Race day feels different. The energy, the nerves, the excitement. It’s normal to want everything to be perfect. And that’s exactly why runners make one of the biggest mistakes in the sport: they change things at the last moment.
New shoes. New gels. New breakfast. New routine. It sounds harmless. It’s not.
Why Race Day Is Not the Time to Experiment
Race day is not about testing. It’s about executing. Your body performs best when everything is predictable. The moment you introduce something new, you introduce risk.
The Most Common Race Day Mistakes
New Shoes
Even the best shoes can cause blisters or change your stride. If you haven’t run in them before, they are not race-ready.
New Socks or Clothing
Chafing doesn’t show up in the first kilometer. It shows up later, when it’s too late to fix it.
Trying Caffeine Gels for the First Time
Caffeine can boost performance—or completely destroy your race if your stomach reacts badly.
Changing Your Breakfast
Your gut is trained just like your legs. Change your food, and you risk energy crashes or stomach issues mid-race.
New Warm-Up Routine
Your body is used to a specific activation pattern. Changing it can leave you underprepared or fatigued before the race even starts.
The Real Principle
When everything is familiar, you don’t think—you execute. That’s where peak performance happens.
Confidence doesn’t come from new gear. It comes from repetition. From knowing you’ve done this before.
Race Day Checklist
- ✓ Shoes already used in training
- ✓ Tested socks and clothing
- ✓ Same breakfast as long runs
- ✓ Gels already tried before
- ✓ Familiar warm-up routine
- ✓ No last-minute changes
The Bottom Line
You don’t need anything new to run your best race. You need consistency, familiarity, and execution.
Your Rule:
If you didn’t test it in training, don’t use it on race day.
Trust the process. Trust your training. Run your race.
About the Author
Agustín is the founder of Fastrix, with 18+ years of experience in athletics. He combines real-world training with science-based methods to help runners improve consistently.