Why do runners hit 'the wall'?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Glycogen stores deplete
Muscles run out of oxygen — Wrong. Oxygen available (not sprint). 'Wall' is glycogen depletion—body forced to burn fat which produces ATP slower than glucose.
Glycogen stores deplete ✓ — Correct! Glycogen depletion! 'The wall' (bonking): sudden overwhelming fatigue around 18-20 miles (marathon). Cause: muscle glycogen stores exhausted. Body normally burns glycogen (fast ATP) + some fat. Glycogen depleted → forced to rely mainly on fat metabolism (much slower ATP production). Brain also needs glucose—low blood sugar causes mental fog, weakness. Prevention: carb-loading before, energy gels during race. Train body to burn fat more efficiently (long slow runs)!
Lactic acid accumulates — Wrong. Lactic acid clears quickly and isn't issue in endurance running. 'Wall' is glycogen depletion forcing reliance on slower fat metabolism.
