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EDP Porto Marathon race-day plan

A race-day plan for EDP Porto Marathon: timing, warm-up, pacing guardrails, and a simple fueling schedule to practice in training.

Last updated/Mar 20, 2026, 11:57 PM
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The race-day principle: decisions should already be made

Race day is for execution, not improvisation. If something is new, it’s a risk.

3–4 hours before start

  • Eat a breakfast you’ve practiced.

  • Sip fluids normally; avoid “panic chugging.”

60–90 minutes before

  • Arrive early enough to remove stress.

  • Final bathroom + kit check.

10–20 minutes before

  • Short warm-up (jog + a few strides) if it helps you feel smooth.

  • Start line cue: “too easy is correct.”

During the race

  • Start fueling early and stick to a repeatable schedule.

  • If it’s hot or hilly, pace by effort and let splits drift.

Back to the athlete guide.

How to use this guide

Treat this page as a decision checklist:

  1. Confirm the race date and official logistics.
  2. Choose a realistic training plan length (16–24 weeks is common).
  3. Practice fueling and pacing in long runs.
  4. Keep race week simple: tested shoes, tested gels, conservative start.

Verification reminder

Race details change between editions (dates move, routes get rerouted, and registration rules update). Use this page as a starting point, then confirm time-sensitive details on the official site close to race day.

Training guardrails

  • Keep easy runs truly easy so workouts stay high quality.
  • Progress one variable at a time (volume first, then intensity).
  • Use cutback weeks every 3–4 weeks to absorb training.
  • If pain changes your gait, scale back and get assessed.

How to use this guide

Treat this page as a decision checklist:

  1. Confirm the race date and official logistics.
  2. Choose a realistic training plan length (16–24 weeks is common).
  3. Practice fueling and pacing in long runs.
  4. Keep race week simple: tested shoes, tested gels, conservative start.

Verification reminder

Race details change between editions (dates move, routes get rerouted, and registration rules update). Use this page as a starting point, then confirm time-sensitive details on the official site close to race day.

Put this into action

Open the plan and tool that match this guide

Checklist

Do this, not that

Race-day checklist

  • Eat a practiced breakfast (no experiments).
  • Arrive early enough to remove stress.
  • Final kit check: shoes, socks, anti-chafe, gels.
  • Warm up lightly; don’t burn matches.
  • Start conservatively (first 10K effort cue).
  • Fuel early and on a repeatable schedule.
  • Adjust pacing for heat/hills by effort.
  • Simplify decisions: one plan, one backup.

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