| name | race-strategy |
| description | Race day tactics and strategy for trail/ultra running. Covers pacing protocols, aid station efficiency, mental strategies for managing dark moments, gear setup, drop bag planning, and contingency protocols for common race-day issues. |
Race Strategy
When to use this skill
Use this skill when the request involves:
- Planning race-day pacing strategy for upcoming events
- Aid station tactics and efficiency protocols
- Mental strategies for managing ultra-distance challenges
- Gear setup and drop bag planning for races
- Contingency planning (blisters, GI issues, getting lost, DNF decisions)
- Pre-race logistics (race week protocol, course reconnaissance)
- Post-race debriefing and tactical analysis
Core principle: "Train hard, race smart"
Philosophy: Tactical errors cost more races than fitness limitations. A well-prepared athlete with poor tactics will underperform; an adequately prepared athlete with excellent tactics often exceeds expectations.
Evidence base: Ultrarunning Training Essentials (Koop, 2nd Ed.), Training for Uphill Athlete (House, Jornet, Johnston)
Pacing Protocols
Fundamental pacing strategies
Even pacing (recommended for most ultra runners):
- Maintain consistent effort (not speed!) throughout race
- Measured by HR or RPE, not pace/speed
- Best for: First-time distance attempts, conservative goal setting
- Evidence: Minimizes glycogen depletion, reduces risk of bonking
Positive split (start faster, slow down):
- Banking time early when fresh
- Risk: Depleting glycogen too early, "blowing up"
- Use cases: Very experienced, known course, aggressive time goals
- Warning: 80% of ultra runners who positive split regret it at mile 60+
Negative split (start slower, speed up):
- Conservative early, aggressive late
- Lower risk of bonking
- Best for: New to distance, challenging course, hot conditions
- Challenge: Requires discipline to hold back when feeling good
HR-based vs RPE-based pacing
Heart Rate (HR) based:
- Early race (first 25-30%): Stay below AeT (e.g., if AeT=160 bpm, cap at 155-158 bpm)
- Mid race (30-70%): Allow drift to AeT+5 bpm on climbs, return to AeT on flats/descents
- Late race (70%+): HR often decouples; switch to RPE
- Advantages: Objective, prevents over-exertion early
- Limitations: Heat/altitude/fatigue cause HR drift; less reliable late race
Rate of Perceived Exertion (RPE) based:
- Early race: RPE 3-4/10 ("could talk in full sentences easily")
- Mid race: RPE 4-6/10 ("conversational but requires focus")
- Late race: RPE 6-8/10 ("can speak 3-5 words at a time")
- Advantages: Works throughout race, accounts for fatigue/conditions
- Limitations: Requires experience to calibrate
Hybrid approach (recommended):
- Early race: Use HR to prevent overexertion
- Late race: Switch to RPE when HR decouples
- Crosscheck: If RPE feels much higher than HR suggests, slow down (fatigue/heat/altitude)
Terrain-based pacing adjustments
Uphills:
- Steep (>10% grade): Power hike if hiking pace = running pace
- Moderate (5-10% grade): Run if you can maintain conversational breathing
- Gentle (<5% grade): Run, but don't force pace
- Rule: If breathing becomes labored on uphill, slow down or hike
- Poles: Use on sustained climbs >5% grade to reduce quad load
Downhills:
- Steep (>10% grade): Control speed, use short steps, land midfoot
- Moderate (5-10% grade): Let gravity assist, but don't overstride
- Gentle (<5% grade): Run naturally, slight increase in pace acceptable
- Warning: Quad damage accumulates; downhill speed in first 30% of race = quad death in last 30%
- Eccentric loading: If quads burn on downhill, slow immediately (damage is progressive)
Flats:
- Opportunity to "bank time" without excessive cost
- Keep effort steady (RPE 4-6/10)
- Focus on efficiency: cadence 160-180 spm, relaxed shoulders
Distance-specific pacing
50K (3-6 hours):
- First 25K: Conservative (HR <AeT, RPE 3-4/10)
- Middle 15K: Steady (HR ~AeT, RPE 4-6/10)
- Final 10K: Push if feeling good (RPE 6-8/10)
- Aid station time: 1-2 min max per stop
100K (8-14 hours):
- First 40K: Very conservative (HR <AeT, RPE 3-4/10)
- Middle 40K: Steady (HR ~AeT, RPE 4-6/10), allow HR drift on climbs
- Final 20K: Survival mode (RPE varies, focus on forward progress)
- Aid station time: 2-5 min per stop, longer if needed for recovery
100 miles (20-30 hours):
- First 50 miles: Extremely conservative (HR well below AeT, RPE 2-4/10), "this feels too easy"
- Mile 50-80: Steady grind (HR often decoupled, RPE 5-7/10), manage fatigue
- Mile 80-100: Mental game (RPE 7-9/10), celebrate each mile
- Aid station time: 5-10 min acceptable if needed, efficiency still matters
- Night sections: Slow down 10-15% (reduced visibility, fatigue)
Aid Station Strategy
Time management protocol
Efficiency rule: Every minute at aid station = ~3 minutes of moving time to make up
- Example: 5-min stop vs 2-min stop = 9 minutes lost on course
Target times by distance:
- 50K: 1-2 min per stop (quick fuel, water, go)
- 100K: 2-5 min per stop (fuel, check feet if needed, recover slightly)
- 100 miles: 3-10 min per stop (fuel, recover, address issues), longer at crew-accessible points
In/out protocol:
- Approach (100m before): Decide what you need (water? food? gear change?)
- Arrival: State needs clearly to volunteers ("Fill both bottles, 3 gels, pretzels")
- Execute: While bottles fill, grab food, eat immediately
- Depart: Check you have everything, thank volunteers, GO
What to do at each aid station
Standard stops (no crew):
- Refill hydration (both bottles/bladder)
- Grab quick CHO (gels, bars, real food if tolerated)
- Eat/drink WHILE at station (don't leave with food in hand to "eat later")
- Quick body scan: feet ok? Chafing? Blisters forming?
Crew-accessible stops:
- All of above PLUS:
- Change socks if wet/hot spots detected
- Apply lube to chafing areas
- Change layers if weather changed
- Restock personal nutrition from drop bag
- Crew protocol: Crew should have gear ready, minimize talking, 5-min max
Major stops (e.g., halfway, mile 60):
- More time acceptable (5-10 min)
- Sit if needed (but set timer!)
- Address issues: blisters, tape hot spots, change clothes
- Eat real food if appetite allows (soup, potatoes, broth)
- Mental reset: "I'm starting a new race from here"
Drop bag planning
What to include in drop bags:
- Nutrition: Extra gels/bars you like (aid station may run out)
- Hydration: Electrolyte tablets, spare bottle if worried about loss
- Clothing: Extra layers (jacket, gloves, hat) + rain gear
- Foot care: Spare socks, blister kit (tape, needle, lube)
- Lighting: Spare batteries/headlamp, vest light
- Emergency: Ibuprofen (use sparingly!), duct tape, safety pins
- Mental: Motivational note to yourself, photo of family/goal
Drop bag locations (prioritize):
- Halfway point (critical for gear swap, nutrition restock)
- Before night section (lighting check, warm clothes)
- Before final push (mental reset items, fresh socks)
Label clearly: "Your Name - Drop Bag Mile X - [Race Name] 2026"
Mental Strategies
Race segmentation
Break race into manageable chunks:
- 50K: Think in 10K segments (5 segments)
- 100K: Think in 20K segments (5 segments) or aid-station-to-aid-station
- 100 miles: Think in 25-mile segments (quarters) or "sunrise to sunset"
Psychological trick: "I'm just running to the next aid station" (not "I have 60 miles to go")
Managing dark moments
Expect dark moments at predictable times:
- Mile 30-40 (50K): Post-glycogen-depletion dip, often around 4-5h mark
- Mile 50-65 (100K/100mi): Physical fatigue accumulating, night approaching
- Mile 80-90 (100mi): Sleep deprivation, accumulated damage, "why am I doing this?"
Dark moment protocol:
- Acknowledge: "This is normal, expected, temporary"
- Physical check: Eat, drink, check pace (am I going too hard?)
- Mental reset: Break race into smaller segment ("just get to next aid station")
- Positive self-talk: "I've trained for this, I can handle this"
- Time limit: Give it 20-30 minutes; if still dark, reassess
When dark moment lifts (it usually does): Celebrate mentally, but don't surge pace
Positive self-talk protocols
Mantras to use:
- "Relentless forward progress" (common ultra mantra)
- "One step at a time" (when feeling overwhelmed)
- "I've done harder things" (reference training or life challenges)
- "This is temporary" (pain is transient)
- Custom mantra (choose in training, use in race)
Avoid negative self-talk:
- ❌ "I'm not good enough" → ✅ "I'm doing my best"
- ❌ "I can't do this" → ✅ "I'm still moving forward"
- ❌ "This is too hard" → ✅ "This is supposed to be hard"
DNF (Did Not Finish) decision framework
When to DNF (prioritize safety):
- Medical emergency: Severe dehydration, hyponatremia, heat stroke, injury requiring medical attention
- Time cutoffs: If mathematically impossible to finish within cutoff, save yourself for another day
- Severe injury: Continuing would cause long-term damage (stress fracture, severe sprain)
When NOT to DNF (push through):
- General discomfort (this is ultra running!)
- Dark moment (these pass)
- Blisters (manageable with tape)
- Fatigue (if you can still move forward, keep going)
- "I'm slower than I wanted" (adjust goals, finish the race)
Decision protocol:
- Sit at aid station, eat/drink, address immediate issue
- Give yourself 10-20 minutes to reassess
- Ask: "Is this dangerous to my long-term health?" If yes → DNF. If no → continue.
- If DNF: Accept decision, don't dwell, learn for next time
Gear Setup
Mandatory gear (check race requirements)
Typical mandatory items:
- Hydration (minimum capacity specified, e.g., 1L)
- Nutrition (minimum calories, e.g., 500 cal)
- Lighting (headlamp + backup, specific lumens)
- Emergency (whistle, space blanket, first aid)
- Navigation (map, GPS, phone)
- Clothing (jacket, extra layer)
Verify before race: Read race rules, check gear list multiple times
Optional gear (personal preference)
Poles (trekking poles):
- Use if: Course has >1500m vertical per 50K, steep sustained climbs
- Don't use if: Mostly runnable, flats, or you haven't trained with them
- Technique: Use on uphills (push off to assist legs), collapse/carry on flats/downhills
Hydration system:
- Vest with soft flasks: Most popular, easy access, can see fluid level
- Hydration bladder: Hands-free, but harder to monitor intake, cleaning tedious
- Handheld bottles: Simple, but annoying on technical terrain
- Recommendation: Train with what you'll race with (minimum 3 long runs with gear)
Clothing layers (temperature-dependent):
- Hot (>25°C): Lightweight shorts, singlet/shirt, hat with brim, sunglasses
- Moderate (15-25°C): Shorts, short-sleeve shirt, hat, arm sleeves (optional)
- Cold (<15°C): Tights/pants, long-sleeve shirt, gloves, hat/buff
- Rain: Lightweight waterproof jacket (pack even if forecast is clear)
Lighting:
- Headlamp: Minimum 200 lumens (300-500 better), spare batteries
- Vest light: Front-mounted (chest) + rear light for visibility
- Test before race: Run in dark with exact setup to verify comfort/brightness
Foot care
Sock strategy:
- Single sock: Most common, less friction if fit is good
- Double socks: Thin liner + thicker outer (reduces blister risk for some)
- Change schedule: Every 25-50K or when wet (sweat/stream crossings)
Blister prevention:
- Pre-tape hot spots (heels, toes) with Leukotape before race
- Lube (Body Glide, Vaseline) on common friction areas
- If hot spot develops: Stop immediately, tape BEFORE blister forms
Shoe choice:
- Use shoes with 50-100km of training miles (broken in but not worn out)
- Match shoe to terrain: more cushion for rocky, more grip for muddy
- Don't try new shoes on race day!
Contingency Planning
Common issues & protocols
Blisters:
- Prevention: Pre-tape, change socks when wet, good-fitting shoes
- If blister forms: Stop at aid station, pop with sterile needle, drain, tape over
- Keep moving: Taped blister is painful but manageable
GI issues (nausea, cramping, diarrhea):
- Slow down: Reduce intensity, walk if needed
- Stop solid food: Switch to liquid nutrition (sports drink, cola)
- Ginger/antacid: Ginger chews or Tums can help nausea
- If persistent: Walk, sip water, give gut rest (10-20 min)
- Prevention: Gut training (see race-nutrition skill)
Chafing:
- Prevention: Lube before race, reapply at crew stops
- If occurs: Apply more lube immediately, adjust clothing/vest straps
- Emergency: Band-aids or tape over raw areas
Getting lost/off course:
- Stop immediately when unsure: Don't continue hoping you'll find the way
- Backtrack: Return to last known marker/flag
- Check GPS/map: Verify position before continuing
- Ask other runners: If you see them, follow or confirm direction
- Alert race: Report missing markers if found
Cramping:
- Cause: Usually electrolyte imbalance or over-exertion
- Protocol: Slow down, stretch gently, consume salt/electrolytes
- Prevention: Adequate sodium intake (300-600 mg/h), don't surge pace
Bonking (severe energy depletion):
- Recognize early: Sudden fatigue, dizziness, confusion, irrational thoughts
- Protocol: Stop, sit, consume fast-acting CHO (cola, gels), wait 10-15 min
- Recovery: Will take 20-30 min to feel better, then very conservative pace
- Prevention: Consistent fueling from start (don't wait until hungry)
When to push through vs when to stop
Push through (with caution):
- General fatigue (normal for ultra)
- Blisters (if taped and manageable)
- Minor aches (DOMS, muscle soreness)
- Dark moments (psychological)
- "This is harder than I expected" (welcome to ultra running)
Stop immediately:
- Chest pain, difficulty breathing (cardiac concern)
- Severe dehydration (no urination for 6+ hours, dark urine, confusion)
- Hyponatremia symptoms (nausea, headache, swelling, confusion after drinking a lot)
- Acute injury (twisted ankle, fall with sharp pain)
- Heat stroke (no sweating, confusion, core temp >40°C)
Gray area (assess carefully):
- Persistent nausea >2 hours despite slowing + changing nutrition
- Pain that changes gait significantly (could worsen injury)
- Sleep deprivation hallucinations (common in 100-milers, but if severe/dangerous, consider DNF)
Pre-Race Logistics
Race week protocol
7 days before race:
- Final taper week (see periodization-coach skill)
- Finalize gear list, test all equipment
- Review course maps, elevation profiles
- Plan drop bags (if applicable)
3-4 days before:
- Begin carb-loading (8-12 g/kg/day, see race-nutrition skill)
- Reduce fiber (avoid GI issues)
- Stay hydrated
- Avoid new foods
1 day before:
- Race check-in, bib pickup
- Course reconnaissance (if feasible): drive/view key sections
- Lay out all gear, check mandatory items
- Eat familiar high-CHO dinner (not excessive)
- Early bed (sleep 2 nights before matters more than night before)
Race morning:
- Pre-race meal 3-4h before start (see race-nutrition skill)
- Arrive at start 60-90 min early (parking, gear check, bathroom, warm-up)
- Body marking (bib, timing chip)
- Final gear check
- Warm-up: 10-15 min easy jog + dynamic stretches
Course reconnaissance
If possible (day before):
- Drive key sections (aid station locations, major climbs/descents)
- Note landmarks (helps with mental checkpoints during race)
- Check footing (rocky? muddy? technical?)
Use elevation profile:
- Identify major climbs (where you'll slow/hike)
- Note steep descents (where quads will take beating)
- Plan mental segments around profile
Crew & pacer coordination
Crew protocol (if you have crew):
- Designate crew chief (one person in charge, not committee)
- Crew meets you at designated aid stations with gear ready
- Pre-planned: What you'll need at each stop (written list)
- Crew keeps you moving: "5-minute timer" approach
- Crew provides positivity: "You look great!" (even if you don't)
Pacer protocol (if allowed):
- Pacer joins at designated mile (often mile 50-60 for 100-milers)
- Pacer's job: Keep you moving, navigate, positive energy, make decisions if you're bonking
- Brief pacer before race: Your pacing plan, nutrition strategy, what helps you mentally
- Pacer runs slightly ahead/beside (not behind) to lead
If no crew/pacer:
- Self-sufficient strategy: More gear in drop bags
- Make friends on course: Other runners can help with morale
- Aid station volunteers: Ask for help when needed (they want you to succeed)
Integration with Other Skills
Cross-references
For race-day nutrition strategy:
- See
race-nutrition skill for detailed fueling protocols, gut training, hydration targets
For pre-race training (final weeks):
- See
periodization-coach skill for taper protocols, final hard workouts, B2B long runs
For recovery after race:
- See
athlete-monitoring skill for post-race recovery protocols, red flags to watch for
For injury concerns during race:
- See
kinesiology-foundations skill for injury assessment, when to stop vs push through
Methodological Sources
Ultrarunning Training Essentials (Jason Koop, 2nd Ed.)
- Pacing strategies: CH.7 (Race Execution)
- Aid station efficiency: CH.7 (Race Execution)
- Mental strategies: CH.9 (Mental Aspects)
- Gear setup: CH.8 (Equipment)
- Reference:
knowledge/Ultrarunning Training Essentials.txt
Training for the Uphill Athlete (House, Jornet, Johnston)
- Mountain-specific pacing: Uphill/downhill tactics
- Mental preparation: CH.12 (Mental Training)
- Reference:
knowledge/Training for the Uphill Athlete.txt
Practical ultra racing experience (synthesis)
- DNF decision framework: Synthesis from race reports, coaching experience
- Contingency protocols: Common issues and proven solutions
Key Takeaways
- Pace conservatively early: 90% of ultra runners start too fast; don't be one of them
- Efficiency matters: Every minute at aid station = 3+ minutes on course
- Dark moments pass: Expected at mile 30-40, 50-65, 80-90; protocol is: eat, slow down, wait
- Gear must be tested: Never try new shoes, nutrition, or equipment on race day
- Mental game is real: Race segmentation and positive self-talk prevent DNFs
- Safety first: DNF if dangerous to long-term health; push through discomfort
- Celebrate the journey: Every finish is a victory, regardless of time
Remember: "Train hard, race smart" - Tactics can make or break your race more than fitness.