justgiving

Posted on: Wednesday, January 26th, 2011



Running a Marathon Without Training?

Andrew Gertig shares his story of running a marathon without training!

A few years ago I ran the San Francisco marathon without training and finished it in 4 hours and 28 minutes. Most people don’t believe me when I tell them I did this, then when they do they then start thinking I’m an idiot. I did do it, and maybe. The part of the story that I don’t normally share is that my friend Tyson also ran the marathon that day and finished in around 5 and 1/2 hours. To me his run, though an hour longer, is probably more impressive of a feat.


Everything started on a Tuesday evening in Livermore, CA where Tyson and I were both working as interns at LLNL. We were shooting pool with 2 other interns and one of them mentioned that he was going to run the San Francisco marathon that coming Sunday. I am not sure if there is a possible logical chain of events between his comment and the point that Tyson and I were registering for the marathon and buying running shoes at the Expo the day before it, but it happened. What was logical was that Tyson (now a nuclear physicist) and I decided that we needed a plan for how to finish the marathon. This is where Tyson’s story gets more impressive. As we started hashing things out we started by discussing our current levels of physical fitness and how far we had ever run before. Tyson had always been more into playing music than sports, so when he told me that he didn’t think that he had ever run for more than a mile before it gave me only a moments pause. This is when I actually started to feel confident because I played intramural soccer in college and had once gone for a three mile run. After all we were two smart young guys, so who needs to have run longer than a mile before when you are about to run 26.2 miles. Not us.


So we talked with our marathoning buddy who had tricked us into this somehow and we came up with a plan. How to hack a marathon:


  1. Don’t plan on running the whole thing
  2. Take 4 Advil an hour before the race
  3. Take a walking break at every mile marker
  4. Eat half a banana whenever you see one
  5. Take two waters at ever water station
  6. Eat no more than 3 Gu energy packs because our stomachs didn’t like them
  7. Take bathroom breaks
  8. Walk every hill
  9. Meet interesting people and use conversation to kill the pain
  10. Put bandaids on your nipples to prevent bleeding


Because I felt as though I was in relatively good shape I decided that I would run the first 4 miles at a little slower than a 10 minute pace and then start my plan of walking for 2 mins or less at every mile marker. I mostly stuck to the plan and finished with a pace of 10:14/mile. Tyson also stuck to his regimen and we both got our medals.


That day I learned a valuable lesson, that just because something seems hard and you don’t feel prepared does not mean that you can’t do it.


Now go run a marathon.

If you’re lucky enough to have secured a spot at this year’s Virgin London Marathon, make the most of it and:

1) Create a fundraising page

2) Check out our Fundraising Tips page

3) Watch this blog space for more fundraising and training tips, stories and other gems from experienced runners, world record breakers and even stay-at-home-mums!

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Tags: , , , ,

 
  • Sally Chambers

    Congratulations Andrew but oh how this upsets me when I think of my months of training to get a time of 2 hours and 25 mins in my first half marathon. I ran the whole way, as I had the fear/psychological barrier that if I started walking then I wouldn’t have been able to switch back to running… Maybe next time I’d be better off following your plan ;)

  • Will S

    Your story, albeit a lovely one, and your timings and strategy do not add up. Having run the San Francisco marathon in 2007, I know it very well. I too was a young, fit and healthy intern working in SF.

  • Pingback: Running a marathon with no training. « Red Head On The Run

  • Lstar3672

    My son ran a 4:17 @ 14 with no training

  • Shannon

     I was on the site stumbleupon and came across this blog posting. I loved it! I wish I had seen it before I ran the boston marathon a month ago. I was too busy with work to train and ended up only running 7 times in the two months leading up to Boston. My friends thought I was crazy for doing it with no training but there was no way I was going to pass up the chance to run the greatest marathon! 

  • http://www.justgiving.com Tal Wolgroch

    Hi Shannon, that’s brilliant! How did it go in the end? If you fundraised for it via our sister company in the US, FirstGiving, I’m sure they’d love to hear your story too. Thanks for sharing!

    Tal
    Community Manager
    JustGiving

  • http://twitter.com/sdragoni SD

    I must admit that I am a runner and have run several marathons but I have also found myself signing up for marathons shortly before the event (once the day before). I have found that I do best when I have not trained too much, I don’t know if it is lack of pressure or that my body is not so tired.

    As one of my friends puts it better to be undertrained than overtrained.