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ISSA, International Sports Sciences Association, Certified Personal Trainer, ISSAonline, Everything You Need to Know About Carb Loading Before a Race

Everything You Need to Know About Carb Loading Before a Race

Reading Time: 5 minutes

BY: ISSA

DATE: 2023-08-21


If you’re new to running or are training clients, you need to know about carb loading. It’s a fueling strategy that has helped many a runner avoid hitting the wall on race day. 

In fact, carb loading isn’t just for runners. It can help all kinds of endurance athletes. If you have a big race or other endurance event coming up, learn how to fuel for it for the best results. 

What is Carb Loading? 

Carbohydrate, or carb, loading is a dietary practice endurance athletes use leading up to an event (1). It involves eating more carbs than usual in an attempt to avoid hitting the wall during the competition. If you have ever been on a long run, you know this feeling. Despite all the training you put in, you get to a point during the run at which you just can’t continue due to fatigue. 

Proper race nutrition begins well before the carb loading period and extends beyond the race. Here’s a guide to marathon training nutrition to help you fuel for your next event. 

Carb Loading Stocks up Muscle Glycogen

Glycogen is the body’s easiest source of energy. It’s a string of glucose molecules that is stored in muscles and the liver. When you head out on race day, your body will first utilize glycogen for energy to fuel the run. 

When your muscles run out of glycogen, you’ll start burning fat. Fat is an important energy source, but it’s more difficult to use than glycogen. You’ll feel that in the form of hitting the dreaded wall. It’s important to have your glycogen levels topped off before the event, which is what proper carb0 loading does. 

The Benefits of Carbohydrate Loading

The primary benefit of carb loading is avoiding the wall. By properly fueling for a race, you can run longer and at your best (2). In the end, this can be the difference between hitting or missing your PR or getting on the podium. 

Another benefit of carb loading is that it could help you hydrate. If you load up on high-carb beverages (such as a sports drink), you’ll also be hydrating. Being poorly hydrated can be even worse for athletic performance than running out of glycogen. 

Carbs are important for many aspects of fitness, even building muscle. Learn more about why your strength training relies on carbs and how to fuel for bigger muscles. 

Is Carb Loading Before a Race Always Necessary?

It’s never necessary, but if you want to perform optimally on race day, you should carb load in advance. Think of it as topping up your fuel tank before setting out on a road trip. With a full tank, you won’t have to stop. 

Definitely Carb Load for Endurance Exercise and Events

Although the practice is most often associated with running, you can benefit from carbo loading before any endurance event. For running, carb load before a half marathon or marathon for the best results. Carb loading will also help with triathlons, distance bike races, and any other sport that requires significant endurance. 

Carb Loading Before a Race That’s Shorter Isn’t Necessary

On average, people don’t run out of muscle glycogen until they’ve been going for about 90 minutes. It isn’t at all necessary to carb load before an event that takes less time. Don’t bother if you’re doing a 5K or 10K, for instance. 

How to Carb Load Correctly 

The image most people have of carb loading is a big bowl of spaghetti the night before a race. This isn’t actually how it works. One meal won’t adequately fill up your glycogen tanks. Here’s how to do it the right way: 

  • Start carb loading between three and six days in advance of your event. Any less won’t be as effective and longer won’t help more. 

  • Increase your carb intake each day, maxing out at 70% to 90% carbs in the two or three days before the race. Aim for about five grams of carbs per pound of body weight. You don’t need to eat more calories. Just shift your macro ratios. 

  • Choose healthier carbs. Junk food isn’t the best for racing, so resist the temptation to fuel up on processed snacks. Instead, choose potatoes, sweet potatoes, rice, pasta, bread, and whole grains. 

  • Stay off the scale. When it’s time to carb load, you’ll also be tapering and putting in fewer miles. The combination of less training and water retention from carb loading might make you put on a few pounds. Try to avoid weighing yourself during this time. The extra weight will come off soon enough as you resume your normal diet and running schedule. 

In addition to carb loading before the race, you’ll benefit from snacking during the event. Try race gels or blocks and an electrolyte drink with carbohydrates. Re-fuel about 60 to 90 minutes into a race and then every 30 minutes to keep your body going. 

What Not to Do When Carb Loading 

Carb loading is a simple concept, but it’s also easy to do it wrong. Learn from the bad experiences of other runners and avoid these common pitfalls: 

  • The spaghetti dinner. Yes, you can have spaghetti the night before the race, but it shouldn’t be your only carb loading strategy. You cannot replenish your muscle glycogen stores with one meal. 

  • Overdoing it. Eating too much food before a race is unnecessary and potentially damaging. That one big meal the night before might make you feel sick the next day. Instead of binging, spread your carbohydrate intake out over several days and throughout the day before the race. Your dinner should be normal for you. 

  • Rich foods. Whatever you do, don’t make pasta with alfredo sauce your pre-race dinner. Stick with simple, basic foods that your body can digest easily and quickly and that won’t lead to later digestive issues. 

  • Fiber. Also avoid foods to rich in fiber the day before the race. Like fatty foods, fiber can upset your stomach. Choose white pasta, rice, or bread and enjoy the simple carbs. Bananas are also good for carb loading and have less fiber than other fruits. 

  • Alcohol. Yes, beer has a lot of carbs, but it’s not an ideal drink when preparing for a race, especially the night before. An occasional beer is fine, but limit alcohol intake throughout the week ahead of your race. 

  • Skipping breakfast. Pre-race fuel is essentially for topping off the tanks. Don’t skip breakfast before a race, but do get up early enough to be able to digest it. Stick with a small meal that is heavy on carbs and without too much fiber, like a bowl of cereal or oatmeal with a banana. Don’t try anything new because you don’t know how it will affect you. 

Carb loading is a tried and tested technique for fueling endurance events and workouts. If you want to perform at your personal best, take the time to eat properly and load up on carbohydrates. If you’re working with a client on a big race, talk to them about how to eat throughout training and in the days leading up to the event. 

Get Certified in Nutrition and Running

ISSA’s Nutrition Coach certification program is a great skill set to add to your personal training business. Nutrition and fitness go hand-in-hand, and being able to provide clients with diet and fueling advice will set you apart from other trainers.

Want to help runners specifically? Become an ISSA Running Coach! In this course, you will learn training, injury prevention, motivation, and recovery strategies. As a Running Coach, you can help anyone from an endurance athlete to a casual runner prepare for and achieve their goals, whatever they may be. From 5k’s to marathons - you will help them cross that finish line.



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ISSA | Nutritionist

By becoming an ISSA Nutritionist, you'll learn the foundations of how food fuels the body, plus step by step methods for implementing a healthy eating plan into clients' lifestyles.



References

  1. Jeukendrup A. E. (2011). Nutrition for endurance sports: marathon, triathlon, and road cycling. Journal of Sports Sciences29 Suppl 1, S91–S99. https://doi.org/10.1080/02640414.2011.610348

  2. Wilson, P. B., Ingraham, S. J., Lundstrom, C., & Rhodes, G. (2013). Dietary tendencies as predictors of marathon time in novice marathoners. International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism23(2), 170–177. https://doi.org/10.1123/ijsnem.23.2.170

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