Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness

 

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