Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Run Coaches Share 5 Annoying Training Mistakes—And How to Fix Them

Run Coaches Share 5 Annoying Training Mistakes—And How to Fix Them

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Common Running Mistakes That Can Hold You Back

No runner is perfect, and if you think you are, just ask a coach. Whether you’re a beginner training for your first 5K or a veteran logging marathon miles, chances are you’ve picked up a few habits that hold you back from better running. For example, maybe you tackle every run like it’s race day, you rarely look up from your watch, or you signed up for a marathon just because Harry Styles did. Don’t worry: You’re not alone. In fact, these and other training missteps are so common they’ve made it onto coaches’ lists of pet peeves. The good news is that they’re fixable, and once you address them, you’ll run stronger, stay healthier, and actually have more fun on your runs.

That’s why we asked eight run coaches about the bad habits that bug them most. Here’s what they said, why it just might derail your training, and how to break the pattern.

1. Running Every Run Too Hard

One of the most essential skills in running is learning how to control your pace—yet it’s also one of the most common mistakes run coaches see. Many athletes, especially beginners, default to running everything at the same medium-hard effort, says Alysha Flynn, founder and coach of What Runs You. “It feels productive in the moment, but it actually sabotages both fitness and recovery,” she says.

True easy runs should feel suspiciously effortless. “Easy days should feel so relaxed you almost question whether you’re doing enough,” Flynn explains. If you can’t comfortably chat with a friend or wouldn’t feel up for repeating the same run tomorrow, you’re probably going too fast.

The same pitfall can arise in marathon training (not just in those new to running), where runners often try to complete nearly every workout at or near race pace, explains Janet Hamilton, C.S.C.S., founder of Georgia-based Running Strong. “Doing all your workouts at high intensity is an invitation to injury,” she warns.

The solution is understanding the purpose of each run in the context of a training plan, she says. Easy miles build aerobic capacity, teaching your body to use oxygen more efficiently so you can run longer. Threshold runs improve your speed endurance, and faster intervals build anaerobic fitness, making you more explosive. You can’t train everything at the same time, so it’s important to focus on doing each workout exactly as it’s designed. “Once athletes understand the purpose of each workout, they’re more willing to slow down when it’s time to go easy,” Hamilton says.

Marathoners suffer the most by foregoing easy days, says Kai Ng, New York City-based USATF- and RRCA-certified run coach. Ng often sees runners blasting through zone 2 efforts too fast, only to end up huffing, puffing, and walking with sore joints. “They’re training the wrong system,” he says. “Going out too hard stresses your anaerobic system instead of strengthening your aerobic system—the one you actually need for 26.2 miles.” He compares it to driving: your watch or heart-rate monitor is just feedback, like the speedometer. But the real skill is learning how to use the gas and brake pedals effectively.

Coach-approved tip: Pace control is a developed skill, but mastering it almost always begins with slowing down on easy days. That way you arrive at your speed sessions fresher, sharper, and ready to actually hit faster paces.

2. Ignoring Your Current Fitness

“How am I supposed to be ready to run my goal pace on race day if I’m not training at that pace now?” It’s an all-too-familiar query for Jeff Gaudette, owner and head coach at RunnersConnect. At first, this question may seem like it should receive answers in the pacing section above. However, the solution is a bit different.

Gaudette explains that runners who ask this question often ignore their current fitness level when starting to train for a marathon, jumping into workouts right away based on their goal pace rather than their present ability. The disconnect often comes from template training plans. Gaudette says many runners choose plans based on a goal finish time, but instead of progressing up to those paces, they begin right at them when they’re not ready. “That’s just not how training works,” he says. This practice can lead to overtraining, burnout, and injury.

For example, if a threshold run is designed to slightly dip into your anaerobic system, running it too fast just misses that fine line entirely and vaults you into a zone that throws off your workout and makes recovery more difficult. Do this regularly, and you end up in that overtraining zone where injuries and progress regression can pop up.

The solution, according to Gaudette, is steady progression, starting from where you are now.

Coach-approved tip: Use your last race as a benchmark to find your current training paces. If you haven’t raced, the easiest way to measure your current fitness is with a mile time trial. From there, you can use your paces for training and set a more personalized goal finish time. Once you’re comfortably hitting your training paces and recovering well from workouts, speed up! “The goal is that by race day, you’ve advanced your fitness enough that your physiological reality is now your goal race pace,” Gaudette says.

3. Over-Relying on Data

Running watches and apps are powerful tools—but they also turn into shackles. Obsessing over heart rate, pace, or mileage totals can paralyze athletes to the point where they lose touch with how they feel, says Andrew Evans, RRCA- and 80/20 Endurance-certified run coach. “Sometimes the best thing you can do is leave the numbers behind for a few runs and trust your body,” he says.

Running by effort helps athletes reconnect with their natural rhythm, and it can be eye-opening to realize that your body—not your watch—ultimately determines how much you can handle on any given day.

“I’ve been at the track with runners doing 400-meter repeats, and they’ll stop at 350 meters because their watch buzzed,” says Alex Morrow, RRCA- and USATF-certified run coach and founder of Resolute Running. It seems extreme, but it’s the perfect example of the disproportionate trust runners place in their gadgets and data over… basically everything else. In those moments, the watch isn’t helping—it’s taking control of your running.

Morrow also notes that watches can convince runners that skipping or shortening key workouts is fine as long as the weekly mileage number looks right, when in reality the structure and purpose of the plan matter more than the numbers on the screen.

Coach-approved tip: Evans encourages his athletes to use cues like breathing rhythm, perceived effort, or the “talk test” to judge intensity. Morrow agrees, saying “the more you trust yourself rather than the beeps on your wrist, the stronger and more adaptable you’ll be on race day.”

Next time you head out for an easy run, leave your watch at home. Take in your surroundings and pay attention to how you feel while you run.

4. Letting Peer Pressure Dictate Your Races

Not every marathon is meant for you. Too many athletes sign up for big-name races just because their friends or Instagram feeds make them feel like they should, notes Laura Norris, RRCA-certified run coach and owner and coach at Laura Norris Running.

While sure, it could be a motivating tactic if you enjoy running with your friends, Norris emphasizes the commitment level it takes to successfully train for, and complete, a full marathon. “If you don’t actually want to run 26.2 miles, it’s going to be a miserable experience,” she says.

She advises runners to reflect honestly on whether the prospect of training for a big race excites you or feels like a burden. And remember, registering doesn’t obligate you to follow through. Dropping a race because it no longer fits your life or goals isn’t failure, it’s wisdom.

Coach-approved tip: Choosing races because you want to run them, not because you feel obligated to or because everyone else is, makes your experience more rewarding.

5. Disrespecting Your Training Plan

Training plans aren’t just a list of runs, they’re carefully-designed roadmaps that balance hard efforts with recovery, build fitness gradually, and lead to peak fitness at the right time. But one of the biggest mistakes coaches see is athletes treating those schedules as optional guidelines.

Runners often fall off track when life gets busy, then try to cram in workouts as race day looms, says Vanessa C. Peralta-Mitchell, RRCA-certified run coach, owner of VCPM, Inc., and creator of Game Changers. That last-minute surge not only undermines fitness but also spikes injury risk.

To combat this, Peralta-Mitchell has athletes go through a “control and distraction” exercise, identifying what they can plan for (like laying out clothes, meal prepping, or adjusting schedules) and what they can’t (like weather or work emergencies). She encourages her athletes to build their running routines around the controllable factors in life, making training more consistent and sustainable.

She says that if you don’t do this, and allow those uncontrollable distractions to consume you and derail your training, “you will grow frustrated and waste mental and emotional energy.”

Morrow adds it’s easy for him to predict a rough race when his runners don’t follow their training plans. “They deviate from the plan, skip long runs, cram workouts, then wonder why race day didn’t go well,” he says.

Missing a workout or two isn’t the end of the world, but repeatedly blowing off important sessions can derail your training. Instead of improvising when you miss a workout, trust the structure of the plan and move forward with your next workout. Trying to compensate for a missed effort by squeezing too much into too little time leads straight to overtraining, injury, or burnout, which coaches can see coming a mile away.

If you train with a run coach, communication also plays a role. Morrow says he’s encountered many runners who hesitate to tell him when they’ve missed runs or want to shift workouts around, thinking it’s a bother. He implores athletes who do use coaches to use the resources available to them. “You’re paying me; this is my job,” he says. It goes beyond the obligation though; he says that athletes who talk to their coaches the most are more often the ones who perform the best.

Morrow says being curious, asking questions, and letting your coach help you run your best will give you the best results come race day. That’s what they’re there for!

Coach-approved tip: Consistency is the most important factor of training. Respecting the training schedule doesn’t mean never missing a run, but it does mean trusting the progression of the plan and safely adjusting (and communicating with your coach) when life gets in the way.

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Thursday, August 21, 2025

Jim Walmsley's Running Journey Begins After Military Discharge

Jim Walmsley's Running Journey Begins After Military Discharge

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A Journey of Resilience and Running

Jim Walmsley is a man who thrives on movement. He admits he hates sitting still and finds downtime challenging. This restlessness has shaped his career as an endurance athlete, where he runs up to 140 miles a week—mostly on trails and hills. For Walmsley, running isn’t just a sport; it’s a way to channel his energy and find purpose.

Currently, he’s recovering from a lingering knee injury that had him worried about his upcoming races. However, the setback is now behind him, and he’s gradually increasing his training mileage in preparation for the World Mountain and Trail Running Championships in Spain and the Pyrenees in late September. This return to training has not only improved his physical fitness but also boosted his mood.

“I get to do longer runs that take me to fun places,” says Walmsley. “I’m back to a happy part of my relationship with running and being able to do enough that’s quite satisfying.”

For Walmsley, ultrarunning has always been more than a career or a hobby. It has been a refuge during some of the darkest times in his life. After graduating from the Air Force Academy, he was stationed at Malmstrom Air Force base in Great Falls, Montana, working 24-hour shifts as a nuclear missileer. The job was isolating and didn’t allow much time for running, which he had previously done in high school track and cross-country.

Despite the challenges, Walmsley found solace in running whenever he could. However, his time in the military was short-lived due to a proficiency test cheating scandal and an earlier DUI charge, which led to his discharge. Following this, his mental health declined, and he struggled with depression and suicidal thoughts.

“It was a tough time,” he recalls. “I haven’t looked back on it too much. Sometimes it’s still a triggering time, and I like being more in the present.”

After seeking professional help and taking a job at a bike shop in Flagstaff, Arizona, Walmsley rediscovered his passion for running. Creating a routine around his training gave him stability and a sense of purpose. He began to see progress and found joy in the process.

“Running became a bright point in my life,” he explains. “It made me happy, and I liked talking about it. The positive feedback from running helped me come out of a difficult period.”

Ultrarunning, defined as any distance longer than a marathon, is often seen as a different pursuit altogether. Races are held in harsh conditions and can last many hours or even days, pushing participants to their physical and mental limits. For Walmsley, the sport has become a way to challenge himself and embrace the beauty and brutality of long-distance running.

His background in track, road, and cross-country running is unique within the ultrarunning community. In 2020, he competed in the US Olympic marathon trials, placing 22nd. However, it’s over the trails and longer distances that Walmsley has truly excelled. He once held the world’s best 50-mile time and is a four-time champion at Western States, an iconic 100-mile ultramarathon.

Walmsley’s journey hasn’t been without setbacks. His debut at Western States in 2016 saw him take a wrong turn and finish 20th. But since then, he has grown into a seasoned trail runner, becoming the first and only American man to win the Ultra-Trail du Mont-Blanc (UTMB), one of the most prestigious and challenging races in the world.

“Getting brought up in American running culture has set me up to have a bunch of fallacies and fail in a lot of different ways in ultrarunning,” Walmsley says. “I’ve learned that walking up steep inclines is often faster and more efficient than running. I’ve also learned the importance of fueling properly and staying patient, even when my instinct is to push harder.”

For Walmsley, ultrarunning is a deeply personal experience. He values the moments of doubt and questioning that every runner faces, as they often lead to motivation and perseverance.

“I think 24 hours is a really long, beautiful length of a race because you’re racing one day, one rotation of the Earth,” he explains. “It brings you to the present, focusing on going forward. That simplicity is a special feeling we can have as humans.”

Walmsley will compete in the OCC at UTMB week on August 27, one of several races staged alongside the full-distance event. However, a recent knee injury has forced him to skip the main event at his doorstep. Now a resident of Chamonix, he’s frustrated but focused on future-proofing his knee from further injury.

“I would rather find myself healthy and competing for UTMB again,” he says. “But this year, I’m more afraid of regressing, and I hope to move past this injury.”

Patience has been a key lesson in his ultrarunning career, and it’s now essential for preserving his future health. Despite the challenges, Walmsley has no plans to stop running. He hopes to remain a lifelong runner, finding mental and physical benefits in the act of moving forward.

“I think I’ve learned that about myself—that it helps me a lot mentally to keep moving.”

Friday, July 25, 2025

Survivor Rides Pan-Mass Challenge After 9/11, Two Cancer Battles

Survivor Rides Pan-Mass Challenge After 9/11, Two Cancer Battles

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A Journey of Survival and Resilience

Kathy Ball-Toncic's story is one of survival, resilience, and the enduring strength of the human spirit. Almost 22 years after she ran barefoot from the North Tower on September 11, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. While her medical team at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute cannot definitively link her illness to the toxic dust she inhaled during the attacks, she is part of the WTC Health Program. To date, more than 44,000 individuals exposed to the World Trade Center site have been diagnosed with cancer.

The Morning of September 11

In 2001, Kathy was commuting between Boston and New York, working on Wall Street. On the morning of September 11, she had helped organize a conference at Windows On The World and was in a meeting in the lobby when the first plane hit the tower. At first, no one knew what had happened. She recalls a roar that sounded much like a subway train and flickering lights. She and her colleagues were standing up, pushing papers into their bags, when she heard a BOOM!

The explosion caused glass to shatter in businesses along the first-floor concourse. Kathy and her colleagues were "dressed up" for their meeting. In the moments after the explosion, one of them didn't feel that Kathy was moving quickly enough—probably because she was in shock. He urged her to take off her heels and run from the building. With bare feet, over broken glass, she did.

Blocks later, they stopped. "We stopped and turned around just in time for the second plane to hit," Kathy said. "My memory of that morning is a little bit like a film that's missing a few frames. But I vividly remember when we turned around and the building in flames... I pointed to it and said, 'We were in there.'"

By the time the group arrived at their office, Kathy's feet were bleeding, and she was covered in a thin layer of dust. She remembers feeling fortunate to have escaped and that night, to have been able to return home to Boston.

Healing Through Running

Processing the trauma of the attacks took a lot of intentional, emotional work. There was also a physical component to Kathy's emotional healing. After 9/11, Kathy, who had been a runner for years, began running marathons for charity. "It really felt like a wonderful way to be able to give back, to do something meaningful," Kathy said.

The 2002 Boston Marathon was her first. Running became a way to celebrate her health, nourish friendships, process difficult emotions, and raise money for organizations she believed in. In 2014, the year after the Boston Marathon bombings, she ran for Dana-Farber.

Facing Cancer Head-On

Her breast cancer diagnosis in 2023 was shocking enough. Kathy was treated at Dana-Farber for a full year. The following February, right around her birthday, she celebrated being cancer free. In a photograph with her son Henrik and daughter Maja, she is beaming as she holds a cupcake. That sense of elation, though, was short-lived. Two weeks later, she was diagnosed with colorectal cancer. (Breast cancer and colorectal cancer are two of the almost-70 cancers that have been traced to 9/11 exposure.) She had surgery and chemotherapy.

As someone for whom exercise and physical activity are so important, Kathy recalls her exhaustion at the end of 2024. "The chemo took everything out of me ... I remember lying on the couch thinking, I'm a business owner who's not working. I'm a chef who can't eat. And I'm an athlete who can't make it up a flight of stairs. Who am I?" she asked.

She answered that question by focusing, minute-by-minute, on healing and small victories. Knowing when to give herself grace. Knowing when to ask for help. "I'm someone who's fighting and I'm someone who is visualizing health and wellness," she said.

Riding Toward Recovery

During radiation, she visualized that the treatments were working. In early 2025, still healing from those treatments, Kathy knew that running a marathon was out of the question. But desiring a goal, she asked her doctor (Dr. Brandon Huffman) and physical therapist whether she could ride the Pan-Mass Challenge, an event to which she had donated for years. "They both emphatically said yes and were super supportive!" she said.

Kathy, who works as an executive leadership coach and facilitator, is riding the two-day PMC route from Wellesley to Provincetown. She hopes, with some nervousness, that she will be able to ride the entire route. Those who know her have little doubt. Henrik is a registered volunteer in Bourne and Provincetown. Asked about his mother's decision to take on this new challenge on her bike, he says what she brings to the ride makes him proud. "Grit and determination and perseverance and love and honor and all these wonderful characteristics that make her who she is," Henrik said.

A New Chapter

While she does not miss cancer treatment, she does miss her team at Dana-Farber. "They are so extraordinary," Kathy said. "I think it's a part of cancer. People don't talk about a lot, that you finish your treatment.... And there's a bit of 'now what?' And you are not regularly seeing your care team." She says she will think about them while she is riding.

Kathy is again cancer free. She has regular check-ups, and her team promises to watch her "like a hawk." The colorectal cancer she survived has a high recurrence rate. But she says smiling, "it doesn't know who it's messing with."

PMC Living Proof Rider

A few weeks before the PMC, Kathy enjoyed an experience that offered a new feeling of community. Smiling and flexing a well-toned bicep in a PMC t-shirt at Fenway Park, she was among the Living Proof riders (cancer survivors) who rode the warning track and paused for the national anthem and a standing ovation.

It was PMC Night at Fenway and the ballpark was full of fans. "They announced, 'These are the cancer survivors riding the PMC.' I almost wanted to look around and say, 'Who-like--who are the cancer survivors?' And it's like, it's me!" That realization came with a flood of emotions. "I burst into tears at first. And then I just, I thought I want to be here. I want to take this moment in."

She now looks ahead to the ride and imagines it will feel like a victory lap. "It's a way to celebrate all the people that have supported me. It's a way to celebrate my health," she said. "And it's a way to do whatever I can to make sure people don't have to go through this by raising money for research."

"We are all touched by this horrible thing called cancer," Kathy said.