Running a Marathon Just Got a Little Easier

If you have a Fall/Autumn marathon on your dance card, you probably have a goal in mind. This could be just finishing, a personal record (PR) or a Boston Qualification (BQ).

Unfortunately, the stark reality is that the majority of runners will fail to achieve their goal. Many will also have a depressing, miserable experience on race day when they encounter the dreaded Wall.

A survey conducted by Chicago Athlete Magazine asked runners the question: “What is your goal for the Chicago Marathon?” The results were:

Sub 3:00 - 25%
Sub 3:30 - 16%
Sub 4:00 - 25%
Sub 4.30 - 8%


Therefore 66% of participants thought they would achieve a time better than 4 hours!

These predictions are surprising when you sanity check against the analysis conducted by Athlinks where the average marathon time achieved was actually 4.33.13 based on over 400,000 finishers.

So runners were extremely optimistic starting their training…..what did reality look like after 26.2 miles? As you may have guessed, the race results were dramatically different….. only 31.28% of Chicago finishers came home in under 4 hours. Furthermore, on a flat course, only 2.3% achieved the sub 3-hour goal.

Based on these statistics, the vast majority of Chicago Marathoners would therefore be disappointed….having failed (many by literally hours) to achieve their stated goal.

What can you do to improve your odds of achieving your goal?

The Answer = Copy What Elite Athletes Do!

Elite runners have solved the marathon puzzle and you can copy their approach.
Indeed, many runners are already adopting ‘professional’ techniques:

  • Structured mileage plans

  • Speed work

  • Cross training

  • Strength conditioning

  • Pro footwear

The one area we typically fail to copy could be the most critical component of all – the mental game!

Your brain is like any other muscle in your body. It takes deliberate, regular training to make it stronger.

Every elite athlete has a sports psychologist or mental coach – because it works.

“Athletics is not so much about the legs. It's about the heart and mind.”
Eliud Kipchoge (Marathon world record holder)


Until now, sports psychology wasn’t readily available to what the marketing guys call the ‘recreational runner’.

To bridge this gap, we’ve persuaded top sports psychologist Dr. Jim Afremow to distill the same mental training play-book he uses with Olympic champions and share it with you.

Packaged as the Champion’s Mind – Running’, Dr. Jim’s mental skills training is conveniently delivered as a mobile app.

It only takes 10 minutes a day to give you the mental skills to develop a Champion’s Mind and run: longer, faster, stronger, happier…

For full details on how the Champion’s Mind app will help you to crush your next race and a special Olympic Games offer click below.

Run smart

Kevin McGirl
Editor – Rundamentalists

PS “The mental component of sport has long been acknowledged, but few people knew enough about how to cultivate that skill to make a difference in performance. Dr. Jim Afremow takes mental conditioning and breaks it down in easy to understand ways that we can put into practice immediately.”

Tianna Bartoletta
4x Olympic and World Champion

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In her book ‘Get Running’; Mary outlines her belief that exercise should be fun, social, enjoyable and pain free. As a keen long-distance runner Mary herself has completed over 40 marathons and ultra-marathons up to 100k in distance.

Mary has kindly agreed to share an excerpt of an article she wrote that was first published in the Irish Times. As you will read below, Mary takes 10 mental strategies and explains how they can be applied to improve running performance: “Training our head as well as our legs”.

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“There are two ways to cope with pain. One is to put your head down and grunt through it. I don’t know the other way”

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Through his coaching practice and training camps, Dan has seen the immense need for aligning mental strategies with physical training as this critical aspect of success is severely lacking for most athletes. 

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Recalling the interview with the eminent sports psychologist, Dr. Jim Afremow, a winning mindset looks at a defeat as a learning opportunity. Dr. Jim advocates “Win or Learn” rather than the more typical Win-Lose mentality.

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Our guest expert for this episode is Sarah Williams: the host of the ‘Tough Girl’ podcast. Sarah interviews women demonstrating extreme levels of mental toughness and is sharing with Rundamentalists readers the key attributes needed to tackle life’s biggest challenges.

Sarah isn’t just about tough ‘talk’, she also puts her words into action and is currently training for the grueling Marathon des Sables (6 marathons in 6 days across the Sahara desert).

Highlighting the stories of three amazing women, Sarah will inspire you to harness your mental strength to become literally: unstoppable.

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