The TSK 25K Kolkata is a December race that doesn't fit anyone's training plan and that is exactly its charm. Twenty-five kilometres is too long to wing and too short to taper for. The course loops through the Maidan and curves around Victoria Memorial, which is one of the more honest stretches of running ground in this country. Here is what the course gives you, what it asks for, and how to read it like a runner who has been around the block.
The course is a love letter to Calcutta's lungs
The Maidan is six hundred-odd acres of green in the middle of one of India's densest cities. Run through it at sunrise on a December morning and you will understand why people who left Kolkata thirty years ago still talk about it like they left it yesterday.
The route uses this geography honestly. It hugs the Maidan, swings past Victoria Memorial, and gives you views that no other 25K in India can match. The course profile is flat. The course feel is anything but.
What the course gives you
A pancake-flat profile. December air that sits in the high teens at the start. Crowds that know what running looks like — Kolkata has one of the older marathon cultures in the country and the supporters along the route show up like they mean it.
What the course asks for
Honest pacing. The flat profile makes it easy to go out hard. Twenty-five kilometres is just long enough for that mistake to land at kilometre 18 with a thud.
The 25K distance is its own animal
Twenty-five kilometres sits between a half marathon and a marathon. Most runners arrive having trained for either side and not the middle.
This matters. A 25K is not a long half. A 25K is a short marathon. Fuelling, pacing, and effort distribution all sit closer to the marathon end of the spectrum than the half.
The pacing rule
Take your honest half marathon pace and add fifteen to twenty seconds per kilometre. That is your sustainable 25K pace. Faster is possible only if you have specifically trained for it. The STRIDD calculators can convert your last race time into a 25K target without guesswork.
The fuelling rule
You will need to eat. A half marathon, most runners can fake without nutrition. A 25K, you cannot. One gel at kilometre 12. Another at kilometre 19. Sip fluid at every aid station from kilometre 8 onward.
Reading the loop
The course unfolds in three sections. Each has its own tactical answer.
The first nine kilometres
This is where the crowd is thickest and the body feels best. Hold back. The temptation to surf the energy and run a thirty-seconds-faster opening pace is the single largest cause of fade in this race. December cool tricks you. The flat terrain tricks you. Trust the math, not the legs.
The middle ten
Kilometres 9 through 19. This is the working stretch. Maidan loops, Victoria Memorial in the distance, and the field starts to spread out. Hold the pace honest. Eat. Drink. This is where the race is built.
The closing six
If you paced the first two thirds well, you finish with a kilometre or two left in the tank to drop. If you went out too hot, kilometre 22 is where it shows up. The pavement is unforgiving. The course is not.
December in Kolkata is a gift, mostly
The Bengali winter starts late November and runs through early February. December race mornings in Kolkata sit between 14 and 18 degrees Celsius at start, climbing to 22 by 9 am. By Indian race-day standards, this is generous.
What to wear
A singlet and shorts. Maybe sleeves for the first kilometre, discarded by the third. A cap if you sweat onto your eyes. Nothing more.
What to drink
Less than you think during the race because the cool air dampens thirst. More than you think before. 500 ml of fluid with electrolytes in the ninety minutes before the start. The STRIDD heat and monsoon guide covers cooler-weather hydration too, which is a more common cause of mid-race trouble than runners realise.
A small story about the Maidan
The first time I ran a sunrise loop through the Maidan I did not understand why people were so reverent about it. By the fourth lap I did. The way the mist comes off the grass at 6 am. The way the buildings on the perimeter — Eden Gardens, the Victoria Memorial dome — frame the open space. The way half the city seems to be out walking, jogging, doing yoga, or just standing there breathing it in.
You do not run the Maidan. The Maidan runs you. Use that.
Training for a 25K when no plan exists for it
Most runners default to a half marathon plan for this race. That is fine. With one modification — extend two of your long runs to 24 to 26 km in the four weeks before the race. The matching STRIDD half marathon plan is a sensible starting structure. For a 25K-specific build, the plan generator can shape one to your week.
Race-week logistics that actually matter
The TSK 25K Kolkata race page carries the bib pickup window, start corral details, and route map. Read it on Wednesday of race week, not the night before. Lay out kit Friday. Eat your tested breakfast Saturday morning to confirm it works on Sunday.
Travel-day runners should aim to land Friday at the latest. A travel day plus a race day is a poor combination. The matching STRIDD Running Lab archive has more on race-week logistics, recovery, and post-race fuelling.
Next step
Open the plan generator and build the eight to ten weeks of training that this race actually needs. Pace honestly. Eat on the run. Trust the Maidan to do the rest.