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Friday, October 16, 2015

Kona Pictures!

Bought the Finisher pix package, so here's a bunch from the race.  

Start of the bike riding through town.



Out on the Queen K early on.

Queen K coming back late in the ride.

Still passing riders the whole.  Worked my way near the front of the race, but still 15' out from the Age Group leaders.

Couldn't really enjoy the scenery in the heat.  

Just starting the run, trying to smile and enjoy it, making jokes.  But it's hot!

Pointing at TBC coach & athlete Jim Vance & Ben Kanute taking pro splits at the 1 mile mark.

Further down Ali'i just past the condo.  It's business time!

Out on the queen K near mile 15 or 16.  It's really, really hot.  But cool watching the pros go past the other way.

Finishing Chute!  The reward for a long hard day of racing!

Done!

Hey... I know those finish line catchers!  That's Alex Zanardi even happier to be done than me.   Incredible athlete!  He went even faster than last year. He sits just above the pavement.  They measured 120F at that height.... about the same as the inside of a race car I imagine.



Aerial shot of the swim start at the Pier in Kailua Bay.

Transition area.  I'm at the end of on the those racks in the narrow diagonal section in the middle.


Monday, October 12, 2015

2015 Ironman World Championships Race Report - 10/11/15

I did it!   I finished and put together overall given the conditions and my fitness, a solid performance.   Finishing time 9:40, 31st in M35-39, 2nd American in 35-39, top 100 Amateur finish.  Set a bike PR, and was very humbled on the run, watching about 70+ athletes pass me over the marathon.  But it was possibly my best race in terms of listening to my body and making good decision about nutrition and pacing.   My not so stellar 3:41 marathon was all I had yesterday.  I ran fairly even splits and just took what my legs gave me.  I think the bike took a lot out of me and the amount of fluids I needed to consume, took it's toll and I just didn't feel like I could go faster.   All in all, it was an amazing experience and a real privilege racing the best in the world.  The race it's summed up simply in one word HOT!

Pre-race
Got up around 3:30, the usual breakfast, bathroom, double check my stuff and wait for my wife to get out the door.  Head out around 4:20, ahead of the rush, nice and relaxed, plenty of time.  We get to the Walmart parking lot and realize I forgot the bike pump.  Ugh.... plan B.   We go back and get it and my wife drops me off a few blocks up Palani.  It's Kona, so your already a rock star for prerace.   You get personally tattooed, weighed in and off to transition.  Just in front of me at the scales is Rinny.   I didn't catch her weight.   I tip the scales at 172.5lbs.  Hey, at least I'll kick some serious ass on the downhills!  I get my bike all set, double check everything, grab my swim skin, goggles, cap and a bottle of gatoraide and check my pre-swim bag in.  I meet up with Adam Zucco and Scott Iott and wait.  It helps to calm the nerves to hand with people you know.  Pretty soon we're in the line and the pro men are going off.   We get into the water and work our way to the line.  It's real now!  I'm here on the start line at Kona!


Swim: 1:02:32
Decided to line up 2-3 rows back.  we were packed in.  barely had room to tread water.  the last 15 minutes took a long time.  They moved us forward a couple times which helped a little.   Cannon goes off and it was a melee.   A battle for any open water and swimming just to survive.   I found a little pocket and was able to relax and swim a comfortable pace.  The good news is I wasn't swimming hard and I didn't have to sight very much which saved my back.  The bad news is I had nowhere to go and still had to fight for my piece of ocean every so often.  Things cleared out with about a 1/2 miles left, or at least I finally was able to get wide to the pier side but stay on some hips.  Tried to speed up and stretch out my stroke and just bridged up to the next pack.  All and all, not a bad swim, I'll take it.  Up the famous steps.   Very excited to finish my 1st Kona swim.


T1: 3:09
Through the showers, get my empty T1 bag and to the changing tent, take off my swim skin and get my arms in my trisuit sleeves.  Swish my mouth out with water.  Off to the bike, helmet and glasses on and I'm off!


Bike: 4:50:20 (220NP/214AP/1.03VI... Stages Power Meter...probably 10-15% off)
Crowded, but not as bad as I envisioned.  But everyone is fast and going hard, so I sit it, let them go by and conserve energy using the descents and turns to my advantage.  I knew going in that I'm a little short on power to weight, but pretty aero.  So my plan was give up ground uphill and stay below 85-90%.  Ride even, then ride 65-75% downhill to keep passing and stay legal.  The end result was a very even ride, with a 1.01 VI in some segments, and 1.03 overall.  Right on target!  

I saw my wife and daughter cheering me on at the U turn at the end of Kuakini Hwy.  That was cool.  Then downhill, moving up, turn onto Palani, ride comfortably around threshold up that, then the turn onto the Queen K.   Time to get to business.

The next 40 miles or so was just trying to stay legal and ride my target watts and get nutrition going.  Just after the turn off of the Queen K, Dan Stubleski went around.   We chatted for a minute, and I rode with him for a couple miles, but eventually let him go.  He was just too fast.  I needed another 10 watts to ride with him.  We turned toward Hawi and were met with a descent headwind.   PERFECT!   This neutralized the climb for me. and I was able to move up rather than loose ground.  About 1/2 mile out I saw Adam Zucco, so I had probably rode about 1-2 minutes into him.

Now for the real fun....descending!   Crosswinds weren't too bad, so I could really get into a comfortable position, head down a little lower.  I rode steady and kept moving up.  It was getting thinner out there, so I figured I was finally getting near the front of the field.  First problem for me was receiving a bottle with the foil still over the top.  I only had 1/2 a reserve bottle of water, so I decided to unscrew the cap and remove the foil with my teeth.  The foil was over the cap, not the bottle opening, so Gatorade starts pouring out.  I do the wrong thing and drink like 2/3 of the bottle then dump the rest out.  Bad move.  It took me a while to get my stomach feeling OK again.  

Around 3 hours in I feel really good.  That last for about 40 minutes when the cross wind turns to more of a headwind and it's now showing 101F ambient.  It's hot, really hot.  Lets feel a little sluggish.  I east off a little the power just a little and decide to conserve.  There's not a lot of riders up ahead to catch, and looking at my computer, I'll be short of going under 4:40, so a 4:45-4:50 will be a solid ride and set me up for a good run.  There's a long gap after the last aide station.  Not happy about that.   I cruise the final turns into town.   I survived the Kona bike course.  I don't feel great, but not shelled either, so that's good....I guess.


Nutrition and cooling:
The most important part of any IM is managing nutrition.  Kona and other hot races add the element of cooling.  I estimated that I'd drink 2 bottles an hour or 9-10 18-20oz bottles during the race.  Yes, that's a lot!   It's about as much as I can absorb.  The good news is that I'd only needed 4 gels and a waffle to get to around 400 calories per hour since I'm drinking around 300.  

For cooling I dump cold water on me at every aide station.   Aide stations are frequent, usually every 8 miles or so.  They usually went like this:  Take a drink from the bottle of Gatorade I had between my arms and toss it, grab a water, take a sip, dump a bunch on me, take another sip and toss it.  Then grab a fresh cool Gatorade (verify that it's open), get back to aero and ROLL!  Out of all the aide stations I probably only missed 3 exchanges out of maybe 25 attempts total.  Cool water gets sprayed into the helmet vents, on my face, over my back and arms and chest.  It feels great and you feel cool for a couple miles at least.


T2: 3:09
It's hot.  It's really, really... really hot.  I'm not sure I've ever run in this much sun, heat and humidity.  Certainly not a marathon.   My legs don't feel real happy.  Not like in Madison, where I felt awesome.  I know immediately a couple things 1) this will be really hard, 2) I'm probably not running a PR 3) I will be happy just to avoid walking.  Its hot!

I catch Adam Zucco in transition.  I don't think he's feeling well.  But neither am I.  I'm hoping we can run together, but that doesn't happen.  Always cool when the bike racks are almost completely empty.  Great feeling.  The changing tent is really hot and damp.  I take a little time getting my socks on and straightened out, number belt on and I'm off.  I have my visor and GPS watch around my belt, so I take it off and remove those while I'm jogging.  

Run: 3:41:24 
I quickly find a very easy pace, get relaxed and get my HR down.   I look out and enjoy the view.  Heading out of transition onto the Epic Kona run or a classic, if not epic Kona day!   Embarrass the suck!   Up on Kuakini Hwy I see Tanya Zucco and Mark cheering!  Down on Ali'i drive I see Jim Vance and Ben Kanute taking pro mile 1 splits.  Give them a high five and take in the energy on Ali'i, then settle into a safe pace.  It's hot!  NO shade!

One aide station at a time, just keep a comfortable relaxed pace, HR in zone 2, cadence up.  1.5 miles to our Condo on Ali'i where my wife and daughter are.  Folks have hoses out, which is awesome!   Aide station have lots of cold sponges, and I take all all the cups of Gatorade, coke I can drink 3-4 sponges, and a few sips of water and a couple over my head.  All this time, I'm happy I have my sleeved suit to keep the sun off. It's thin, wicks great and really feels good overall.  I reach the condo and give my wife & daughter and big high 5!   I was going to stop and hug them, but there's traffic and I'm too excited to see them.

I'm walking aide station to get in nutrition.  I make a quick bathroom break to pee at mile 4.  I just stick to my pace despite all the runners flying past.  I just don't have to legs to go that fast today.  But I'm not quitting either.   At the 5 mile turn, feeling slightly better.  Mile 7.5 and I see my wife & daughter again, but this time too much traffic the other way to even high 5.   I tell them it's going to be a while, but I'm feeling slightly better.

Back into town and tons of energy gives you a nice boost up the first hill, run in any shade you can find, then onto Palani.  I look at my HR and decide that I'm better walking 15' pace then jogging 12' pace up the hill.  I see a few others making the same decision.  Then we turn onto the Queen K.... the real race begins.

Its hot, no shade, aide station just feel farther and farther apart.  The road is rolling, and the energy lab seems so, so far away.  Pretty soon here comes Frodeno with a solid 1/2 mile lead.  He's just stopped and walked at an aide station for more fluids.  I joke with another athlete that "hell if the leader can walk the aide station, then we're doing it right!".  Not far back was Raelert and the Tim ODonnell.  I cheered loud for Tim!  After about 10th place, it was total carnage.  A lot of pros walking in the last 5k.  I reach the 1/2 marathon mark and feel OK, but realize wow, this is a long way to go. About 15 mile mark I saw Daniel Bretscher and gave him a high 5.

I'm noticing now that after just a 1/2 mile after an aide station, the ice has pretty much melted and my suit is dry again.  I'm a little worried about not getting extra sun screen at T2.  My arms are a bit toasty already.  I take in a couple gels on this stretch and mostly Gatorade a few sips of coke and Redbull.  Finally I reach the turn to the energy lab, a welcome sight after a long hill.  The downhill is a boost but I'm thinking I need a port-a-potty break.  I make it to the turn at the energy lab, about 8 miles left.   I play it save and duck into the nastiest port-a-potty I've ever been forced to use.  Better ot stop for a minute than risk the alternative.  At this same time, little do I realize that the timing mats are messed up and it looks like I might have DNF'd.

I step out after doing my business and it's now overcast!   OMG, it feels like 20F cooler.  My GPS watch later confirms a 10F drop in a short time.   After the stop it's a climb back out of there and on to the Queen K again and a long downhill.  My legs feel better, my energy is good, cadence picks up, I'm running to best I have all day. I have fatigue, but I'm ready to tackle the last 10k.  I pick up the pace and see 7:30 here and there, my original target for the race).  I'm counting down the miles now.... 5.4, 4.2, 5k to go and we climb the very last hill!  I pump my fist, as I know it' all downhill from here.  I kick up the pace and try and enjoy the last 2 miles.  1.5 miles down Pilani one last time, long straight on the Kukakini Hwy, soak in the cheers.  Right turn on some street I can never remember, down a hill again, flying to Ali'i into the last 1/2 mile.   Ali'i is lined with people and your a rock star rolling to the finish.  Time to really enjoy the moment, think about how you'll hit that ramp and celebrate, no need to sprint out that last position, you're nowhere near the top 5 (there were actually 3 guys within 20 seconds of me in my age group up the road).  I give some high 5's.  This is why you trained so hard, put in so many miles, given up so much time and energy... for this moment.  I am a Kona World Championship Ironman!

Finish Time: 9:40:33  31st and 2nd American in M35-39.  Top 100 amateur.

As a bonus, the finish line catchers are Facebook friends Susan Mcnamee and Jessica Baxter!   Super cool.   Just behind me at the finish line is Alex Zanardi, Age 48, without any legs, totally crushing it!  Amazing athlete!  I'll have to print off a finish line photo and send it for an autograph.

No a lot else to say.  I'll do a follow-up with pictures in a week or so.

Overall I'm really happy with my performance and how I managed to day.  I feel like that was the best race I could put together on that day.  You never go into a race looking to run 20' slower than your best, but you take what your given.  I look back and I don't see how I run faster.  It simply wasn't there, or I wasn't adapted enough to the heat to tolerate it.  But I feel like I can walk away from Ironman for a couple years having accomplished so much.   Qualifying in my 1st attempt and then showing up to race, not just to finish and giving it what I had, but still racing smart.

As a bonus, less than 24 hours later, one of the 1st clients I started coaching qualified for Kona!!!   He's made incredible improvements in just the 12 months I started working with him.  I'm super proud!  I know he has potential to get even faster and really tackle this brutal event.

Thank you everyone, especially my family for all the support the last 2 years on this journey.

...pictures coming soon.



Friday, October 9, 2015

Kona Pre-race - Final Thoughts

Phew!  What a journey.  I'ts been a cool experience here training and trying to soak in the whole week while still doing some family stuff.  Been to several beaches playing in big waves, the seahorse farm, chocolate factory.   I swam at the pier every day Monday through Thursday.  I have 2 good swims, a short swim and, 1 very scary one in really bad chop.  I seems to be swimming straight and my stroke feels pretty good.  No idea where my speed is, but I'm confident I can get into a good groove and stay relaxed but still post a good time.

The bike is my weapon!  I have no doubts.  My early strategy is to give up ground up the hills to stay legal, they use my extra 8-10lbs and aero to roll past downhill without having to put in surges.  Then from Hawi back, stay on nutrition and let myself get stronger and put in some time.

I think I'm acclimating well overall.  I sweat like buckets when I'm warm but down feel overheated and my stomach seems to be OK.   But I'll have to feel that out for nutrition.

For the swim I think I'll line up maybe 2nd row and let everyone go ape-shit and just sit back and enjoy the draft.  Then after the turn, find some good hips to swim on and just cruise the way back.  Sight as little as possible, swim straight, swim smart.

On the run, I know that I'm not going to run a sub 3, so I'll set a cap around 7:10 and just go with it, stay relaxed and watch my HR.   The 1/2 mile I want to try and run just 7:30 pace and get my legs under me, rather than dig a hole early on, but we'll see.  The BIG GAMBLE for me is using my A6 race flats.  The rationale is they drain better and I run with better economy (faster turnover) and being lighter I hope my hamstrings and hip flexors hold together longer.   Downside is potentially more fatigue from less cushion.  But I'm just not happy with how my Clifton 2's feel.  Hey, it's a race.

Otherwise I want to just enjoy the event, enjoy the day.

Wish me luck!   Ironman #2 here I come!

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Weekly Wrap-up.... From Kona! 10/06/15

4 days out now from the big day.  What they say is right.  There is an energy here different than and other IM.  It's an assembly of very best long course athletes in the world.  The course is perfect, in that it's the opposite of what's become popular, flat, fast courses with wet suit legal swims.   This is a deep water ocean swim, a exposed, hot, humid windy bike course with rolling hills in what you might call a tropical desert.  Surrounded by lava rock with the ocean on one side and the looming Manu Kea on the other.

My list of pro and celebrity sightings so far includes meeting Pro Tyler Butterfield at the airport.  On my first OWS I met Rachel Joyce by the showers.  While having dinner Bon Babbitt was at the table behind us and Alex Zanardi rolled past on his hand cycle.  Staying in the spare room at our condo this week is Ben Kanute, one of team USA's top Olympic hopefuls for Rio in 2016.  He's here training for a race in Korea at the end of the month, meeting folks and learning what Kona is all about.

For me, it feels like a big training camp with a race at the end of the week.  It's hard not to go ride the whole 112 mile course, go for a longer run up into the mountain, or swim for a hour in the ocean.  But you have to stick relatively close to your plan.

How is the heat?   Wind?   It's humid, very humid.  It's not really that "hot".  This isn't Houston on an August afternoon.  The sun isn't as bad as I expected.  The heat isn't quite as bad as I expected and the winds are strong, but not that bad either.  However, doing a IM in them is different, and I haven't been up to Hawi where its windier.  For myself, I think I'm going to do very well in the heat.  I'm looking forward to the challenge.

Just 3-1/2 days or training left on this 2+ year journey!

By the numbers:
Swim: 3h01m, 13,287y
Bike: 6h32m, 130mi
Run: 4h03m, 31.9mi
TOTAL: 13h48m
TSS: 873

Not sure if I"ll have a post pre-race or not.


Sunday, September 27, 2015

Weekly Wrap-up - 9/27/15

Last bigger week of training done!  Into the final stretch.  Including a travel day and bike check on Friday, I only have 10 days of training left.  27 sessions (yes I believe in frequency in taper) give or take.  Race week is a little bit tentative.  I just want to get in a couple longer ocean swims.  a short run most days and a few descent rides....probably just tagging along with the other TBC coaches & athletes I imagine.  Most of them train more volume than me so I'll have to watch myself a little and not get carried away.

On item of note.  Going back a year, I had planned on easing back swim volume once weather got nice outside for riding, then ramping it up a little right before the race.  It seems to have worked overall.  We'll see how it plays out in the race.

This week went well overall.  Some solid runs, rides and swims.  I met with a local swim coach and had him consult on my stroke mechanics.  He made a few suggestions and they seem to have helped.  Mainly it helps me swim straighter. I'm consistently swimming 3-4s faster per 100m.  Feeling pretty good.

As I did last year, more of my rides were indoors with the days getting shorter and being paranoid about crashing or getting hit by a car.  Plus it's easier to do more precise higher intensity workouts.  Lastly, it's ideal for heat acclimatization.  Acclimating seems ot be working well.  I've overdressed on a couple runs and my longer ride today and really never felt overheated.  After the long ride today it was 72F, lower humidity, but I was wearing a heavier long sleeve cycling jersey with base layer, skull cap, leg warmers and wool socks.  I was warm, but not overheated.   What I did notice was that earlier in the ride, I could tell that my body was drawing blood to the surface of my skin, which drew blood from my stomach.  It didn't feel great.  As such I eased off a little and waited to eat.  I think in Kona, blood will pool in the arms from the swim, then add to that blood going to the surface of the skin, and pretty quickly your PM might say 75%, but you're actually at an intensity equal to 80-85%.  SO if you ride closer to 80%, you are now up into Z4 above 90%.  That means your burning matches fast.

By the numbers:
Swim: 3h21m, 14,591y
Bike: 10h06, 204mi
Run: 5h14m, 43.3mi
TOTAL: 18h41m
TSS: 1126TSS
ATL (9/28): 151.7
CTL: 141.6
TSB (9/28): -10.1

Next Post from KONA!

Monday, September 21, 2015

Weekly Wrap-up 9/21/15

Last day of summer, 1st day of Fall...or maybe it's tomorrow.  Whatever. It was 45F this morning, so it feels like Fall.  All that means is starting next weekend, I'll be bundling up and sweating it out here soon to compensate.  No fans on the treadmills at my gym, so that helps.  Honestly, I seem to do OK when slightly overheating on the run and bike.  HR goes up a little, but as long as I mentally stay focused, I'm OK.

Phew!  Almost There!   Somewhere between stressed with everything going on, excited, and nervous.  That 2.4mi non wet suit open water ocean swim with 1500 other elite males in my wave, has me a bit intimidated.  But like any race, you just get out there and put one arm in front of the other.

Last recovery week, and now headed into a solid week of training to start "TAPER".   Remember, the term, taper refers to a reduction in something.  So this week will be slightly less than the average of my last build.  I'll also try and front load the week slightly as well... if I have the time.  I started off well with a solid swim.  Felt good, pace was only OK, but I enjoyed having energy and motivation.  My target for the week is around 17:30-18:00 hours having average 18h40m the previous block.  Average TSS was 1100.  So targeting 1050, is about right.  I'm playing just a little catch-up, or rather tapering a little "late" was my base wasn't quite and big as ideal back in April-June.  No real excuse.  Just hard to fit it all in with everything going on.  Harder to get motivated this year.

This week have a little bit of a swim focus.  Increasing frequency.  I'm going to meet a swim coach on Wed. to look at my stroke and help me dial in a few elements.  Not looking for a major change, but I know that when I'm "ON" I'm swimming 3-4s/100scm faster!   That's a lot!  That's may 2:00 at Kona... like going maybe 58-59:00 and having a great swim vs. 1:01-1:02.  Should be interesting.  It's the 1st time I've done this.   Leave no stone unturned...right?   Wish my weight management had that same philosophy.... it's been more like "leave no fridge full of food".   I'll be racing around 167-169.  About 3lbs heavier than IMWI last year and 7lbs heavier than Kansas last June where I had my best run ever.  But I'm having my fastest bike splits ever and overall hitting the tape faster.  So maybe it's not so bad.

I ran 5.5 miles on the treadmill and cruises at 6:00 pace @ 160bpm.  Slower than in the past, but no fans.  I'm definitely not running like last year, but I get the impression my endurance is better.  Yesterday I went for a harder ride, and ended up averaging 24.6mph @ 256w NP in training set-up.  Felt pretty good.  HR was hovering around 150bpm.  So solid high tempo.  Not sure I recovered quite enough this week, but I'll make up for that in Kona.  Really easing off the last few days.  

Other items on the checklist:
I have a bike case - thanks to Jeff Yeager.  I think he said "this is the closest I'll ever get to Kona".   Have hope... there's Legacy slots!  Or you can just keep aging up.  Great guy and a MSU grad, so all the better.

New Chain and another new tires ordered.  I lost track of the miles on each chain I have, so I decided to just order another one.  I'll bring the take-off tire to Kona just in case.  But best ot have new rubber.  Front tire is almost new

Wow... 12 days and I'll be on a plane headed there!  The countdown begins!

By the numbers:
Swim: 2h43m, 10,280y
Bike: 6h18, 120mi
Run: 3h37m, 29.5mi
TOTAL: 12h18m
TSS: 739


Monday, September 14, 2015

Weekly Wrap-up 09/14/15

And with that, I wrap up my build for Kona.   Phew.  It's been a long road, but it's been a blur all at the same time.  I'm not exactly where I wanted to be.  I'm a few lbs heavier than I'd like, but not point in dwelling on that. I've proven in my last 2 70.3's that I can put together solid races regardless.  Consistency, specificity and being smart about pacing goes a long way.  

This last 7 days was one of the harder stretches I've done all year.  Mainly because i pushed my long ride form last week into Monday, and that just made the whole week a little bit harder.  By the time Sunday rolled around, I didn't have much zip in the legs, but I gave it what I had and put in a solid long ride.  My last ride over 4 hours and 200 TSS.  This might have been my first 300+mi week biking since last summer.

So the last 4 weeks looks like this:

Recovery Week - about 55-60% the volume of this week.
Peak Week 1 - about 80% of the volume as this last Build week, so not an easy week.   Recover most of the fitness lost this week recovering. I start some heat acclimatization at the end of this week.   Some overdressing sweat fest ugliness.  
Peak Week 2 - about 80% of the previous week above.  This  week gets front loaded a little since I'm traveling that weekend.  Intensity increases just a little on average, but overall training load drops.
Race Week!   Progressive taper.  I'm not sure what my workouts will look like in Kona, so it will be a day by day affair.  Most noteable is that my TSB will be positive for a full 6-7 days prior to the race.   In a "B" race its' only 2-3 days.

I've had some better swims lately.  Good timing on that.  It gives me a little fresh motivation getting in the water and feeling descent.  My plan is to do a small swim focus the last couple weeks.  It's a compromise I'd been looking at as I needed to reduce overall training volume this year.  I've also reduced the bike volume just a little.

Where do I think I'm at compared to last year?  I've said it before, but my main improvement isn't fitness.  It's been pacing well and aerodynamics.  I figure that if I rode IMWI now at the same power output, I'd ride about 10-12 minute faster. I think I'm a stronger runner, with more consistent mileage under me.  But I'm not any faster.  Maybe a little slower, but I hope on long course I can hold my mechanics longer and pull off a solid time even in the heat.

The real wild card is the heat.  However, I've done 3 hotter races this year and overall I can say it wasn't a major factor.  I don't think I would have run much faster in cooler weather.  I feel it, but I don't let it consume me or fill my mind with negative thoughts.  I focus on what I can control.  That's all you really can do.

By the numbers:
Swim: 2h02m, 8804y
Bike: 15h22m, 312mi
Run: 5h30m, 44.5mi
TOTAL: 22h54m
TSS: 1210


Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Des Moines Tri Race Report and Weekly Wrap-up

RACE REPORT:

Lets preface the report by saying that I went into this one knowing it would be a "C" race and I wouldn't have great legs.  It really wasn't on my radar at all, but we happened to be going to Iowa to visit family and a friend that works for PEM threw a free entry at me and a free place to stay downtown.   So WTH, why not, free training race right?  I would have Sat. off for travel and Friday wasn't too heavy, though it had some intervals and my legs were feeling the previous 10 days of training at that point.  I also have been in the long course mindset, so normally making myself slow down rather than go fast.

I think you're all seeing where I'm going, the race report will be a long list of explanations and excuses. It is what it is.  I like to be honest about why I did or didn't perform 100%.  I also want to learn from my mistakes and understand what happened.  What made having a mediocre effort harder to swallow was that 1) there was prize money and I finished 6th (1st loser...haha) 2) 5th place passed me after making a wrong turn 3) I mentally checked out and thought I was in 7th or 8th place and way out of money. 4) I thought prizes went deeper than 5 places as they had in the past.  5) I missed an opportunity to almost literally run alongside the best runner in the sport of triathlon.  I still say Marinda Carfrae pass the opposite way, but much cooler to follow the legend right out of T2.

With all that, I was optimistic as usual and went into it excited that I could knock out another strong performance, at least on the bike.  My goals were to test out the sleeve suit with a swim skin.  I picked up a ORCA swim skin on sale and this would be my 1st time wearing it.  I knew I'd have a slow transition, but it was worth it for the practice.

I arrived at transition very early, as there was no traffic and the drive from my friends apartment to Grays Lake was all of 8-10 minutes....should have slept another 30 minutes.  I got set up, chatted for a few minutes with some racers around me, and with a long line at the portajohns, I went ahead and walked around to the swim start to use the bathroom there.   I carried a large bottle of sports drink and a gel.  I chatted with 3 other racers there early and pretty soon others started to arrive.

For warm-up I swam out to the 1st buoy and back.  The water was warm, murky, my back was stiff, but I felt fast in the new swim skin. I met up with my my friends that drove up to watch.  Their daughter is the one that works for PEM.  We watched the mens race go off, and I headed to the swim corral.  It was a small elite wave field.  But I figured there were some fast swimmers, but took my chances and lined up near the front.  Here I made my 1st mistake and lined up to the right.   I pull to the left, and the 1st turn in to the right, so I was right on the race line near "pole position".   Overall though I'm pretty relaxed.  Nothing to lose or really gain in this race, just enjoy the morning and put in some good work and race!

Gun goes off and it's pretty frenzied.  I get his in the goggles pretty quick and they take in a little water.  Great, can't sight as well now.  I stay relaxed and just keep the turnover high and pull strong fighting to a place to put my arms.  I try and go right, and there's someone there...left is the same.  I ease off and I start getting run over.   I'm pretty much boxed it, so I just try and stay right on someones feet.  All of these folks are prolific kickers too...lucky me.  I'm stuck and just hang in there.  I'm not redlined, but I'm swimming harder than I want for sure.

1st turn thins things out and I find a perfect spot but the the guys I'm following is kicking like it's an open 800M and I'm getting drowned trying to stay there.  I finally keep pulling to the left and end up on my own a little off course....as usual.  I try and stay within the general draft of that group, but they slowly pull away.   I have a feeling that's a 21xx high, 22 low group I'm letting get away.  In hindsight, it might have been worth it to push a little harder.  OTOH, I knew that I'm have a slow transition with this suit so getting comfortable mattered more.   It felt like a steady breeze was coming across us and sighting was hard going into the sun.  i put in a few more efforts to close the gap, but was mainly focused on going straight.  The last 400y I feel like I found my stroke a little, but too little too late.  The swim felt a little long and the finish finally arrived.

Up the hill and into transition.  I got the swim skin zipper open on the 2nd try and started peeling down and finding my sleeves.  This isn't easy while running, even slow.  I end up taking a few seconds at my spot getting the last sleeve on and trying to straighten out the suit a little.  It's not fast... at all.  I lost maybe 45" in transition.

I get on the bike and HR is really high, my leg are pretty flat and I try and just settle in and focus on staying aero, lean on my advantage.  Overall I feel a little bloated and just can't find any power.  I ease off to Zone 2 power but it's not helping much.   the good news, is at Zone 2 watts, I'm not losing much ground and still passing folks.  I get up to tempo for most of the ride and near threshold up the hills, but it takes a focused effort the whole time.  I end up riding 79% or 240W NP, I think 235AP.  SO very even, but weak.  As I mentioned after Steelhead, I suspect my real power numbers are at as much as 10% off due to R/L imbalance.  Hard to say.  No longer a big fan of single sided meters as I've become more serious about aerodynamics and using Bestbikesplit.com to compare courses and performances.  Bottom line, I rode as hard as I could, but legs weren't there, but I still rode sub 1:00 for the 1st time ever in an Olympic. So I'll take it.  I did have fun in a few turns and accidentally overcooked one a little, even possibly sliding the rear around just a tad.

Rolled into T2 and decided that I "earned" socks, meaning I was not longer racing and just ready for a 10k tempo run and blisters weren't going to help me in my last few weeks of Kona prep.  2 guys passed me in transition and i set about running nice and steady.  My stomach continue to feel a little bloated.  Legs felt OK.  HR was just above Tempo, but not too high.  Breathing was pretty relaxed and I put on a smile and went about the business on finishing up the race.

Most noteable was watching Haskins and Rinny fly past the other way.  Going much faster than I was.  No catching them.  I slowly reeled in 1 athlete.  We both figured were were in like 10th place way out of it.  We chatted for a minute and I continued on trying to pick it up just a bit.  I went out around 6:30 with a goal of starting out at that pace and running 6:00 the last 5k miles.  SO out around 20:00, back around 18:45-19:00.  I haven't checked my file, but what actually happened, was I went out around 20:30, OK there, but never sped up.  I also added 1/4 mile detour making a wrong turn before volunteers stopped my from cutting 1.5 miles off the course, crossing a timing mat and probably getting DQ'd.  Oops.

I mentally checked out at that point.  IT was getting harder to run tempo and I was still feeling bloated but also felt thirsty and noticed the heat.  I kept a steady pace and slowly reeled back in the guy in front of me.   I was only 100y back at the base of the hill, but I had a decision, bury myself and out sprint him, or just cruise up the hill and live to fight another day.  It was mentally hard because I rarely if ever pass at the opportunity for a finishing kick.  It's a habit I started back in high school cross country 23 years ago, and continue today...even in long course.

Final time 2:08, run split 42:xx.  My slowest Olympic run in maybe 7 or 8 years.  But I will say, it was my easiest Olympic run ever, easiest bike split and not my hardest swim.  I give it a "C" for effort, "B+" for having the fitness to go fast without going hard if that counts for anything.

I'm keeping my eye on the prize, and looking forward to Kona.  The bike tells me what pace I can ride at just above IM watts.  I can cruise on moderately hilly terrain (equivalent to 4000ft uncorrected elevation for 115 miles)  IMWI in comparison is around 7500ft uncorrected) with a descent wind and lots of turns.  On ward and upward!   Last week of solid training!


The Positives!!!
1) I didn't crash on the bike
2) 3rd fastest amateur bike split, 19th overall.  Not bad for just over IM watts.
3) I didn't injure myself running too hard or sprinting to the line up that hill for 5th
4) I overall had fun and got to meet and chat with a lot of great triathletes
5) I had a good washing machine swim experience and survived
6) I swam mostly straight
7) I got a solid workout it
8) I ran almost negative splits.
9) I managed the heat well and mentally feel like it wasn't the primary factor
10) I learned about drinking too much pre-race in warm weather.
11) I rode under 1:00 for the 1st time ever.


BESTBIKESPLIT!
Putting my actual wattage in there, it predicted my time within 2 seconds.  Spot on a gain.  Maybe just luck.  But I plugged in 72% for Kona with the weather tool, and it spits out a 4:41.  At 75% I get 4:36 with 258TSS.  That's still easier than I rode at IMWI.  Actually, the same TSS would be a 4:30 @ 0.79... basically a pro level ride.   But I think you need to factor in the heat and come up a little lower and the wind gusts will slow things down.  I think hitting the same number of calories may prove challenging as well.  I want to have a complete race, not a killer bike split then blow up on the run.  I figure the wind is about 5' deduct from that estimate.

TRAINING WEEK:


The training week otherwise was pretty routine in terms of just fitting workouts in.  Nothing noteable, but good consistency, focusing on run consistency as usual.  Really light on swimming and biking.

By the numbers:

Swim: 2h08m, 9,350y
Bike: 6h29m, 139mi
Run: 5h59m, 49mi
TOTAL: 14h39m
TSS: 919

Not a high volume week, as expected with a day off in there and a sprint race on Sunday, but you have to view it as a 21 day stretch, rather than in 7 day blocks.  the middle 7 days are soft, but the 1st 7 and last 7 are pretty solid.  It's going to be a challenging week, but hopefully it's pays off come race day.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Weekly Wrap-up 08/31/15

Week 1 of my final build for Kona done.  It went great.  I had my best long ride in a LONG time.  4h49m @ 0.73IF, averaging over 23mph until the wind turned and I bonked hte last 30 minutes.   I learned 300 calories per hour at the end of a build week doesn't cut it (glycogen stores not topped off like in taper) for rides over 4 hours.  My excuse, I didn't feel like carrying a couple more bars and didn't want to stop and by any sports drink.  Very happy with my pace.  I was a flat route, but that includes stop signs and a couple bathroom stops, road helmet, 4 bottles, box rims, but good...though worn... tires and latex tube on rear.  Lets felt great until I bonked.  Overall it was a huge confidence booster.  I haven;t had a lot of long rides this year and on most I fell apart pretty early on.  I felt like if I hadn't bonked I could have ridden tempo that last hour.

Running feels good.  I did step on a scale and I'm maybe 1lb heavier than last year, so I'm making progress overall, but the extra 2-3lbs will probably cost me 5-6' at Kona...maybe.  Then again, my energy levels should be more stable.  So it's hard to say.  I think staying cool, pacing well and being mentally strong will make the biggest difference.  IF you feel hot and you focus on the heat, then your performance will suffer.  It was moderately hot at Racine and I never focused on it and jsut held the pace my legs gave me.

Swim is still hit & miss.  I found a local swim coach that I might have take a look at my stroke and give a few pointers.  I can schedule a session through my gym.  Yes, it's a little late to make big changes, but I'm not looking for major changes.  I've swam faster this winter and one and off, but it doesn't quite "stick".  I think the 27xx I swam at Racine was my good stroke and I think that could translate to 59-60 at Kona which would set me up to clear traffic on the bike at Kona a little easier and sooner.  If I swim 1:01-1:03, I'll have to burn a match(s) to move up and avoid a drafting penalty.

Big scare this week was not having my tri bike for 6 days.  Headset was trashed.  Actually, it's been that way for I think 2-3 years.   No I'm not kidding.  I'm a little embarrassed about that.  But headset doesn't specifically slow me down.   So drive train, aerodynamics, tires tubes, on top of it.  So i was on my road bike all week, and in reality, probably rode a little easier, which wasn't so bad and it set me up for a great long ride.  I ended up then skipping the local Olympic distance race (was rainy anyway).

This next week I'm doing Des Moines Triathlon (formerly Hyvee tri).  A friend got me a comp'd entry and a couch to crash on.   It should be a great change to finally break 2 hours and ride under 60'.  I think my goal will be burying myself on the bike and see how many pros I can out split.  Then cruise a tempo run with a negative split around a 37-38.  Should be fun!  the challenge will be the logistics.  We're also visiting family in Keokuk, IA, so I go there first, then straight to Des Moines for packet pickup, then bike check, then dinner possibly with some Facebook friends.  It will be a C+ to  B- race.  I'm only 1-3/4 weeks into a block, but I won't have time for any workout on Sat. so it will be GASP!  a day off.  I think I only have 2-3 of those a year, usually after an "A" race.

Then one final week to get my fitness to a peak again and I'll taper.  To clarify, in a base, you raise your overall training load to that you hit a peak CTL for the season.   In a Build you do 2 things.  You train is a way that's more specific to your race, and you return your CTL to a point right at or just slightly higher than the peak CTL from the base period.   What you don't do, is try and hit a new peak.  In Build 2, you peak CTL might even be lower than in Build 1..especially if you're doing some 70.3's in a build for an IM.  You race yourself out of shape just a little, then use the build to regain that fitness.  But it's a fair trade as those races are great workouts, build your confidence, test your fitness and help establish pacing metrics and race predictions.

By the numbers:

Swim: 2h32m, 11,045y,
Bike: 9h53m, 209mi (mostly Road Bike)
Run: 6h09m, 49.8mi
TOTAL: 18h23m
TSS: 1169


SIDENOTE:  One of my athletes had a great day at Muskoka this weekend.  Did hit his stretch goals, but had a swim PR, comparative bike PR (that's one of the hardest bike courses of all IM's) with negative splits by power.  He ran faster than Maryland last year too and paced really smart, targeting negative splits, but faded in the heat.  

Also, a local female placed 2nd in her AG and 6th overall and should be headed to Kona next year.  She rode a 5:25!!! and had such a lead that a good but not fast 3:56 held off everyone behind.  Haven;t seen the final results to see how it all unfolded.  IM's website is severely lacking for to track competition effectively.


Monday, August 24, 2015

Weekly Wrap-up 8/17 & 8/24

Getting caught up once again.   I had wrapped up my "Build 1" block with another week of solid work after a short recovery from Steelhead.  I didn't quite hit the numbers I was targeting, but I put in some good consistent work.  I followed that up with a recovery week leading to my final build for Kona.

Wow, I can't believe I'm <40 days away from stepping on an airplane for the big island.  Couple thoughts on that.  1st, Steelhead & Racine proved to me that even if I'm a little heavier and a little behind in terms of training than where I wanted to be, or even where I think I was last year, the consistency of the last 5 years combined with good sense of pacing, seem to rule the day.  It seems close to the that it's a matter of having enough fitness, and knowing how hard you can go with what your legs give you that day.  I seem to manage solid races even when I'm a notch below my best in my training and how I feel on race day.  2nd, the final month is a little bitter sweet.  I'm closing a chapter in my athletic career.  I think the realities of balancing training, family and the fact that I'm 37 years old mean that in terms of peak performance, this is the pinnacle of my athletic career.  Perhaps 10-15 years down the road I can train with equal or greater volume if I have the hunger to perform, but I won't be as fast as I am now.  That sense of mortality creeps in just a little.

In my training these last few weeks I'll keep visualizing myself feeling strong, having a great race.  Having a solid swim and riding up to the front of the field with the best in the world.  Hitting the run relaxed, controlled, feeling strong yet light with a nice bounce to my step with a ringside seat to the pro race out on the road 10-15 miles up ahead for the men and I figure just 3-4 miles up to the women race.

By the numbers (8/10-8/16):
SWIM: 2h37m, 11,508y
BIKE: 10h56m, 234
RUN: 4h48m, 38.5mi
TOTAL 18h21m
TSS: 1061


By the numbers (8/17-8/23):
SWIM: 1h43m, 7,601y
BIKE: 7h42m, 150mi
RUN: 3h24m, 27.8mi
TOTAL 7h42m
TSS: 749


What's left:
2 Olympic distance "fun" races.  Those will pretty much be my "speed" workouts for the block.
3 Long rides between 4 and 5-1/2 hours
3 long runs of 14-16 miles (actually 2, since I did a long run this morning)
A little more swimming.... if possible

My focus is IM pace, with some tempo mixed in on the bike.  My medium and long runs, other than the OD races will be mostly z2 pace at IM intensity.  I say "intensity" because my pace in 90F, 80% humidity will be slower, but the intensity will be the same.  I think realistically I can roll a 7:25-7:35 pace and set a run PR and go just under 9:10 and even that is a stretch goal.  I have to be realistic about the wind on the bike and the heat.  But hey, why not dream a little.  I tend to perform on hard courses and tough conditions.

Sidenote: I'm finally "Ranked" having completed my 3rd race of the season.  I'm tied for 12th 35-39 nationally.  2nd (really 3rd, not sure why Dan Stubleski isn't ranked yet) in Michigan.   Corey Perez rocked Triple T, which always scores really high.   I'm just short of 100 points.  3 more shots at improving my point average. :)

If anyone has any questions on details of my training, race execution, etc, feel free to ask or e-mail...  coachmikegirard@gmail.com



Monday, August 10, 2015

2015 Steelhead 70.3 Race Report 08/09/15

Pretty cool to have a major Ironman branded race right in my new hometown.  I rolled out of bed at 4:30AM, took my time getting breakfast, doing final double checks, airing up the tires and rolling out of the house.   Its dark, but I've ridden this the 3 miles down the road to Jean Klock Park 20+ times before sunrise on training rides the last few months.  I know every all the big potholes and manhole covers.  Legs felt pretty good.  Z2 felt nice and easy.  I bypassed the long line of cars and rolled up to the line for transition.  I went through the usual checks and transition set-up.  I forgot rubber bands for holding my shoes but got a couple from a guy next to me in line.

6:30AM left transition and headed to the bathroom line then headed to the beach to meet up with the family.  Around 7:10 I got my wet suit on and warmed up for 5 minutes.  Water was on the warmer side.  Barely cooled you off.  It was going to be a warm swim.  Arms felt OK, but didn't have the same snap as Racine.  I got back in around 7:30, then headed to the line for my wave.  I think it was 14th out of 17 waves.  It was going to be 90 minutes of yelling on your left and dodging other competitors.   That's just how it goes at these events.  I get it, I understand the need to compress the race, but it makes things a little sketchy when you have riders going 15mph, riders going 19mph passing them, riders going 23mph passing that person and I'm the 4th one along doing around 28 mph.  I wonder if just going to 5 minutes between waves 6-17 waves would help resolve it.  That's only adding 10 minutes to the last wave, but it might make a pretty big difference.  That's another 1-2 yards on average between each person.  That sounds small, but it's pretty big when it gets congested.  It also means it will take another 5-10 miles for the faster age groups to catch some of the earliest waves.  It might however make lap 2 of the run more congested, but honestly, I'll take that trade-off.

None of this is possible without support from my family.  Love you guys!  My 6 y/o daughter had a blast at the beach.


Horn goes off, and I don't know what it is, but I swear that almost everyone hesitates for a split second and somehow I'm already 1-2 steps ahead.   I'll summarize the swim real quick.  I went too hard with all the dolphin diving and running, swam the 1st 300M too hard and never fully recovered.  I never found my stroke and while I swam straight and had a good time overall, it wasn't what I was hoping.  My sub 4 dream was already dead, but a sub 4:10 was a there as was maybe a sub 4:05.  Traffic on the swim wasn't terrible.  About typical.  The water was pretty calm so you could see most swimmers up ahead with plenty of time to maneuver.  SWIM TIME 31:01

I breezed through T1, hit the flying mount and got to work T1 TIME 2:22.  I managed my power output a little to catch my breath, relax and recover from the swim and T1.  By the time I reached the bottom of the long hill on the Blue Star Highway I was ready to roll.  Plenty of scary moments.  I took out a cone and went from slightly annoyed to downright agitated.  Much worse than Racine.  I think the light tailwind was the main reason.  It speeds up the slowest riders and creates more congestion.  Last year we had a headwind going out.  

When shoulder ended 12 miles in, there's some froze heaves and I hit it hard and lost my aero bottle.  It was a shock as I've never lost that bottle before.  But it was sweating as in high sight, I foolishly filled it with cold Gatoraide.  So now I just had my BTA bottle.  So hand offs would be more critical.   
After the turn East, the road got bumpy and folks were riding to the left to avoid some of the rougher patches.  I've ridden this route 4 times in the  last 2 months and honestly, this is stupid.  It's not much different.  If it's too bumpy, take some air out of your tires, sit up or use latex tubes, but please, please don't obstruct faster riders.   I still refused to cross the center line resulting in having to nail my brakes a couple times, and after yelling on your left 3 items in a row loudly, got cussed out.  My heart rate shot up, I put in some hard efforts to get around traffic.  I finally had to ease up a little.  A group of 4 riders rolled past me over the yellow center line.   We had just passed an official earlier, so I dropped back.  Not to be arrogant, but I knew I was faster, but was just having trouble with lap traffic...and I suspected they were riding over their head.  I sat back, but every time we can to a downhill or flat section I was in Z1 or coasting and rolling into the back of the group.  I passed them a couple times with some hard pulls, but every longer hill they caught me.   Finally as we turned back into a crosswind on a long flats section I made the pass stick and pulled away.  What I...and they didn't know, for what it mattered, or didn't matter, was that I was actually the leader on the road by over a minute at that point with Dan Stubleski, arguably the top amateur in the world at the IM distance, was 5 minute behind me in second.  I had a real race on my hands.

The last 25 miles I finally had mostly clear road and could finally get into a rhythm.   Unfortunately, so did Dan, and he put over a minute into me that last 40k, just like last year. A simple reminder that there are contenders and pretenders, and I was clearly put back in my place.  That guy is a machine.  But hey, I was 1st off the bike and out of transition by 5 seconds.  That lasted probably 200 yards (virtually), and the race was over at that point.   BIKE SPLIT 2:06:34 (within 60" of my BBS prediction).   

BIKE DETAILS | Division Rank: 1
SPLIT NAMEDISTANCESPLIT TIMERACE TIMEPACEDIVISION RANKGENDER RANKOVERALL RANK
36.6 mi36.6 mi1:21:481:55:1126.85 mi/h
56 mi19.4 mi44:462:39:5726.00 mi/h
Total56.0 mi2:06:342:39:5726.55 mi/h111

I should have this screenshot framed.  It will probably never happen again in a major race.



I struggled with my socks a little in T2.  Shorter ones would go on faster, but I like the long purple to to match my Race Kit and like the coverage and compression on my achillies.  T2 TIME 1:57

I came out of T2 and the inside of my quads and 1 hamstring were cramping a bit.  I kept easing off and just relaxed, tried to pick up my cadence and recover.  6:15-6:30 felt comfortable, my legs felt good, but not like Kansas last year, but a lot better than Racine.  I figured it might be another good race to try and roll some negative splits, so I cruised, took in as much fluids as I could, grabbed a gel then carried it to the 2nd aide station and ate it before getting some water.   Around mile 4, around came Dan, right on schedule.  I gave him a hard time about taking so long, asked him what his bike split was and he was gone.  

Lap 2 I tried to roll on the pace just a little.   I grabbed another gel at the same point and kept grabbing water, ice, Gatorade, red bull, coke, what ever was easiest to grab.  I hit about the 8 miles mark and realized this was it.  This was my last chance at a possible lifetime PR at the distance.  I wasn't getting any younger, I might not have course conditions at this event or be able to train at this level again for a few years, so it was now or never, time to suffer a little and take it home.   Hit the 10 mile mark and really started to focused.  Went up the hill on Benson Rd the last time and I knew it was all downhill from there.  I rolled on a it felt like 5:30 pace, but was barely 6:00-6:15.  Breathing was heavy and rhythmic, I was into threshold zone at this point... this was all I had left.  Hit the chute, did some math and knew I nailed a sub 4:10.  I got a small cheer form he crowd when it was announced I was from St. Joseph, MI.  I think it took the announcer by surprise to have a local guy place that high.   RUN SPLIT 1:26:09  OVERALL TIME 4:08:03.   I guess I should have run just a little faster and getting to 1:25 and 4:07....haha.   

Looks like I just barely ran negative splits.  Pretty happy with how I paced it overall.  It's a fairly hilly course and was a humid day. 

RUN DETAILS | Division Rank: 2
SPLIT NAMEDISTANCESPLIT TIMERACE TIMEPACEDIVISION RANKGENDER RANKOVERALL RANK
1.6 mi1.6 mi11:102:53:046:58/mi
4.6 mi3 mi19:103:12:146:23/mi
6.6 mi2 mi13:193:25:336:39/mi
9.6 mi3 mi19:223:44:556:27/mi
13.1 mi3.5 mi23:084:08:036:36/mi
Total13.1 mi1:26:094:08:036:34/mi222




This was one of those races that really makes you feel like your hard work paid off, yet at the same time, it makes you more hungry for more.  You an now taste that next level.   Riding that fast starts to make you dream a little.  I had gone into Kona knowing I was get schooled, especially on the run.  But now with 2 solid swim/bike splits, I'm thinking that I could ride my way to the front of the amateur race.... before I then get trounced on the run.  But it puts a solid time near the top 10 (AG) as a possibility if I can execute and race smart.  Either way it motivates me to put in a solid block of training and be as fit as I can when I set foot on the Big Island.  Being just a little arrogant, over confident and a bit cocky has worked pretty well so far the last 2 years.   Why stop now.  Just keep swinging for the fences!

Congrats again to everyone that finished and Dan Stubleski for yet another dominating performance!!!

Training Update 08/10/15

Before I post my Racine Race report, I have a few week of training summary to post up here.  I know it's always more art than science and a matter of listening to your body when you recover from a long course race, then try and turn around, get some fitness back and race another less than 4 week later.  The build wasn't ideal and a lot of family commitments took priority, but I came into Steelhead ready to race and set some PR's.

Looking back, it's not the build I wanted, but I think the important take-away, is that I mostly cut out recovery rides and swimming, so my run consistency was great and my key bike rides were there.  So in terms of "value" I hit the mark.  I think mentally and physically, a slight drop in training load wasn't a bad thing after a long season of training to this point.  Psychologically, having a great day at Steelhead will pay off come Kona and that final block of training.  that being said, this was the lightest 4 week period of training I've done since the Fall.

By the Numbers:
7/20-7/26
Swim: 2:00/8804y
Bike: 6:42/145mi
Run: 3:22/27.6mi
TOTAL: 12:04/767TSS

7/27-8/02
Swim:2:06/9244y
Bike: 7:37/168mi
Run: 5:54/48.2mi
TOTAL: 15:37/994TSS

8/03-8/09 (including the race)
Swim: 2:42/11866
Bike: 6:56/165
Run: 4:29/37.9mi



Monday, July 20, 2015

2015 Racine 70.3 Race Report

Racine 70.3 - 07/19/15

Pre-race
Arrived very early so I wasn't rushed and to avoid parking issues.  I made sure to have a couple bottles of water & sports drink to carry to the beach for the 2 hour wait for my wave's start and stretched out my pre-race nutrition accordingly. I waited until about 40 minutes before my start to get on the wetsuit and get it so I wasn't standing around sweating in it.  The water was 61F and after the initial shock it actually felt almost perfect with the warm and humid air.  

SWIM
I lined up at the front anticipating a sub 30 swim.  Minimal contact and slotted right between 2 guys and swam strong but stay well under control right near threshold and quickly eased back to a tempo pace.  Neither pulled in front and I didn't want to drop back and have the pace slow down, so we swam together.  I lost them just after the 1st turn and in some lap traffic.  I did possibly my best job of sighting and swimming straight ever in a OWS.  It paid off with a 70.3 distance swim PR by almost 1 minute.  Looking at the Pro times, it was a little fast, but not much, a pretty honest swim course.  2 take-aways for me... and these are pretty obvious, but worth repeating as they have a greater impact than swim fitness itself. 

I have fast swims when I:  
1) Swim straight!   I did a much better job of sighting and sighted much more frequently.
2) Swim along side someone else
3) Get into a rhythm really soon, relax, stretch out my stroke and can pay attention to my catch and timing.

Last note on the swim.  The last 100 meters was in shallow water.  I opted to dolphin dive and swim until it was below my waist.  That seems to be much faster than those walking around me.  I hit hte beach and saw 1:30 on the clock so i know I came in under 28!  Swim PR...nice!

T1
I was careful not to run too hard in the sand off the beach.  Its' easy to be pushing well over threshold at that point.  Long run through transition.  AWA rack was near the exit so a short run with the bike.  No shoes on the bike for this race, so I elected to put my shoes on, then run the 30 yards out from there.  I haven't run in my cycling shoes in almost 10 years.  I find it funny because I fumble more getting clipped on on a flying mount, that I do sliding my feet into shoes held with rubber bands.... oh well.  Just another reason I'd like to see an Open Elite wave that goes off maybe 10 minutes after the female pros with the same drafting and other rules as the Pros.  Maybe move the Male pro start forward 10 minutes.  But I know that presents some challenges.

BIKE
My legs felt great.  I settled in around 80-85%, surging a little as needed to get through traffic.  I focused on holding a good aero position as best I could, but I had to stay up a little more than I like so I could see down the road further.  As anticipated, the roads were a little rough in sections, but excellent in others.  A real mixed bag.  I dropped my tire pressures just a little and of course run Latex Tubes.  I ran around 98 psi front on narrow rim older Zipp 404's and 95psi rear on a wide rim Firecrest 808.  I'm running around 167lbs right now (It shows on my run split compared to Kansas last year).  My goal in this race was to really lay down a solid bike split, see if my position improvements this winter paid off, push my limits, but still ride within my fitness.  Just feel it out.   There's a lot of turns on this course.  OF course every one has me passing someone at a 10mph+ closing rate.  I called out my presence deliberately.  I probably sounded like a jerk a little, but if it keep everyone safe and allows me to race, then it's ok in my mind.  though I'm not sure most triathlete know what "inside" or "outside" means.  It refers to the position in a corner.  If I yell "inside", and it's a let turn, I'm passing you on the left and taking a tight line.  If it's a right hander, I'm taking a wide line and praying the lapped rider holds their line.  I overcooked a few turns but recovered ok.

Then IT happened.  The one thing that always goes wrong in a race.  Around mile 15 on a left hand turn, I rubbed my elbow pad switching from aero to sitting up for some lap traffic and my right pad came unstuck off the velco.  I almost was able to grab it as it was in my lap for a split second, but missed it.  For a few seconds I debated turning around.  But it would have been unsafe to do at that point on the course.  I elected to solider on.  I has a nice bruise to show for it.  I spend the next 90 minutes or so, managing weighting my right arm over bumps.  Hard ot say what it cost me.  I couldn't stay as aero, was a distraction and I wasted energy for the run and a modified pedaling mechanics holding myself off the bars.  If it was an IM...I would have stopped and used bar tape to fasten the neoprene bag the hold my flat kit in my draft box as a makeshift arm pad.  But it was a good mental test.  I ended up with the 3rd fastest amateur bike split.  Corrected distance average speed was 25.7mph.  That beats my previous corrected best of 25.5 at Steelhead. 

I consumed about 60oz of gatoraide, 3 gels and a 1/2 bottle of water on the course.  Right at 400 calories per hour.  As usual, I waited about 15 minutes until I had relaxed, settled in and HR dropped a little to drink anything.  

T2
Nailed my flying dismount, one of my better ones in terms of speed and timing.  Took a moment to put on socks and off I went. Pretty uneventful.  I fumbled putting on my visor and GPS watch while running as usual, but NBD.

RUN
I had to really focus on slowing down.  I kept seeing 5:30-5:50 on my GPS and it felt easy.  But at the same time I had some cramping in my quads and hamstrings.  I felt like somewhere around 1:24-1:28 was all I had in my today.  I settled in to around 6:30-6:45 and just listened my legs.  I thought this might be a perfect time to see if I could roll a negative split.  Really ease off the start of the run and roll into it.  The 2 hills in the first mile made that a smart play.  I figured I had a solid swim and bike so I could play it safe.  The fast guys of the age group, Dan Stubleski hadn't passed me yet, as he started 3 minutes behind.  I was getting worried maybe he had crashed or had a mechanical.  It turns out he swam a couple minute slower and only biked a couple minutes faster so we were almost even starting the run.   That meant it only took him 5 miles to catch me.  I wasn't sure where I was at otherwise.  But I could see Scott Bowe at the turn around about 7 minutes up.  He started 3 minutes ahead, so he had a 4 minute lead.  I stayed relaxed, high fived and cheered some of the pros I knew that were finishing, took in as much water and gatoride as I could and dumped Ice down my trisuit and used the downhills to pick up the pace a little.  I ate 2 gels, I grabbed from a table on course.  One around mile 6 and another at mile 10.  It felt a nice bump in energy each time. I ended up running a conservative 6:50 on 1st lap and 6:35 pace the 2nd lap.

At the turn around I took a split on my watch and I had taken 2 minutes off to Bowe so with a surge I might have a chance of bridging the gap, especially with a couple downhills near the finish.  The course was getting pretty congested and my patience to passing was wearing thin with folks running side by side chatting. I counted down the last miles, played those games where you tell yourself... OK, 20 minutes left, 15, 10, 5, then the final 1/4 mile kick.

The effort paid off with a 3rd place finish, 22nd overall, 6th Amateur.  It was a close fight after 2nd.  Only 1 minute up was the 3rd amateur, 1 minute slower and I'm 5th in my age group. On to my home course for Steelhead in 3 weeks!!!


A shout out to TBC's own Jordan Bailey!!!  3rd amateur overall! Awesome race!  That means, if he's so inclined, he could get his Elite/Pro status.  

Other notes:

My size small sleeved custom printed trisuit, fit & functioned as well as it looked.  Not arm flexibility issues, I think my average speeds at the wattage I put on showed it's fast, and it felt very cool.  It seemed mostly dry feeling much of the time.  The sun coverage was great.  You can clearly see the tan lines, despite using sun screen.  The sleeves extended most of the way to my elbows.

I also looked at some bike splits.  I matched the 2nd fastest split of Dan Stubleski on the 1st segment.  I'll have to see where my NP was at that point compared to the rest.  That might be my power target in 3 weeks.  See if I can hold that.

Can't wait.  A well executed race overall always motivates you to push your training a little harder.

Final results:

SWIM DETAILS | Division Rank: 10
SPLIT NAMEDISTANCESPLIT TIMERACE TIMEPACEDIVISION RANKGENDER RANKOVERALL RANK
Total1.2 mi27:3927:391:25/100m105776
BIKE DETAILS | Division Rank: 3
SPLIT NAMEDISTANCESPLIT TIMERACE TIMEPACEDIVISION RANKGENDER RANKOVERALL RANK
16 mi16 mi37:161:07:5325.76 mi/h
34 mi18 mi42:171:50:1025.54 mi/h
42 mi8 mi18:172:08:2726.25 mi/h
56 mi14 mi35:242:43:5123.73 mi/h
Total56 mi2:13:142:43:5125.22 mi/h31515
RUN DETAILS | Division Rank: 3
SPLIT NAMEDISTANCESPLIT TIMERACE TIMEPACEDIVISION RANKGENDER RANKOVERALL RANK
3.4 mi3.4 mi23:153:08:396:50/mi
6.6 mi3.2 mi21:583:30:376:51/mi
9.8 mi3.2 mi21:173:51:546:39/mi
13.1 mi3.3 mi21:344:13:286:32/mi
Total13.1 mi1:28:044:13:286:43/mi32122
Transition Details
T1: Swim-to-bike2:58
T2: Bike-to-run1:33