
Periodically we publish an interview with an interesting sports personality. Today with Markus Ryffel, 5000m Olympic silver medallist (1984).

Those who have the aim of being well prepared for a competition such as a half marathon or want to achieve a new best time should take part in preparatory competitions to get the security and necessary edge they need.
He who tests is at an advantage
When you take part in a competition, you are normally nervous and tend to lose the composure that would otherwise set you apart. Experiments are gladly made out of uncertainty, and these can cost you dearly to some extent. It is therefore all the more important that you test as much as you possibly can under competitive conditions prior to your major goal. For example, your training during the week of the competition, your diet prior to the competition, your food during the competition, not to mention your socks, running shoes, and running outfit as well as racing tactics.
Real competitions or simulated competitions
This is easy for runners. Practically every week they have the opportunity to take part in a run. Whereas triathletes also have many opportunities to take part in a triathlon during the summer months, this is not so easy for racing cyclists, bikers, and skiers due to there being fewer events, which means they are more likely forced to simulate a competition during their training.
The characteristics of a preparatory competition
Ideally, the distance and duration of exertion in a preparatory competition is shorter than the main competition to ensure the effects of fatigue don’t last too long and the training program can be continued after a short recovery period. The start time, the profile of the route, and the ground conditions should be as similar as possible to those on the day of the competition.
Tips on the length and time of preparatory competitions (for runners)
Competition run Preparatory competition test run Time
Marathon Half marathon 4-6 weeks beforehand
Half marathon 10 kilometres 3-5 weeks beforehand
10 kilometres 5 kilometres 3-4 weeks beforehand
5 kilometres 3 kilometres 2-3 weeks beforehand

Periodically we publish an interview with an interesting sports personality. Today with Markus Ryffel, 5000m Olympic silver medallist (1984).

Tips on how to prepare for your athletic goal can be found everywhere. But what about when it comes to post-race recovery? Although a gap exists here, with some simple tricks you can reduce the aftermath and accelerate your recovery so nothing will get in the way of preparing for your next major goal.