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Why do marathon runners take walk breaks during races?

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Answer: Brief walks allow partial recovery and conserve glycogen

Walking prevents muscle soreness after the raceWrong. Walk breaks don't prevent muscle soreness (called DOMS). Soreness happens 24-48 hours after exercise regardless of whether you walked. Walk breaks help during the race by letting your heart rate drop and clearing metabolic waste.

Brief walks allow partial recovery and conserve glycogenCorrect! The run-walk strategy really works. When you run non-stop, your body burns through glycogen and builds up lactate faster than it can clear it. Taking a 1-minute walk break every 5-10 minutes lets your heart rate drop, clears some metabolic waste, and switches which muscle fibers are working. Many runners actually finish faster using this method than running continuously!

Professional runners consider walking as cheatingWrong. Walk breaks are a widely accepted racing strategy. The famous Galloway Method teaches this technique, and many runners achieve personal bests using run-walk intervals. It's not cheating—you still cover the full distance.

Go deeper: Glycogen · Lactate · Muscle fibers
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