What Not to Do Before Your First Race

13 Things Not to Do Before Your First Race (So You Actually Enjoy It)
Meta description: First race coming up? Avoid the classic mistakes: new shoes, over-eating, bad pacing, and last-minute stress.

Your first race should feel exciting — not chaotic. Most first-timer problems come from a few very predictable mistakes. Here’s what not to do in the week (and morning) leading into your first start line.

1) Don’t try something “new” on race week

Race week is not the time for new:

  • running shoes
  • socks
  • gels
  • pre-workout supplements
  • “healthy” high-fibre meals

If your body hasn’t practised it, race day is the worst day to experiment.

2) Don’t do a massive workout “to feel ready”

  • A hard session late in the week won’t make you fitter in time — it’ll just make you tired. Keep movement light and familiar.

3) Don’t overthink your clothing

  • Wear whatever you’ve already run comfortably in. If you’re debating it on race morning, it’s probably a no.

4) Don’t arrive late

  • Nothing spikes nerves like sprinting through registration, queues, toilets, and the start area. Aim to arrive early enough that you can:
  • find your bearings
  • use the toilet (more than once…)
  • warm up calmly

5) Don’t start at the very front (unless you should be there)

  • It feels tempting. It’s also how people get dragged into running way too fast in the first minute. Start where your pace matches the group.

6) Don’t go out too hard

  • Most first races are ruined in the first 5 minutes. The best cue:
    Start at a pace you could hold for the whole race, then build if you feel good.

7) Don’t skip the warm-up entirely

  • Even a simple 5–10 minute brisk walk + gentle jog + a few leg swings makes the first kilometre feel much easier.

8) Don’t eat a huge breakfast right before the start

  • If your race is in the morning, eat something simple well before you toe the line. If you’re prone to nerves, smaller is often better.

9) Don’t drink loads of water at the last minute

  • Hydrate steadily the day before and morning of. Chugging right before the start usually just means a toilet emergency.

10) Don’t ignore your laces and socks

  • Blisters are a very preventable way to suffer. Check:
  • socks aren’t bunched
  • shoes aren’t too tight
  • laces are secure (double-knot)

11) Don’t set a time goal that makes you panic

  • Your first race goal should be something like:
  • “finish feeling proud”
  • “run the first half steady”
  • “enjoy the atmosphere”
  • A time goal is fine, but not if it turns the day into stress.

12) Don’t forget your post-race layer

  • You cool down fast after a finish. Bring something warm and dry for afterwards.

13) Don’t leave without soaking it in

  • Get the photo. Cheer others in. Enjoy the buzz. Your first race is a milestone.

Race Day Checklist (So You Don’t Forget the Basics)

 

Race Day Checklist: Everything You Need (and What You Don’t)
Meta description: A simple checklist for a stress-free race morning, from what to pack to what to do in the start area.

Race mornings feel hectic because you’re trying to remember ten small things while nervous. Use this checklist once, and you’ll never have a chaotic start again.

The night-before checklist:

  • Race email / confirmation details (screenshot it)
  • Bib + pins
  • Shoes + socks you trust
  • Outfit laid out (including a warm layer)
  • Charge your phone / watch
  • Pack a snack for after
  • Set two alarms
  • What to bring with you (the sensible list)
  • Warm layer for before/after
  • Light snack you know sits well
  • Small bottle of water (for sips)
  • Plasters / blister tape (optional but smart)

What not to bring:

  • a brand-new gel you saw online yesterday
  • anything that needs “figuring out” on the day

What to do when you arrive:

  • Find the start area first (remove uncertainty early)
  • Use the toilet early (then again if needed)
  • Do a gentle warm-up
  • Get into the right place at the start (don’t get swept into a pace you can’t hold)
  • The best first-race mindset
  • Your job is simple:
  • start steady
  • keep moving
  • finish proud

The 5-minute warm-up (do this before any 5K/10K/half)

You don’t need loads of time. You do need to start gently.

Minute 0–2: brisk walk (or very easy jog)

  • Keep it relaxed.
  • Breathe through your nose if you can.
  • Shoulders down, jaw unclenched.
  • Goal: bring your heart rate up a little without stress.

Minute 2–4: easy jog

  • “Conversation pace” — you could chat in short sentences.
  • Light feet, no forcing it.
  • If you’re in a crowded start area, jog small loops or out-and-backs.
  • Goal: switch on running mechanics before the gun goes.

Minute 4–5: 3 x 10-second pick-ups

These are not sprints. Think “smoothly quicker.”

Do:

10 seconds gently quicker

20–30 seconds easy walk/jog

repeat 3 times

Goal: wake up your legs so race pace doesn’t feel like a shock.

Optional 30-second add-on (if you tend to feel stiff)

If you’ve time and space, add these:

  • 10 leg swings each side (front-to-back, holding a fence/wall)
  • 10 calf raises
  • 10 walking lunges

Common warm-up mistakes (that backfire)

1) Skipping it completely

This is why the first kilometre feels like a battle.

2) Going too hard too early

If you’re sweating and panting before the start, you’ve done too much. A warm-up should leave you feeling ready, not spent.

3) Standing still in the cold after warming up

If it’s chilly, keep moving lightly and wear an old hoodie/top right up until a minute or two before you start.

 

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