Chennai is a coastal marathon. That is not a vibe. That is a physics problem. The Freshworks Chennai Marathon runs in January, along Marina Beach, with humidity and salt air that find every gap in your kit and every weakness in your race plan. A race-day checklist for Chennai is not a luxury. It is the difference between finishing on the seafront with your arms up and finishing in a medical tent wondering what hit you.
The four-week countdown to race day
Race-day execution is decided weeks before the gun. The biggest mistakes runners make on race morning have their roots in race-month decisions. A good checklist starts four weeks out.
Four weeks: lock the kit
By four weeks out, every item of race-day kit should be tested. Shoes with 50-400 kilometres on them. Singlet or t-shirt you have done a tempo in. Shorts with no surprise seam friction. Socks you have done a 30K long run in.
Anything new from this point forward is a gamble. The race is not the place to test a new gel or a new pair of socks. The race is the place to execute decisions you already made.
Two weeks: dial in fuel
Two weeks out, your last long run is done. From here forward, the work is preservation, not building. Practise your race breakfast at least twice. Bring those exact ingredients with you to Chennai if you are travelling.
Hydrate well, not extremely. Over-hydration in the days before a humid marathon dilutes your electrolytes and slows your pace. Sip water through the day. Add a pinch of salt to your meals. Avoid alcohol from one week out.
One week: the boring week
This week is intentionally dull. Sleep more. Move less than feels comfortable. Run two or three short, easy sessions to keep the legs ticking. Resist the urge to add a final hard workout. The fitness is in the bank.
Lay out your kit on Wednesday evening. Pin your bib on Friday or Saturday. By race morning, nothing should be a decision.
The night before
The night before a marathon is a logistical exercise. Eat dinner by 7 pm. Stick to familiar food. Chennai is famous for its food culture; tonight is not the night to test it. Save the dosas for the celebration breakfast.
Kit layout, the way
Lay out your kit in race-order on a chair. Shorts and singlet on top. Sports bra or base layer underneath. Socks rolled into your shoes. Cap on top. Anti-chafe balm next to the kit. Race-belt with bib already pinned, gels already loaded, in front of the shoes.
The point is to remove decisions from race morning. A tired brain at 4 am makes bad calls. A well-laid-out kit makes the calls for you.
The 4 am breakfast
Eat your breakfast 2.5 to 3 hours before the gun. Test the timing in training. Most runners do well on 400-600 calories of carbs with minimal fat and fibre. White toast with jam. Oatmeal with banana. Whatever you have practised.
Sip water with your breakfast. Have an electrolyte drink in your hand on the way to the start line. Top up to about 200 ml in the 30 minutes before the start, then stop. You do not want a full bladder at kilometre two.
Race morning, hour by hour
Race morning is a sequence. Each step earns the next. Skip a step and the day gets harder.
Three hours out
Wake up. Eat breakfast. Use the bathroom. Get dressed slowly. Move slowly. The body is still waking. Forcing speed at this hour costs nothing now but bites later.
Two hours out
Apply anti-chafe everywhere that touches another surface. Underarms. Inner thighs. Nipples. Sock line. Sports bra strap line. Chennai humidity will turn small chafing points into bleeding points by kilometre 25. The price of generosity here is zero.
One hour out
Arrive at the start area. Drop your bag. Use the bathroom again. Begin a light dynamic warm-up. Walking. Leg swings. Brief light strides if there is space. Do not jog hard. The first kilometre of the race is your jog.
Fifteen minutes out
Move to your corral. Find your pace group if you are running with one. Take one last sip of fluid. Tighten shoes. Stand quietly. The race will begin when it begins.
In-race execution
The first five kilometres are slower than you want them to be. The middle is faster than you expect. The last ten kilometres are the truth.
Hydration on a humid course
Chennai's humidity makes sweat rates high and evaporation low. Drink at every aid station. Not enormous amounts. Small, regular sips. 100-150 ml at each station is enough for most runners. Add an electrolyte tab to one of your handheld flasks if you are carrying.
The guide on running in Indian heat and monsoon is essential pre-reading for any Chennai runner. Coastal humidity behaves differently from inland heat, and the strategies that work in Bengaluru can fail in Chennai.
The Marina Beach effect
The course skirts the long sweep of Marina Beach. The view is spectacular. The headwind, when it comes, is not. Tuck in behind a group if you find a headwind section. Two runners drafting in tandem cost each other significantly less than two runners running side by side in the wind.
Post-race, immediately
Walk for ten minutes after you cross the line. Do not sit down. The legs will stiffen in seconds if you sit. Drink. Eat. Get the medal. Find your bag. Change out of wet kit within an hour if you can. Wet salt-air kit pressed against tired skin is a recipe for chafing you did not feel during the race.
The next 24 hours
Eat real food. Sleep well. A light walk the next morning is far better than complete rest. Do not run again for at least three to five days, depending on how hard you raced.
What to do this week
Print your checklist. Pin it where you cannot miss it. Practise your race breakfast on your next long run. Lay out a trial kit one Saturday evening. Visit the Freshworks Chennai Marathon event page for the year's logistics, browse the structured marathon training plans if you are still in the build phase, and use the STRIDD plan generator to align your taper with race day. Use our pace calculators to set honest pace targets, and browse Running Lab for more race-day writing.
Chennai is a marathon that asks more than it announces. Respect the humidity. Respect the salt air. Execute the checklist. Finish on the seafront with the arms up.