
The word marathon is meant to inspire terror. It’s a 26.2 mile run that takes even super athletes hours to complete. You can’t just sign up and do a marathon. You have to train rigorously to even have a hope of finishing. So why do some people think this is fun?
Yet a growing movement is occurring around the world that allows more and more people the opportunity to participate in marathons and other races by walking and not running. Walking is a much lower stress activity than running or even jogging.
Walking marathons allows for people of all ages, particularly older people, to enjoy the health benefits of marathon training.
And mile for mile, walking burns the same calories as running. So why don’t more people walk marathons?
First, not all marathons are open to walkers and some permit walkers but do not officially encourage them. Marathons that invite walkers are sometimes advertised as “walker friendly.” (Not all of them are!)
The biggest concern for marathon walkers who participate in official races is how long the track is open. A top runner completes a marathon in slightly over two hours. Most reasonably good athletes can do a marathon in four hours. Even slower runners can complete a marathon in five or six hours. (A six-hour marathon time means the runner ran 13 minute miles … not exactly a super-fast time!) However, walkers need six to eight hours to complete a marathon. Walking consistent 15-minute miles, it would take a little over six-and-a-half hours to walk a marathon. Factor in some bathroom breaks, inconsistent performance, or slower walking times and you end up with marathon walkers who turn in times of seven or eight hours.
Most marathons keep the track open six hours. After that, they begin to “sweep” or start at the beginning of the track and pick up stragglers, the injured, and the clean up the mess at water stations.
While walkers can dodge the sweepers for a while, eventually the walkers will be compelled to leave the track and the marathon unfinished.
The Los Angeles Marathon is known for being super-friendly to walkers because the track is open long enough for even slow walkers to complete the race before getting “swept up.”
In some ways, walkers face the same training challenges as runners. It takes consistent training over a period of many months to build up the stamina and technique required to go 26.2 miles at once.
Training programs for walkers tend to be sporadic and are not always offered in groups training to enter a marathon. When walking programs are available, there may be only a few participants and no real experts at walking technique.
Marathon walkers also face their own unique challenges. Although a very fast elite walker can actually out-pace a slow runner, most walkers are on the track and exercising longer than the runners. That means they need to allow extra time, extra hydration and even some food. It is not unusual for marathon walkers to bring along packets of bars, gels, or liquids to take in along the way. Bathroom breaks are also more necessary during a six or seven hour period of exercise than for those who can do the course in much shorter times.
The best training program for walkers involves consistent training over a period of about six months or more before the race.
Every week, the walker should go out four times in “maintenance walks” that start out at 30 minutes and gradually extend to full hours. Once a week, there should be a “long walk.” This can start out at 15 or 30 minutes; the walker should add 15 minutes more each week until the walk is about 1 hour and 45 minutes long.
During these initial weeks, walkers should learn good form and technique and only concentrate on time, not speed or distance. Obviously, it’s a good idea to gradually try to improve speed, but the main focus is doing the time.
After 1 hour and 45 minutes, it’s time to switch over to distance. At this point, long walks are measured in miles, starting with 6 miles and adding a mile a week until the walks get up to 10 or 11 miles.
At this point, marathon walkers should defer to training manuals for marathon runners. A very crucial skill that marathoners must learn is how to add six more miles to the distance. This means one week the long walk is 10 miles, the next week it’s 16. The following week it’s back to 10, then the next week to 11, and then it’s 17 miles.
This pattern is important, because it drills into the marathoner a very important confidence and ability: the ability to go six more miles, no matter what.
Once the long walk hits 20 miles, that’s an important marker in training. No long walk during training should ever exceed 20 miles. However, before taking on a race, a marathon walker should have done at least three long walks of 20 miles.
A few weeks before the actual race, training ramps down. Walks get shorter. While the walker maintains a consistent schedule of four hour-long, fairly fast maintenance walks a week, the “long walks” dwindle down to a mere 10 or 12 miles.
On race day, the newbie marathon walker faces his or her first 26.2 mile walk. But he or she has learned two vital skills: the ability to go 20 miles with confidence and the ability to be able to go six more miles no matter what. The last 0.2 miles that makes up the marathon is run on adrenalin and crowd noise. To be able to participate in a marathon, a training schedule should be set up to map onto race day. Once a marathon walker is fully in training, he or she can easily modify the schedule to accommodate other races during the year. In fact, many people get so addicted to marathon walking that they do four, five or more races a year.

marathon
Robert Cheruiyot wins Chicago Marathon 10/22/06 with a time of 2:07:35 but slips at finish line – OUCH! 10/24/06 Update: CHICAGO (AP) – Chicago Marathon winner Robert Cheruiyot left the hospital on Tuesday after spending two nights there with a mild concussion he sustained when he slipped at the finish line. The 28-year-old had sprinted away from fellow Kenyan Daniel Njenga during the final stretch of Sunday’s race when he slipped backward and banged his head, causing internal and external bleeding. His momentum carried him across the line, making him the winner in two hours seven minutes 35 seconds. Cheruiyot, this year’s Boston Marathon champion, was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital. He had no recollection of what had happened immediately afterward and asked his coach if he had won. But his agent, Federico Rosa, said his client’s memory is intact. There were decals with the marathon’s logo at the finish line, but Rosa did not blame them for the fall. He suggested after the race and during a news conference on Monday that wet conditions, shoes and even just a lack of balance caused Cheruiyot to slip.
Video Rating: 4 / 5
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get up nigger
And he’s SAFE!
i wonder what could happen if the slippery surface was a little larger than this, and he couldnt cross the finish line, i think he had to swear for the rest of his life..
he probably relaxed on that line.. and also due to fatigue didnt even expect to approach a slippery surface.. only a dumbass can create such a finish line :S
That really is unfortunate. I am a runner and suffered a tragedy and survived.
youtube.com/watch?v=bdeNrb-h-tI
fuck the organizers of this race for putting that slippery shit on the line
Good spot for a laminated advertisement….NOT!
gay advertisements
@Nataliasan I love the guy at 1:27 squeezing the sides runner’s head like vice when the runner hit the BACK of his head. “Are you okay”????? I’d say there’s a strong possibility the dude doesn’t speak English.
talk about celebrating early.
@katioplse Video just makes me angry at the people that constructed the finish line. I hope he won that race as clearly he did.
Not funny to me cuz he’s my friend! He actually had migraines after this fall for like a couple of months.
you sir just failed at winning…
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It’s horrible but really funny looking
He pulled a conan there on that fall.
whats up with the gloves? is it because of the weather? or do they have any other purpose
One word…………………..ouch
@iballzerson jew
@choforito4000 Asshole
nigger
That’s a shame. I know what tragedy in running is:(
utube search Runner Gets Hit By Car Head-On…Told She’d Never Run Again.
lol 1:55
Stupid Kenyans
Ouch. I took a back-flop like that once and got a concussion from it. It sucked.