Thanet 20, March 2 ~~ Closing Soon...--Berkhamsted Half-Marathon (Hertfordshire, March 2) Popular one-lap road race through this elegant Hertfordshire town and its rural environs.--Brooklands 10K (Surrey, March 2) Rev up your racing with two laps
: Wolverhampton City MarathonFilling Up FastOK, so these two events aren’t in August but you heard it here first, places are selling like hot cakes... Carver Wolverhampton City Marathon (West Midlands, September 2) Expect vocal spectator support at this two
thrown in for good measure.Mansfield Half-Marathon (Nottinghamshire, July 1) 2007 sees a new course for this popular long-standing fixture, incorporating a generous mix of long downhill sections and moderately steep inclines.Thompson Brothers Offerton
picking up the pace and eventually the walking breaks went. A few years on, I'm now a marathon runner and gone from a size 14 to between an 8 and a 10. So stick at it, it's worth it in the end. Oh, and by the way,you'll burn a lot more calories outside
country views.National Highlights...Yorkshireman Off-Road Marathon, September 9Yorkshireman Off-Road Marathon (West Yorkshire, September 9) Clinging perilously to the hillside above the Pennine moors, the village of Haworth – once home to the famous
GETTY IMAGES With so much to think about before your first marathon – what to wear, when to eat and how to pace yourself for starters – it’s no wonder your anxiety levels can soar during
- what advice would you offer him as he prepares for his first half-marathon?"I’m a fairly new runner (aged 37) and a busy job and young family prevents me from having a rigid training schedule. I tend to start each run very steadily then decide whether
, scenic course to the stadium finish. Larking Gowen City of Norwich Half-Marathon (Norfolk, December 2) More than twice as many runners as last year have already registered for this two-lap flat fixture charting through the western outskirts
since and am really enjoying it. In the magazine, I’ve seen quite a few articles mention "race pace" - 5K pace, marathon pace, mile pace etc. What is this? How fast is it? How do you measure it? During my regular runs I tend to be out for around 40