Our correction standard
Accuracy is part of training safety, so we treat corrections as a first‑class workflow. If a page contains an error (wrong number, misleading recommendation, broken calculator, outdated race detail, or missing attribution), we want to fix it quickly and transparently. We prioritize corrections that could affect health or safety (for example: fueling amounts, pacing rules presented as universal, or return‑to‑run guidance) and corrections to race logistics that could impact race‑week decisions. We may also adjust wording when a passage is technically true but easy to misread. When we update, we aim to keep the page more correct and more usable, not longer.
How to request a correction
Email [email protected] with: (1) the page URL, (2) the specific sentence/section that’s wrong, (3) what you believe the correct information is, and (4) a supporting source link if you have one (especially for race details). If you’re reporting a tool/calculator issue, include the inputs you used and what output you expected. For race pages, official organizer pages are the best source for verification. If your report involves safety, include context (event type, time goal, experience level) so we can evaluate whether the guidance should be reframed.
What happens after you report
We triage reports into: factual error, clarity issue, broken experience (bug), or “needs stronger sourcing.” If we confirm an error, we update the page and, when appropriate, improve the sources section so the fix is verifiable. For meaningful changes, we may add a short “Updated” note on the page to reduce confusion for readers who saw a previous version. If we can’t verify a claim, we will either remove it or label it as uncertain.
Related: Editorial policy · About