Article written by Coach Brant Stachel
You’ve crossed the finish line! Your race medal is around your neck, legs are wrecked, and emotions are everywhere. Relief, pride, disappointment, and sometimes even confusion — perhaps all of these emotions, all at once.
What you do in that moment defines what happens next. Some runners shut it all down. Others overanalyze every second of the race. The best approach? To reflect. Not with judgment, but with curiosity.
The final part of this article series, based on the IGNITE Method that I use when working with athletes, is about evaluating your performance so you can grow from every race, no matter what the clock says.
Why Reflection Matters
After a race, most runners fall into one of two traps:
- They over-critique, replaying every mistake until the joy is gone.
- They avoid, refusing to think about the race at all.
Both miss the point. The goal of reflection isn’t to punish yourself or ignore what happened. It’s to extract lessons that make you stronger for the next race.
Runners who consistently improve aren’t the ones who always crush it. They’re the ones who look honestly at what went right, what went wrong, and what’s worth doing differently.
How to Reflect After Your Race
Here’s a simple post-race process I use with my athletes:
Step 1: Cool down your emotions.
Don’t rush into analyzing your race performance right away. Let a few hours or even a day pass before you dig in. Emotions cloud objectivity.
Step 2: Ask yourself three questions.
- What went well?
- What could I have done better?
- What’s one thing I’ll change for next time?
Write the answers down. Keep it short, honest, and specific.
Step 3: Turn reflection into action.
Take those insights and translate them into something practical. If pacing was an issue, consider adding more progression runs to your next training cycle. If nerves got the best of you, spend a few minutes each week on race visualization.
Reflection isn’t just thinking; it’s planning forward.
Why Reflection Leads to Progress
The best athletes I’ve coached treat every race like a collection of data. Whether it’s a personal best or a disaster, it all counts. They use reflection as fuel.
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s progress. When you review with intention, every finish line becomes a starting line for the next phase of growth.
Wrapping up the Marathon Mindset article series: If you’ve been following along, you’ve walked through the full IGNITE Method with me. This is the method I incorporate into coaching my athletes to help them strengthen their mindset and mental focus before, during, and after race day.
Whenever your mindset falters, refer back to these steps to regain focus.
- Identify your mental barriers.
- Generate your best traits by defining your competitive identity.
- Nurture your pre-performance routine.
- Instill focus under pressure.
- Train your mental skills daily.
- Evaluate and grow after every performance.
Each step is simple but powerful when practiced consistently. Together, they form the backbone of running free — not just physically, but mentally. Because running fast starts with running free.

Brant Stachel is a mental performance coach, registered psychotherapist, and former professional triathlete. He has coached more than 25 athletes to international teams, including six with Olympic Trials-qualifying times. He works with endurance athletes, from high schoolers to Olympians, helping them train the mental side of performance through his IGNITE Method. Brant is the author of Fast & Free. He coaches runners through TeamRunRun.com and is a mental performance coach through CEPmindset.com.