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Home / Training / Hyrox myths busted: Former GB distance runner lifts the lid on runners’ Hyrox assumptions

Hyrox myths busted: Former GB distance runner lifts the lid on runners’ Hyrox assumptions

With runners helping to drive the huge growth in Hyrox popularity, we put the five biggest running-Hyrox crossover myths to the test.

Hyrox athletes competing in a gym

With Hyrox welcoming a projected 1.2 million athletes across the 2025/26 season, more than double last year’s 550,000, a growing share of those entries are coming from the UK’s running community. Marathon and half-marathon runners are signing up in record numbers, with London, Manchester and Birmingham events selling out within hours.

But for every runner who arrives at the start line confident that their training will translate, plenty get caught out by the same misconceptions about how their running will hold up. 

To help participants separate fact from fiction, Matt Bond, former GB distance runner and representative for heritage British running brand Ronhill, puts the five biggest running myths around Hyrox to the test:

Myth 1: “If you can run a sub-90 half-marathon, you’ll be a strong Hyrox runner.” – FALSE

“A strong half-marathon time tells you how fast you can run when fresh. Hyrox running is done under fatigue, with your heart rate already elevated and your legs already loaded. Plenty of sub-90-minute runners struggle to hold 5mins/km in a Hyrox because they’ve never trained to run compromised. The runners who do well are the ones who’ve practised running tired, not just running fast.”

Myth 2: “The running portions are where runners gain time on everyone else.” – TRUE

“This one holds up, but with a major caveat. Runners absolutely have an advantage on the 8x 1km, but most squander it by going out at 5K pace on run one and falling apart by run five. Apply a proven marathon pacing strategy instead: even effort, slight negative split, save the surge for the final runs. The fastest Hyrox athletes in the world don’t run their first kilometre fastest, they run their last.”

Man running on a treadmill at a Hyrox event
Runners have an advantage on the 8x 1km treadmill but often go out too hard Credit: Mahmut Yilmax / pexels.com

Myth 3: “You should drop your mileage in the final weeks of Hyrox prep.” – FALSE

“This is the most common mistake I see in runners crossing over. They cut their running drastically in the final block to chase other forms of fitness, and arrive at the start line with their best asset blunted. Your running base is what compounds over months and years — protect it. Keep your long run, keep your tempo session, and build everything else around them.”

Myth 4: “Speed work is the most useful running session for Hyrox prep.” – FALSE

“Runners assume Hyrox demands sharp, fast running, so they default to track intervals. But the most valuable session for a Hyrox-bound runner is a short, easy run done immediately on tired legs. Twenty minutes after a hard effort teaches your body to hold form and rhythm when fatigued, which is exactly what the back half of a Hyrox demands. Speed work has its place, but it’s not the priority.”

Myth 5: “If you’re already running fit, you don’t need a structured running plan for Hyrox.” – FALSE

“General running fitness is the floor, not the ceiling. The runners who go from finisher to competitive are the ones who keep their running structured – long runs, tempo work, easy mileage – right through their Hyrox build. A proper half-marathon training plan, like Ronhill’s, gives you the framework to keep building your engine while you add everything else on top. Six weeks of structured running on top of a solid base will transform your race.”

Matt concludes: “Runners coming to Hyrox have a huge advantage; they just need to use it properly. As Ron Hill himself proved over 52 years of daily running, the athletes who thrive long-term are the ones who keep showing up for the work that builds the engine.”

Article by Laurence McJannet

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