Why Building Mental Reset Skills Win

Why Building Mental Reset Skills Win

You do not need to “figure it out” to recover from a mental wall. When you hit resistance, the fastest way forward is not more analysis, but a practiced reset that stops the spiral before it locks your brain in place. This is the real reason recovery feels slow for so many people, and it … Read more

Heart Rate Training Without Number Obsession

Heart Rate Training Without Number Obsession

Heart rate is a guide, not a boss. If you track every beat and wait for “the right” number before you move, you will spend more energy managing metrics than training your body. The goal is simple: use heart rate training to inform decisions while staying in control of effort, rhythm, and recovery. Here is … Read more

Heat Running Needs Cooling Habits, Not Luck

Heat Running Needs Cooling Habits, Not Luck

Running in the heat isn’t a test of toughness, it’s a test of preparation. If you treat hot conditions like normal training, you will pay for it with slower times, drained legs, and a higher risk of heat illness. My view is simple: when the thermometer rises, your plan should change first, not your attitude. … Read more

London Marathon Training After Injury, Go Safer

London Marathon Training After Injury, Go Safer

Trying to “push through” a past injury is not courage, it is guesswork. If you have a London Marathon training history that includes injury, your goal should not be maximum mileage at all costs, but a progression that protects the same tissues from being re-irritated. That means treating symptoms as information early, not as an … Read more

Dehydration-Proof Race Plan for Summer London

Dehydration-Proof Race Plan for Summer London

Heat does not reward guesswork. For summer races in London, your finish depends less on motivation and more on whether you built a hydration plan that protects you from both dehydration and electrolyte trouble. Most runners drink “when they remember,” and that is exactly how you end up feeling heavy, crampy, or oddly flat late … Read more

Overload and Recovery Beat Training Stagnation

Overload and Recovery Beat Training Stagnation

Stagnation is not a mystery; it is usually the result of sloppy overload and lazy recovery. That is why the role of overload and recovery: avoiding stagnation in training should be treated as the core of programming, not a footnote you remember only when progress stalls. The real trick is simple: you apply enough load … Read more

Core Strength for Better Running in London

Core Strength for Better Running in London

Strengthening your core for better running mechanics in London is not a fitness trend, it is the simplest upgrade that can change how efficiently you move. Most runners blame fatigue, traffic, or “bad legs,” but the real limiter is often stability, not stamina. When your pelvis and torso can wobble, your stride leaks energy long … Read more

Finding Your Target Pace Band in London

Finding Your Target Pace Band in London

London punishes rigid pacing. Most runners miss their goal because they treat pace like a single number, then wonder why the course, weather, and crowds derail the plan. Instead, you should build a target pace band that admits reality, so you stay in control even when conditions change minute to minute. Finding your target pace … Read more

Practice Race-Day Fueling on Long Runs

Practice Race-Day Fueling on Long Runs

Your gut will not magically cooperate on race day, and “I’ll try it during the race” is a recipe for avoidable GI chaos. If you want better long-run results and smoother racing, you have to treat fueling like training, not like an emergency plan. That means running your long runs with the same timing, carbs, … Read more

A Calf and Achilles Post-Run Stretch Plan

A Calf and Achilles Post-Run Stretch Plan

Most runners don’t need more stretching, they need smarter timing. After you finish a run, your calves and Achilles get stiff because your ankle has been repeatedly loaded, and your tissues respond best to controlled mobility, not aggressive forcing. That is why post-run mobility for calves and achilles: a targeted routine works when it stays … Read more