The Goldmine of Marathon Data
Imagine being able to learn from the experiences of almost a million runners. That's exactly what a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports has done. Researchers dived into the race data of 873,334 finishers from the Berlin Marathon, covering
a 27-year period from 1999 to 2025. The Berlin course, known for being flat and having consistent weather, provided an almost perfect 'laboratory' setting to analyze one thing: pacing. By stripping away variables like hills and unpredictable conditions, the study offers one of the clearest pictures ever of how runners manage their energy over 42.2 kilometres and what separates a successful race from a painful one.
A Tale of Two Pacing Strategies
The single most striking finding from this massive dataset is the dramatic difference in how men and women approach the marathon. The study found that male runners are twice as likely to 'hit the wall' compared to their female counterparts. The researchers defined hitting the wall as a significant slowdown of 20% or more in the second half of the race compared to the first. The numbers are stark: 17.6% of men experienced this catastrophic pace collapse, while only 9.7% of women did. On average, men slowed by nearly 11% after the halfway mark, whereas women slowed by a more modest 8.3%. This isn't a small variation; it points to a fundamental difference in race strategy that persists across hundreds of thousands of athletes.
The Faster You Are, the Bigger the Risk?
Here’s where the data gets truly fascinating. One might assume that the fastest, most conditioned athletes would be the best at pacing. The study revealed the opposite is true, at least when comparing sexes. The pacing gap between men and women actually widens at the front of the pack. Among runners finishing in under three hours, men were an astonishing six times more likely to hit the wall than women in the same elite time bracket. This finding suggests that superior fitness does not protect against poor planning. It underscores a crucial lesson: the marathon punishes over-ambitious starts, regardless of how well-trained you are. An aggressive early pace can set even the most elite runners up for a late-race failure.
Why Does This Pacing Gap Exist?
The study doesn't offer a single definitive answer, but the data points toward a combination of behavioural and physiological factors. Behaviourally, men may be more susceptible to overconfidence, getting swept up in the race-day excitement and starting out at a pace that is simply unsustainable. The data shows women are far better at maintaining an even, consistent pace throughout the race. More than half of the women in the study held a steady pace, while only about a third of the men managed the same feat. Physiologically, some earlier research suggests women may be more efficient at using fat for fuel, which helps conserve the body's limited supply of glycogen—the primary energy source for high-intensity running—for later in the race.
Your Blueprint for a Smarter Marathon
The insights from these 873,000 runners provide a clear roadmap for anyone planning their next marathon. The key takeaway is that your race is often won or lost in the first half. To avoid hitting the wall, embrace a more conservative start. Most runners ruin their race in the first 10 kilometres by going out too fast, burning through their glycogen stores too early. Your training should include runs at your planned marathon pace to teach your body what it feels like. On race day, have a clear plan. Whether you aim for even splits (running each kilometre at the same pace) or a negative split (running the second half slightly faster than the first), a strategy is non-negotiable. The data is clear: a well-executed plan is a far more reliable path to success than raw ambition.
















