My first Chennai marathon ended at kilometre 32. Not because I was injured. Not because I ran out of gels. Because I had paced the first half like a man who had never met Chennai. Marina Beach in January has a way of teaching that lesson. The humidity does not knock. It walks in and sits down beside you. The Freshworks Chennai Marathon is not a race you win with bravado. It is a race you finish by listening.
This is a piece about pacing. About listening. About the way a coastal marathon punishes the runner who tries to muscle through and rewards the one who reads the wind.
Why Chennai is its own kind of marathon
The Freshworks Chennai Marathon runs through a coastal city where the air does not behave the way it does in Bengaluru or Delhi. The course threads along Marina Beach, taking in the ocean breeze and the salt air. January is the friendlier window, but friendly is relative. Even on cooler mornings, the humidity sits high. By the time the sun is up, the road and the air are working against you.
This is not a course you under-respect. It is also not a course you over-fear. It rewards a plan. Chennai rewards a runner who has already lost a few foolish kilometres in training and learned not to lose them in races.
The Marina Beach factor
The sea breeze is a gift. The salt air is a complication. Skin chafes faster in salt air, so anti-chafe matters even more than usual. Sunglasses cut the glare off the sand. A cap with a neck flap helps from the sunrise onward.
The humidity tax
Humidity slows everyone. Even elites slow in Chennai. Account for it. A pace that is comfortable on a Marathon Sunday in Bengaluru will not feel the same in Chennai by kilometre 25. Adjust expectations downward by 5 to 10 percent on humid race days. Read the heat and monsoon guide the week of the race.
The four-phase pacing framework
I think of the Chennai marathon in four acts. Each act has a job.
Act 1: The first 10 km — restraint
The first hour is a trap. The air is cool. The crowd is alive. Marina Beach in the dark is one of the more beautiful sights an Indian runner will see in a year. None of this is your friend. Run 10 to 15 seconds per kilometre slower than goal pace. Slower. The runners passing you in the first hour will be the ones you pass between kilometre 30 and 35. Always.
Act 2: 10 km to 21 km — find the rhythm
By kilometre 10, the body has warmed and the breeze has settled. This is where you settle into goal effort. Watch the heart rate, not the pace. The pace will fluctuate by 5 to 10 seconds per kilometre. The effort should not. Sip at every aid station. Take the first gel at 45 minutes.
Act 3: 21 km to 32 km — the honest middle
This is the marathon. The sun is up. The shade is gone. The humidity is biting. Pace will drift. Defend it kilometre by kilometre. One gel every 30 minutes. Electrolyte at every station. Water on the head, the forearms, the back of the neck. Treat hydration as a cooling system, not just a fluid balance system.
Act 4: 32 km to finish — borrow from the future
The last 10 km belong to runners who paced the first 30 with discipline. By now, you are running on fumes and form. Shorten your stride. Lift the cadence. Pick one runner ahead. Catch them. Pick another. The race is not about a finishing kick. It is about not losing more time than you have to.
Reading the wind and the sun
Coastal courses are weather courses.
The sea breeze
Marina Beach in the dawn hours offers a cooling breeze on one direction and a stiffer push back on the other. Adjust effort, not pace. The wind giveth, the wind taketh. Smile through both.
The post-sunrise heat
By kilometre 25, the sun is up. The black tarmac stores heat. Your core temperature climbs. This is where most Chennai DNFs happen, not at kilometre 38. Cool the body. Pour water. Wear light colours. Train for it in the months prior.
Stomach in the humidity
Humidity changes how the gut handles fuel. Some runners can take gels every 20 minutes in cool air but struggle past one every 45 minutes in Chennai. Test your gut in long runs in the warmer training months. The gut is trainable. Race day is not the place to find out.
What to do in training
A 16 to 20 week block is the minimum. A 22 week block if Chennai is your first marathon.
Long runs that mimic Chennai
Schedule long runs to start at 5 a.m. or earlier in the months prior. Aim for the warmest part of the morning by the back half. The body learns to handle humidity as a chronic stress, not a race-day surprise.
Heat acclimatisation block
If you live in Pune or Delhi, build a 3 to 4 week heat acclimatisation block before race week. Two runs a week in the warmer part of the day. Body learns. Skin learns. Sweat rate adapts.
Use the right tools
A structured marathon plan or a personalised plan from the STRIDD plan generator will give you the volume and the rhythm. Use the calculators to set a realistic goal time based on a recent half marathon performance. Browse Running Lab for first-hand Chennai stories.
The race-week protocol
Eat normally until Tuesday. Increase carbohydrate intake from Wednesday onward, aiming for 7 to 10 grams per kilogram of body weight in the final three days. Cut fibre and alcohol from Thursday. Hydrate consistently. Race morning eat what you have rehearsed in long runs three hours before the gun.
The night before, lay out kit. Watch charged. Gels counted. Two alarms. Sleep early. The 90 minutes before the start are spent in queues, in toilets, in stretching, in the slow gathering of focus. Stay calm. Stay warm. Stay present.
What the finish feels like
The Chennai finish, when you have paced well, is a quiet feeling. The kind that lasts. The runners I admire most are not the ones with the fastest times. They are the ones who, after the race, sit on the kerb with a coconut water and smile in the way that means they listened. Chennai rewards the listeners.
Confirm dates and registration on the event page. Use the calculators, the plan generator, and the lab to build your block. Then meet the marina at dawn.