TCS World 10K Bengaluru: Race Day Checklist & Logistics

Race day at the TCS World 10K Bengaluru is faster than you think. The gun goes off, you're through Cubbon Park, and somewhere around 6K you realise you went out too hard. This is a checklist for the runner who refuses to lose their PB to logistics. World Athletics Gold Label means the field is fast. The undulating Cubbon Park loop means even-paced legs are gold. The May humidity means hydration is non-negotiable.

Below is the full race-day checklist, broken into three windows: race week, race morning, and the race itself. Print it. Pack it. Run it.

Race week: the seven days that decide your finish line

You can't fix six months of training in race week. You can absolutely break it.

Monday-Wednesday: taper into form

One light tempo of 3-4K at 10K pace on Tuesday. Easy 5-6K runs the other days. Sleep eight hours, every night. Hydrate steadily through the day — 2.5 to 3 litres of plain water, plus an electrolyte serving each evening. Bengaluru in May is humid; arrive at the start hydrated, not chugging at the line.

Thursday-Friday: collect your bib

Expo timings are punishing. Don't go Saturday afternoon — the queue eats two hours. Take Thursday evening or Friday morning. Carry ID, registration confirmation, and a backup printout. The bib pickup is mandatory — there is no race-day pickup.

Saturday: shutdown day

20-minute jog with 4 strides. Lay out your kit by 6 PM. Eat your usual carb dinner by 7:30 PM. Pin your bib. Charge your watch. Sleep by 10 PM. Bengaluru race-day wake-ups are early — most waves start by 5:45 AM.

Race-morning checklist

The hour between waking and starting decides more races than people admit.

Wake and eat

3.5 hours before gun is the sweet spot. White toast, banana, black coffee, pinch of salt. If you're a regular oats-eater, oats works. The point is familiarity. Race morning is not for experiments.

Pre-race hydration

400-500 ml plain water in the 90 minutes before start. Sip, don't chug. One small cup of coffee 60-90 minutes out. Coffee earns its place in 10K performance — caffeine sharpens early-race pace control.

What to wear and carry

Light singlet, shorts you've trained in, race shoes with at least 60K already on them. Visor or cap for Bengaluru sun. Anti-chafe on the inner thighs, under-arms, and (if you wear a heart-rate strap) the strap line. Carry one gel only if you usually take one before a 10K — most runners don't need fuel for 45-55 minutes of racing.

Getting to the start

Cubbon Park area becomes restricted from 4:30 AM. If you're driving, park two kilometres away and walk in. If you're using a cab, drop at MG Road and walk through. Allow 90 minutes between leaving home and reaching your start pen. Bengaluru's metro starts late on Sundays — don't depend on it.

The race itself: kilometre-by-kilometre execution

The TCS World 10K route runs through Cubbon Park and central Bengaluru, with an undulating profile that rewards measured pacing.

Kilometres 1-3: settle, don't sprint

Goal pace plus 5-8 seconds per kilometre. The first 800 metres feel comically easy. Resist. The course narrows through the early Cubbon Park section, and weaving past slower runners costs more energy than the seconds you save. Drink at the first aid station even if you're not thirsty.

Kilometres 3-6: lock in

This is your goal-pace window. Cubbon Park's undulations start showing up. Run by effort, not pace — small rises mean small slowdowns. Your watch will lie about pace by 5-8 seconds because of tree cover. Trust your breathing rhythm and cadence.

Kilometres 6-8: hold

Form softens. Cadence drops. Shoulders rise. Cue yourself: 'tall, quick feet, hands soft.' The 10K race begins here. Take water at every station from 5K to the finish.

Kilometres 8-10: race

If you've paced honestly, you'll pick people off. Pick a runner 30 metres ahead. Catch them by the next kilometre marker. Pick another. The finish line on Kasturba Road comes faster than you think. Don't sprint until the 9.5K mark — most 'kicks' from 9K explode at 9.7.

Bengaluru's May climate and what it means for pacing

Bengaluru weather is the kindest in India for a May race. But 'kind' is relative.

Temperature and humidity reality check

5:45 AM Bengaluru in May runs 21-24°C with 70-85% humidity. Cool to the skin, hot to the lungs. Sweat doesn't evaporate as fast as it pours. Adjust your goal pace by 3-5 seconds per kilometre from your peak training tempo if you've trained in cooler conditions.

Hydration on course

Every aid station. Not alternates. Sip from the cup rather than gulping — chugging causes side stitches at 10K pace. Read the STRIDD heat and monsoon guide for sweat-rate testing before race day.

What to do if you cramp

Walk for 200 metres. Drink electrolyte if available. Reset breathing. Restart at survival pace. Trying to push through a cramp at 7K of a 10K usually adds two to three minutes to your finish.

After the finish: recovery and what to do next

The race ends, but the day isn't done.

The first 30 minutes

Walk for 10-15 minutes. Don't sit immediately. Drink 500 ml electrolyte. Eat a banana or fruit slice from the finish-line spread. Find shade.

The first 24 hours

Easy walking through the day. Eat protein and carbs at every meal. Sleep nine hours if you can. Skip alcohol — your body is dehydrated even if you've drunk a litre at the finish.

What to do next

Take three to five days completely off. Then two weeks of easy running. After that, build into your next race. Browse the STRIDD 10K plan library for your next block, or use the plan generator to build a custom plan. For target pace projections, the STRIDD calculators work. For more event guides, visit Running Lab.

Frequently asked questions

What's a realistic finish time for a recreational runner at the TCS World 10K?

Most amateur runners with 8-12 weeks of consistent training finish in 55-70 minutes. The Cubbon Park undulations and May humidity add 1-3 minutes to your peak training-tempo equivalent. If your best 10K is 52 minutes in cool weather, plan for 54-56 in Bengaluru. The goal is to run honestly, not to set the time you imagined in December.

Should I run with race shoes I just bought at the expo?

Never. Race shoes need 50-80K of break-in before they're race-ready. New shoes on race day cause blisters, calf cramps, and an unfamiliar feel that costs you 30-60 seconds. Run the expo with eyes only. Anything you buy is for training, not for the race that starts in 12 hours.

When should I take my last hard workout before race day?

Eight to ten days out. A 4K tempo at 10K pace with a 2K warm-up and cool-down. After that, two easy runs with strides and a 20-minute shakeout the day before. The final week is for freshness, not fitness. Fitness is already in your legs.

How do I handle the Cubbon Park undulations during the race?

Run by effort, not pace. On gentle rises, shorten your stride, keep cadence high, lean from the ankles. On descents, let gravity work but don't over-stride — over-striding shreds your quads for the finish. The undulations cost 3-6 seconds per kilometre net. Build that into your goal.

What gels or fuel should I take for a 10K?

Most runners under 55 minutes don't need on-course fuel. A small mouthful of sports drink or one quick gel at 5K helps if you've trained with it. If you've never taken a gel mid-race, don't debut one on race day. Eat your usual pre-race breakfast and hydrate well — that's enough fuel for 60-70 minutes of racing.

What's the warm-up routine before the start?

10 minutes of easy jogging, four to six 30-second strides at race pace with full recovery, and 5 minutes of dynamic mobility (leg swings, hip circles, ankle pumps). Start your warm-up 35-40 minutes before your wave. End it 10 minutes before — that's when you change into race shoes if you warmed up in trainers.