Monday, June 16, 2008

Blue Lake Race Report _ June 15, 2008

Short Version:

I’ve only been really training for running so far this year, but somehow pulled off a decent race (for me).

Swim: 28:32 (slow, but not embarrassing)
T1: 2:12 (blazing fast)
Bike: 1:04:01 (2nd best bike ever for me at Poo)
T2: 1:55 (needed socks for the run because my feet were numb)
Run: 51:00 (less disappointing than it sounds)
Total: 2:27:40, good for 116 out of 436

Long Version:
As many of you know, I’ve really only been training my run this year. I ran the Newport marathon 2 weeks ago in an attempt to build my usually weak run base well in advance of my focus race, Ironman Florida in the fall. So, that means I have been in the pool all of 5 times in prep for Blue Lake and really haven’t put the hours in on my bike that has me setting any records. My lack of training was reinforced by a bout with “Food bourn illness” this week (not, food poisoning) limiting me to a very short radius to the nearest bathroom and leaving me feeling rather depleted by the time the antibiotics kicked in Friday afternoon. This left me totally goal-less. What could I possibly expect?

I made a date with Betty (Tom) to pick him up Sunday morning in the effing-150 and rideshare to Blue Lake. We got there and went through the usual ritual of registering, setting up transition, and glad-handing with all the usual familiar faces like Seth, some of my Ironheads teammates, etc. Good to see so many familiar faces including Dave Campbell, the elite triathlete who handed out the awards at the Newport Marathon (“Get the whey! Go for the whey!”).

Right before entering the water, Tom uttered some useful quotables about “Not being able to get it up” and the “tightness in my crotch”. Luckily, this was all said in relation to his wetsuit, which with a little help, we did manage to get the inconveniently located back zippers up and velcroed in place. I also figured out my only goal, I would, for the first time, capture my mile splits on the run and shoot for averaging a 7:45/mile pace. Of note is the fact that the water in Blue Lake was a bit colder (~65 degrees) and the cloud cover kept the coolness of the morning intact.

Soon, Tom and I were floating in the water with our wave waiting for the gun. I asked one of my fellow Ironheads teammates, Scott Benjamin, what he was planning to swim. “25 or 26” he answered. I thought, hmmm, maybe I can ride his feet to a better time. When the gun went off, I realized that was a pipe dream. I quickly lost Scott’s feet, but when I breathed left, I saw Tom’s green sleeves right next to me. This was the theme of the swim. I’d lose them for a few minutes, and then turn a buoy and see Tom’s green sleeves. I’m betting we weren’t separated by more than a few yards the whole swim and we exited together (with me being slightly more aggressive on the ramp) in 28:32 and 28:33 respectively. I had been giving Tom my opinion on the best wetsuit stripping techniques before the race and in T1, I executed it to perfection, getting in and out in 2:12. I decided to leave my cycling shoes in my pedals due to the long grassy run to the mount area and this worked pretty well, until I tried to pull my shoes on while riding. Oh well!

When I did my cyclocross style mount of my bike, I quickly hit the button on my HRM. Of course, my heart rate came right up, but I got the unfortunate 0.0 on my bike speed. I had forgotten a basic, when you remove the front wheel, check the sensor. So, I decided to ride by heart rate and settled in at 155 bpm… and 0.0 mph. I passed a lot of people and felt pretty good so settled in and focused on drinking my electrolytes. I missed seeing Tom at the turnarounds, but felt like I was moving through the groups pretty good. As I passed the archery range coming back into the park I was surprised to see I was still under 1:05 on my ride time. My ride totaled 1:04:01 (22.87 mph), my second fastest ride at Blue Lake. As I execute another cool, cyclocross style dismount, I realized I couldn’t feel my feet. They were totally numb from cold, so I took the time in transition to pull on socks and set off on the run, hitting my watch to start my split. T2 = 1:55, not bad.

I felt OK running out of the park and even passed a few people. I tried to pick-up my cadence to get the legs loose. As I left the park and hit the bike trail, the race leaders were just coming back in and I saw a bunch of my Ironheads teammates just killing it. Even though I’m not fast, it was great because we were yelling to each other and one of the guys, Bill Thompson was so pumped the high five nearly dislocated my shoulder (of course, Bill was flying, so big mo was in his favor). I got to mile 1 with a 7:50… not bad and not far off. As I went up the only minor incline of the run at 1.5 miles, my quads began screaming and trying their best to seize up. I grabbed a water (probably should have been Gatorade) and just tried to keep up my cadence. I tried changing up my stride a bit, lengthening it to let my quads relax and it worked for a while. I missed the mile 2 marker, but when I reached the turnaround and the mile 3 marker, my split was 15:08 (7:34 pace) and I was pumped. I had actually sped up… me, the Fatrunner… on the run I sped up!! Yeah, this run training was finally paying off!! Mile 4 split was a little slower at 7:43, but still just where I wanted it. Then ½ a mile later, that crappy little incline hit me on the way home and my quads were DONE. And I mean DONE! As I grabbed a Gatorade from the teenage volunteer, she commented, “You thighs are really muscular.”, but instead of appreciating the comment, all I could force our was, “That’s because their cramping” through gritted teeth. The slight downhill did nothing to loosen my legs and the death march was on. Mile 5 split, 8:38. Mile 6 + the .2 slowed to 9:40 average pace and a weirdly disappointing, yet not 51:00 run split. Disappointing because I really felt like I was holding my goal well for 4 miles, yet not disappointing considering that the illness combined with the chilly bike ride make the cramps more probable.

Overall, I performed okay given my lack of training. It gives me some hope for my races in August (not Pac Crest, but that’s going to be a long training day for fun, not speed). Tom finished just 30 seconds back, so those great transition times helped! The race was fun and I appreciated having teammates yell support, that’s always cool.

4 Comments:

At 12:53 PM, Blogger Steven said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At 12:54 PM, Blogger Steven said...

Nice blog, Troy! It's nice to see you join the fraternity finally!

I've added you to my Tri-Geek Roll Call on my blog and I'll be sure to check in from time to time.

See you at the races, my friend.

12:53 PM

 
At 9:49 PM, Blogger Dave Ciaverella, Odyssey Coaching said...

Good report Troy, strong work out there!
See you at Pac Crest.

ciaverella

 
At 6:44 PM, Blogger Run Amok said...

Nice work, Troy - I'm just sorry we didn't have the strawberries to speed you along this year!

 

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