running Archives - Tom Hollis https://www.tomhollishealth.com/tag/running/ Expert sports nutrition and running coaching from a registered Dietitian and UK Athletics qualified Running Coach Wed, 21 Jan 2026 08:10:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://www.tomhollishealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/cropped-Favicon-new-32x32.webp running Archives - Tom Hollis https://www.tomhollishealth.com/tag/running/ 32 32 2025 running summary and 2026 goals https://www.tomhollishealth.com/2025-running-summary-and-2026-goals/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2025-running-summary-and-2026-goals https://www.tomhollishealth.com/2025-running-summary-and-2026-goals/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2026 16:25:17 +0000 https://www.tomhollishealth.com/?p=1772 My 2025 was densely packed with running highs and lows, toddler parenting (‘terrible twos’ were mostly good fun, but ‘threenager’…much less so), and a new definition for what ‘busy’ looks like, thanks largely to a breakthrough year for my running nutrition and coaching business. Unsurprisingly, it was therefore pretty sparse on the blogging front! Something […]

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My 2025 was densely packed with running highs and lows, toddler parenting (‘terrible twos’ were mostly good fun, but ‘threenager’…much less so), and a new definition for what ‘busy’ looks like, thanks largely to a breakthrough year for my running nutrition and coaching business.

Unsurprisingly, it was therefore pretty sparse on the blogging front! Something had to give, and this blog (and any semblance of a social life) was sadly first in line for the chop.

So let’s break the silence and kick off what I hope will be an incredibly productive 2026 on all fronts (watch this space), with a trio of running top threes: 2025 highlights, 2025 lowlights, and 2026 goals:

2025 highs:

1. Abingdon Marathon (Oct 19): 2:29:23 (PB and 1st place)

It’s not often you a) represent England at the marathon in your age group, b) win the whole race, and c) achieve your lifetime running goal of sub 2:30.

I’d come pretty close to sub 2:30 on several occasions in the past couple of years, and was starting to think my chances were slipping away. However, on a day when I genuinely didn’t expect it, I executed a near-perfect race in challenging conditions (blustery and drizzly), and was suitably emotional even before I crossed the line. The stand-out moment of 2025, and in fact one of the best days of my life.

Crossing the line in first place at Abingdon Marathon 2025
Crossing the line in first place at Abingdon Marathon 2025
Topping the Abingdon Marathon podium
Topping the Abingdon Marathon podium

2. Copenhagen Half (Sept 14): 70:41 (PB)

The wettest race of my life bar none, and timely proof that I don’t (always) need perfect conditions to PB. Also, generally just an excellent city, and despite the rain clouds and puddles, a great event that I’d love to come back to. Can see why it sells out so quickly.

3. Battersea parkrun (Sept 6): 15:52 (PB)

The first of these three PBs across three distances, across a beautiful six-week purple patch from late summer into early autumn. Looking back now, I think this one was crucial in setting the tone for the other two, and by giving me the confidence that, at 41, I could still make little improvements if I kept looking after myself.  

2025 lows:

1. Battersea Half (Jan 4): 71:54…and lots of injuries

I knew I was in the best shape of my life as I started the year, and anything other than a PB would have been disappointing. Sadly, it was quite a lot worse than that! On lap two of nine, I had a horrendous fall while trying to pass lapped runners. I made the foolish (or at least stubborn) decision to get back up and run the next 11 miles as best I could, and this will always be my go-to anecdote for the analgesic power of adrenaline, because within seconds of crossing the finishing line, I couldn’t walk, and soon found out I had a broken toe, broken rib, and two badly smashed up knees. The knees were actually slowest to heal of the three injuries, and ended up depriving me of two months of training.  

2. Seville Marathon (Feb 22): 2:58:18

This could have gone in the highs or lows, but the reason it goes here is because the above incident robbed me of the best shape of my life, and what I’m convinced would have been a big marathon PB in my 2025 goal race in Seville. That said, it was actually a very happy day / family holiday, and a rare opportunity to ‘enjoy’ a marathon without worrying about pace, but instead just getting round without discomfort. I was amazed and proud to complete the race, but it will always be bittersweet for me, and left me with unfinished business for 2026…

A bittersweet day at Seville, but proud to complete it and share it with my family
A bittersweet day at Seville, but proud to complete it and share it with my family

3. Fulham 10km (Nov 15): 32:51

A mixture of complacency and GPS issues got the better of me, and this ended up being one of my worst executed races in years. This should really have been the day I completed the full house of PBs for the year, but instead I set off at 5K pace, and funnily enough, could barely cling on grimly to marathon pace in the second half. Honestly don’t know what came over me that day, but it was fairly embarrassing as a runner let alone coach!

Amateur hour pacing in Fulham 10K!
Amateur hour pacing caught up with me in Fulham 10K!

2026 goals:

1. Seville Marathon PB

2:29 at Abingdon came off a half marathon block with very little time for marathon specific training, on a decent but not super-fast course, and in very average conditions. So, the goal for Seville in February simply has to be a new marathon PB, on the back of (to date at least) a really good, marathon specific block, on a fast course with lots of other sub 2:30 runners. Obviously I had to re-book Seville this year. Unfinished business.

2. Half Marathon sub 70

After 2:29 in the marathon, 69 in the half has been the next in line in terms of peak lifetime running goals. Unlike the marathon, I have never felt especially confident that this one will happen, but after Copenhagen I’m now only 42 seconds away, and that was basically a swim, so surely there’s a chance this year, and I’ll try to give myself a couple of really good shots at it.

3. Keep loving it.

Cheesy but true, and really, this should always be number one on any list, such is its importance in underpinning everything else. Running motivates me, makes me a better person, father, husband (and coach), and keeps my internal fire burning even when life is hectic and, dare I say, stressful. I won’t pretend to enjoy every minute of every cold, dark and rainy run commute, but I genuinely love the process. This is the key to running success, and something I hope to always bring to my clients.

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Representing England at Chester Marathon (2:32): my big six takeaways https://www.tomhollishealth.com/representing-england-at-chester-marathon-232-my-big-six-takeaways/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=representing-england-at-chester-marathon-232-my-big-six-takeaways Tue, 07 Jan 2025 10:52:10 +0000 https://www.tomhollishealth.com/?p=1656 In the previous blog I recapped the events that led to my selection for England representation in the marathon at Chester…well, that day duly arrived in early October 2024, and it was a special one that taught me loads! Here are six of my takeaways: Summer was a 5k block, then autumn was focused on […]

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In the previous blog I recapped the events that led to my selection for England representation in the marathon at Chester…well, that day duly arrived in early October 2024, and it was a special one that taught me loads! Here are six of my takeaways:

  1. Unusual build and how ten mile training translated into marathon performance

Summer was a 5k block, then autumn was focused on extending speed out for my first ever ten mile race, the Great South Run. Having a marathon dumped two weeks prior to this goal race was far from ideal, but you don’t give up your first opportunity to represent your country (at your favourite distance), so it just needed to be managed carefully.

Chester was never going to be a PB attempt, though, for a few reasons:

  1. To hold back just enough to recover for GSR.
  2. I had done literally no runs over 30km for more than five months.
  3. It’s not the fastest course; not crazily hilly, but certainly not flat, and about double the elevation of London, for example.
  4. I only went into this with a partial taper, since the England ‘experience’ was far more important to me than the result.

So, I went in excited and proud, but with limited expectations, and my coach and I agreed that sub 2:35 sounded reasonable. The plan was to run sub-maximally, keep heart rate low, and just see what that spat out in terms of time. It couldn’t have gone better. I barely even looked at my pace or splits, and finished in 2:32:04, less than two minutes off my marathon PB, and to my great surprise after, as the second placed M40 runner across both the England and Wales teams.

2. Running relaxed is key to performance

Given the casual build-up, the low-key expectations, and the fact that Chester Marathon is a welcome couple of tiers below the majors on the general event stress scale, I was pretty relaxed on race morning. Knowing I was running to such a sensible heart rate (keeping it below 162, approximately 85% of my estimated max) meant there really wasn’t much that could go wrong.

So I did just that, and I also had a smile on my face for a lot of it. I had family in the crowd, my England vest on, and this was an opportunity to proudly reflect for a couple of hours on how my running journey had taken me here. I was that incredibly annoying guy thanking all the volunteers and spectators, and engaging far more than normal with my fellow runners. Absolutely buzzing, basically.

The fact that this translated into such a surprising result was also made possible by my historical endurance running (i.e. plenty of previous marathons), although while the heart and lungs were very comfortable, there was certainly a bit of neuromuscular fatigue creeping in towards the end. The body just wasn’t used to going long in this block. Fortunately, the end arrived before this became a real issue, and I was able to finish with a flourish, unknowingly pipping the second place M40 runner.

So this was a big tick for running relaxed, and indeed for slightly smaller races. Sometimes it’s good to go all in for the adrenaline of a major, but sometimes it’s just a nicer and more chilled experience for runners (and spectators) at a medium sized event like Chester.

3. The importance of pack-racing and in-race decisions

The previous paragraph describes what sounds like the most serene race of all time, and while this was mostly true, there were a couple of key points in the race that helped ensure this was the case.

The first, and most important, was after about five miles. I found myself on my own and adrift of two packs; one in front and one behind me. Given the sparsely populated course and the headwind for the first half of the race, I made a snap decision to chase down the pack ahead. They were about 20 seconds ahead at that point, but I put in 2-3 quick kms and this did the job. As soon as I got there, I was blowing for a bit, but knew it had been a good decision. There were now about 8 of us all running at a similar pace, and we took it turns to lead, but generally stayed together for about 8-10 miles, which flew by as a result of this shared load. It’s impossible to quantify the benefit of a stretch like that, but I’ll try. It felt like it was worth about 5 seconds per mile, both at the time and in hindsight.

That pack eventually started to dissipate behind just myself and a Scottish chap called Ross. We introduced ourselves to each other at this point and it transpired that he once ran the marathon for Scotland in the commonwealth games. Anyway, we kept a bit of gentle chit chat going to push each other through the hilly final few miles, and generally this helped really put the seal on what was a wholly positive race experience…but this was all down to a really good bit of decision making to chase that pack down about 20 miles earlier.  

4. The pros and cons of race tourism with family

What can I say…there are definitely pros and cons to having family support at races like this, especially when one of them is an incredibly boisterous 23 month old. Here’s a quick summary off the top of my head:

Pros:

  • Lovely to feel truly supported and share the experience.
  • Exposing my son to the positivity of running as much as possible.
  • Nice distraction from my usual pre-race anxieties and weirdness.
  • That post-race beer with my wife was just perfect.

Cons:

  • I couldn’t just be ‘selfish’ with my usual pre-race routines; everyone needs to be factored in (although I sent everyone to Chester Zoo for the day to get a few hours of peace!)
  • This managing of everyone’s needs / travel plans / meal requests / spectator logistics is definitely quite tiring in itself.
  • Toddlers don’t suddenly become good sleepers in the build-up to a marathon. Ray refused to sleep in the travel cot I had hauled up from London on the train, so I spent my two nights before the race on some cushions on the floor. Yup, not exaggerating.

5. Fuelling for sub-maximal effort (and increased hydration)

Given that I knew I would be running this one sub-maximally, I would be using a slightly higher percentage of fat than carbs per minute than in previous marathons, so I knew I could get away with a less intense carb load. I went for 550-600g on both Friday and Saturday (approx. 9 g /kg, compared with ~11g/kg in recent marathons), and found this absurdly easy to manage; I really had to hold myself back.

I also kept my  intra-marathon carb intake a little lower than usual, with approx. 210 g over 2.5 hours (84g per hour), compared to my usual ~100g/hour. As with previous races, this was a combination of a homemade carb mix drink (90g in 250ml today) and gels (3 x 40g today).

I also made more of a conscious effort to proactively drink water in the second half of the course, which is something I often neglect a bit. I don’t often feel especially thirsty and don’t like to break my momentum, but the hot and humid Big Half 2024 reminded me to reassess this, and I feel this, and my fuelling plan overall worked really well for the race plan and conditions.  

6. London 2024, cancelled GSR, and the benefit of hindsight

After a performance like this, I couldn’t help but look back at London 2024 and feel cheated. I was in such strong shape in April, for 2:29 if not more, but as I’ve written before, something wasn’t right on the day and I took myself to a dark place to squeeze another 2:30.

To cruise round to 2:32:04 in Chester, barely a minute slower than London, on a much hillier course in fairly windy conditions, having neither trained for a marathon nor pushed myself hard in the race just confirmed my suspicions that London had been out of my control.

That said, the relaxation and control piece is definitely a factor too. I was perhaps inappropriately pumped for London and can learn from Chester in that respect.

The other big old dose of hindsight going on is that, as I write this in mid November, I can sadly  report that my ten mile goal race that I had been saving the legs for, Great South Run, was cancelled at short notice due to Storm Ashley, and who knows what I might have been able to achieve at Chester if I’d really gone for it. That said, maybe if I’d pushed even five seconds per mile faster I’d have crashed and burned. Like I say, who knows.

So those are my six things that I thought worth mentioning or documenting for my own reflections, but above all, this was just one of my most enjoyable race experiences to date, and hopefully not my last opportunity to represent my country at the sport I love. Chester is also a beautiful city that we will definitely be going back to, and I’d certainly do this race again…just perhaps staying in an AirBNB with a spare sofa bed next time.

Since writing this, England Athletics have written their own blog on the day, and have mentioned me by name and my (unintentional) finishing straight battle for M40 second place!

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