7 Tips for Running Your First or Fastest 13.1 or 26.2 at the Fitbit Miami Marathon and Half Marathon

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The Fitbit Miami Marathon and Half Marathon are coming up this weekend, and I wanted to share with you some suggestions to make it your best race yet.

1. Set the right pace goal. Your fitness level is your fitness level. The training is done, and you are where you are. You need to be honest with yourself as to what you are truly capable of achieving. Have three race pace goals: Plan A, B, and C. Long distances races often don’t go exactly as planned so give yourself backup plans so you can hang in there, stay focused, and do the best you can.

2. Respect Mother Nature. If you trained in cold weather, and you are flying into Miami for the race, you need to adjust your pace accordingly. The weather and heat have a significant impact on performance, especially if you are not training regularly in the same climate as your race location. Be humble and respect Mother Nature.

3. Ease into your pace. Start slow. Let the race come to you. Don’t make the mistake of letting the adrenaline get to your head. If you start fast, it will make the race a lot more difficult, and you will not achieve the best finish time possible.

4. Stay ahead with hydration and fueling. Stick to your normal, long-run fueling even if you feel amazing early in the race. Once you get dehydrated, or your glycogen stores are depleted, it’s nearly impossible to recover and finish strong. By staying ahead with your water, electrolytes, and fast-absorbing carbs, you give yourself a stronger chance of enduring well when things get tough late in the race.

5. Don’t try anything new. The expo will be selling all sorts of cool, new, running-related products. Go shopping as much as you like, but don’t try that new product before or during your race. Stay away from samples, too. You don’t want to eat or drink something that causes you an upset stomach and derails your entire training and end result.

6. Embrace the moment. You are running along a beautiful course in Miami. Take it all in. It is human nature for your mind to drift into negativity when you physically challenge yourself. Reset your mental attitude by focusing on the positives around you. Have an attitude of gratitude.

7. Support your neighbor. Get out of your head by thinking of and supporting those around you. There are many runners participating in the race, so stop thinking the world revolves around you. Thank a volunteer, wish a nervous participant good luck at the start line, or high five a fan on the course.

Scott Fishman is the founder of Team All-American a movement that helps people worldwide crush personal records. Scott is a certified coach and trainer with 15+ years of experience. His speciality is helping people run their first or fastest marathon. Join him in your quest for ultimate performance at www.TeamAllAmerican.com.

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