Great pacing isn’t guesswork—it’s measured. This guide shows how to convert your training data into a clear, adaptable race plan so you run or ride faster with fewer blow-ups.
1) Know your anchor numbers
Lock these in during training so you can set realistic race targets:
- Critical power / Functional threshold:
- Running: Critical Power (CP) or threshold pace/speed.
- Cycling: FTP (power you can hold ~60 minutes).
- Threshold heart rate (LTHR) and aerobic decoupling (how HR drifts vs power/pace in long efforts).
- Recent race-equivalent pace or power (5K/10K/HM, 20–60 min TT).
- Course-specific economy: cadence you sustain, comfortable RPE, downhill and uphill efficiency.
- Environment tolerance: heat/altitude history, typical sweat rate, carbohydrate intake your gut tolerates.
2) Convert fitness to target pace/power
Use these evidence-based ranges to set your starting plan. Calibrate with your training files.
Running (by power or intensity)
- 5K: 100–105% of CP; HR finishes at/just above LTHR.
- 10K: 95–100% of CP; near LTHR late.
- Half marathon: 90–94% of CP; 5–10 bpm below LTHR for the first half.
- Marathon: 85–90% of CP; 10–15 bpm below LTHR until 30 km, then close the gap if feeling strong.
If pacing by speed: use your recent race or threshold pace and aim for a slight negative split (second half 0.5–1.0% quicker if conditions allow).
Cycling (time trial, triathlon bike leg)
- 20–40 km TT: 95–100% of FTP (flat), 92–97% (hilly).
- 70.3 tri (90 km): 75–85% of FTP depending on run goals and heat.
- Ironman (180 km): 65–75% of FTP; target Variability Index (VI) ≤ 1.05 on flat, ≤ 1.08 on rolling courses.
For road races with surges, set a strong average target plus caps: don’t exceed 120–130% of FTP for more than brief hills or accelerations; keep average NP within your event range.
3) Adjust for course and conditions
- Elevation: cap uphill power; use free speed downhill. Expect pace to vary—hold effort steady, not speed.
- Wind: hold power, not speed. Push slightly harder into headwinds, ease slightly with tailwinds while keeping average on target.
- Heat/humidity: reduce targets by ~2–3% per 5°C above ~20°C; prioritize HR caps and fueling. Pre-cool and hydrate.
- Altitude: reduce targets by ~1–2% per 300 m above 1000 m unless acclimated.
- Surface/turns: allow time where traction or cornering slows you; don’t chase pace spikes.
4) Build your pacing plan
Set three guardrails
- Power/pace target: your primary anchor.
- Heart rate ceiling: early race cap (LTHR minus 5–15 bpm depending on distance); OK to lift late if feeling good.
- RPE check: must feel controlled early; if not, you’re overcooking it.
Structure the race
- Start (first 5–10 minutes):
- Running: hold 95–98% of target pace/power; let HR rise gradually.
- Cycling: 90–95% of target power for 5–10 minutes, then settle.
- Middle:
- Hold average on target; cap surges uphill at +5–10% (short hills) or +2–5% (long climbs).
- Use downhills to keep effort smooth (don’t chase equal pace).
- Finish:
- When HR is stable and nutrition is landing, lift to the top of your range; close hard in the final 10–20%.
Course-specific caps
- Max uphill power: +5–10% over target; never exceed ~110% (tri) or ~115% (TT) for >1–2 minutes.
- Descent floor: allow power to drop; prioritize aero and safe cadence over forcing power.
- HR caps: keep below LTHR until the final third (short races) or final quarter (long races).
5) Set up your devices for clarity
- Primary screen:
- Cycling: 3 s power, lap power, HR, cadence, time.
- Running: current power or pace (with smoothing), lap pace, HR, cadence, distance.
- Alerts: HR ceiling, power high/low bands, fueling timer every 15–20 minutes, drink reminder every 10–12 minutes.
- Auto-lap by distance (e.g., 1 km/1 mile) for split discipline; use manual laps for course segments (climb, flat, final push).
- Calibrate sensors pre-race; disable firmware updates and phone alerts.
6) Fueling and hydration to protect your pace
- Carbohydrates: 60–90 g/hour for most; up to 100–120 g/hour if gut-trained (2:1 glucose:fructose blend helps).
- Fluids: ~0.4–0.8 L/hour, adjusted for sweat rate, body size, weather.
- Sodium: 500–800 mg/hour typical; heavy/salty sweaters may need 800–1200 mg/hour.
- Execution: slow slightly at aid stations to get full intake; a 2–5 s slowdown is faster than missing fuel and fading later.
7) Mid-race decision rules
- If HR is 5–10 bpm high early at target power/pace:
- Back off 3–5% for 5–10 minutes; increase cooling/fluid; reassess.
- If power/pace feels too easy with low HR after 25–33% of race:
- Lift 1–2% and recheck in 5–10 minutes; avoid big jumps.
- Into headwind or on climbs:
- Hold power steady; ignore pace drops; protect caps.
- GI discomfort or cramping:
- Ease intensity for 5–10 minutes; take in fluids/electrolytes; then return to target.
- Final 10–20%:
- Let HR rise toward LTHR (or slightly above in short events) and spend your saved matches.
8) Quick templates by event
5K run
- First 1 km: 98–100% of goal pace or 100% of CP; settle rhythm.
- Middle 3 km: lock target; HR climbs toward LTHR.
- Last km: lift to 102–105% of CP; strong finish.
10K run
- First 2 km conservative (95–98% of target pace); build to 95–100% CP.
- Last 2 km: press if HR and legs allow.
Half marathon
- First 5 km at 90–92% CP; HR 5–10 bpm under LTHR.
- Middle: hold; fuel every 15–20 minutes.
- Last 5 km: lift if HR stable and form solid.
Marathon
- First 10 km at 85–88% CP; patience.
- Middle: stay smooth; walk 5–10 s through aid if needed to nail fueling.
- After 30 km: nudge to 88–90% CP if stable; otherwise defend form.
40 km cycling TT
- First 10 minutes at 95% of target; then 98–100% FTP.
- Cap short hills at +5–8%; stay aero on descents.
- Last 10 minutes: lift 2–3% if you’ve kept VI ≤ 1.05.
Triathlon bike (70.3 / Ironman)
- 70.3: ride 75–85% FTP; VI ≤ 1.06; begin run with HR under control.
- Ironman: ride 65–75% FTP; VI ≤ 1.05; fuel relentlessly; run starts easy.
9) After-action learning
- Compare target vs. actual: pace/power by segment, HR drift, VI, NP/AP.
- Note where you lost speed: start too hard, under-fueled, overheated, pacing on climbs.
- Update your anchors (CP/FTP, LTHR) and adjust caps for the next race.
