Training Plan

Marathon Training Plan for Beginners

The marathon is fundamentally an aerobic event with a metabolic ceiling problem. Running out of glycogen — 'the wall' — is a fuelling and pacing failure, not a fitness failure. The training goal is to build a large enough aerobic base, develop fat oxidation efficiency, and practice race-pace running so the body knows what's coming on race day. This plan is built for runners new to running: the structure, pacing guidelines, and weekly progression are calibrated to your specific situation, not a generic template.

Why easy days are your most important sessions

The most counterintuitive thing about starting to run: your easy days are doing more work than you think. Slow aerobic running builds the mitochondrial density, capillary networks, and musculotendinous resilience that form the foundation everything else rests on. Running every session at moderate effort — which feels productive — actually blunts adaptation and raises injury risk. Keep easy days genuinely easy.

The 10% rule and when to break it

The classic guidance is to never increase weekly mileage by more than 10% from one week to the next. It's a useful heuristic, but not sacred. The more important signal is how your body responds: persistent soreness, disrupted sleep, elevated resting heart rate, and loss of motivation are early warning signs that load is outpacing recovery. When in doubt, do less.

What to do when you miss a session

Missing sessions is part of training, not a failure. The worst response is to try to 'make up' a missed run by cramming it into an already-full week — that's how injuries start. If you miss a day, adjust the rest of the week and protect your long run. Coach Baz adapts your plan automatically when you report what happened, so you never need to guess how to recover.

Training philosophy

The marathon is fundamentally an aerobic event with a metabolic ceiling problem. Running out of glycogen — 'the wall' — is a fuelling and pacing failure, not a fitness failure. The training goal is to build a large enough aerobic base, develop fat oxidation efficiency, and practice race-pace running so the body knows what's coming on race day.

Let Coach Baz build your personalised marathon plan

This is the structure. Daash's AI coach, Coach Baz, personalises it around your schedule, current fitness, and goal — then adapts it week by week based on how training is actually going.

Get my personalised plan

Sample training week

This is a representative week from the middle of the plan — not the first week (which starts lighter) or the peak week (which is harder). It gives you a sense of the session structure and weekly rhythm.

DaySession
MondayRest
TuesdayEasy run 45–55 min
WednesdayMarathon-pace run: 8 miles with middle 4–5 miles at goal marathon pace
ThursdayEasy run 40–50 min
FridayEasy run 30–40 min or rest
SaturdayMedium-long run: 12–14 miles easy
SundayLong run: 18–20 miles easy

Why use Daash for this training plan

A static plan — PDF, spreadsheet, or fixed programme — assumes your life runs on schedule. Coach Baz adapts week by week based on what you report: missed sessions, tired legs, travel, illness, or a breakthrough workout that means you can handle more. The result is training that fits the runner you actually are, not the one who never has bad days.

  • Weekly plan adapts based on how your training actually went
  • Garmin integration: structured workouts sent directly to your watch
  • Conversational coaching — ask Coach Baz anything, any time
  • No rigid race date required — set the goal, let the plan follow

Frequently asked questions

How many days per week does this marathon plan require?

Most sessions in this plan run four to five days per week, including one quality session, a long run, and easy aerobic running. The plan is designed to be adjustable — Coach Baz can restructure around your available days each week.

Do I need a GPS watch to follow this marathon training plan?

A GPS watch or running app is helpful for tracking pace and distance, but not strictly required. Effort-based running (using a scale of 1–10 perceived exertion) works well for easy runs. For quality sessions where specific paces matter, a watch becomes more valuable.

What should I eat before a long run?

For runs under 60–75 minutes, eating beforehand is optional. For longer runs, a light carbohydrate-based meal two to three hours before the session — oats, toast with banana, or a rice-based option — provides fuel without gastrointestinal issues. Avoid high-fat, high-fibre, or unfamiliar foods on long run mornings.

How does Daash adapt the plan if I miss a session?

Coach Baz adjusts your upcoming week based on what you report. If you missed a session due to illness, fatigue, or life events, log it in Daash and the next week's plan will reflect that reality — redistributing sessions, reducing volume if needed, or modifying the upcoming quality work to account for the missed training.

Is it normal to walk during training runs?

Completely normal — and often strategically correct. For beginner runners, walk-run intervals allow more total time on feet with less injury risk than continuous running. Many elite ultra runners use planned walk intervals even in races. Walking during training runs is not a sign of weakness; it's appropriate load management.

Do I need to take gels or nutrition during training for a marathon?

For any long run over 90 minutes, practising race nutrition is valuable. Train with the gels, chews, or drinks available at your target race so your gut is adapted before race day. Do not try a new nutrition product for the first time on race morning.

Let Coach Baz build your personalised marathon plan

This is the structure. Daash's AI coach, Coach Baz, personalises it around your schedule, current fitness, and goal — then adapts it week by week based on how training is actually going.

Start with Coach Baz

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