Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Final preparations for IMCAN
Today was a day filled with little tasks.
After doing another 20 minute run this morning (3.6km covered - 5:33/km pace). I hustled to get a 1 hr massage from Angela Lloyd (does it out of running Free and is the best), then back home to pick up "doggie nuggets" and cut the lawn to make the yard look presentable.
We got word that there is an offer on our house (we put it up for sale last Thursday--the market is hot around here) so lets see what happens. Hey, if you are looking for a nice place and a wicked location let me know. I will speak to the management to give you a discount.
Did some more cleaning, and packing, and headed out to train a 12 year old gymnast. This kid is tiny but strong as a bull. You will see her hitting the big time real soon and when it happens I will be sure to give you the heads up.
Just need to pack my race gear, and then I am off to bed. I am slowly starting to get excited about the race and looking forward to re-uniting with Siena. You will hear back from me after the big race.
By the way, my gal Ana Ivanovic won the Roger's Cup (Canadian Open) on Monday. Her first Tier 1 Title. Look for her to crack the top then and become the world's #1 player. She hits the ball hard, is super aggressive, is a nice person, and of course good looking. Hopefully her increased success does not change her personality. Also, Martina "the legend" Navratilova won her 177th career doubles title. That is totally insane. She now heads to the US Open and will finally shut the curtains of her incredible career.
Later
Hoss
Saturday, August 19, 2006
Siena is off to Penticton
Today I got up at 6:30 am (4 hours sleep), and went out for a ride with my buddy "The Avalanche". The roads were real quiet and we managed to push a health tempo for 60 km. Avg Hr: 132 Max: 172 Cal: 1699. I was flying up the hills along the way at a nice clip and it did not feel that tough (running a 25 rear). Knowing that I was going to put on a 27 rear for the race, I felt that I should be in good shape for race day.
Later I drove down to D'Ornellas Bike Shop, put my wheels with the 27 rear on Siena, and handed her off to Aubrey Bryce for shipping to Penticton. I may be just a proud Papa talking, but Siena is definitely the best looking bike out of all of the bikes being shipped out there. I'll be seeing her again in 5 days. By the way, there is no better way to ship your bike to a race. Paying those money grabbing airlines $100 each way to ship your bike is pure nonsense. Plus they may lose it, damage it, etc. This way eliminates those worries and you do not have to take apart your bike and put it all together again since it is shipped in one piece.
The rest of today was spent eating, drinking, and resting.
Good to see Mike Weir playing some good golf today. Hopefully he can continue to play well and win his 2nd major tomorrow.
Mike & Tiger at the Masters
Right now Ana Ivanovic (my current fave female tennis player and my pic to break into the top 10 and do some serious damage) is playing to get herself into the finals of the Roger's Cup in Montreal. They are in a rain delay but things look good for her to get into the final to play Martina Hingis (love the way she plays) on the comeback trail.
Anna Ivanovich
Martina Hingis & Anna Kournikova (Do you like how I snuck her in there?)
The original Martina (Navratilova) is still kicking butt out there at age 50. She is arguably the greatest female athlete of our time, is in the doubles final tomorrow.
The Greatest - Martina Navratilova
Three of my fave tennis players, and Mike Weir in contention, could be an excellent sports day tomorrow. I have a 1-1.5 hr run, and a 1.5-2 hr ride planned for tomorrow. Then its chill time til the big day next week.
Blog again soon
Roger
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Bike Fit, IMUSA 2007, IMCAN 2006
Within an hour Ian had my fit dialed in. I was spinning effortlessly and everything felt comfortable. Of course the true test will come in 10 days during that 180 km ride at Ironman Canada. Of note was that according to the SpinScan, my pedal stroke has improved over the course of a year. Could that be the new bike? The bike fit? All I know is that I never saw those numbers when I rode the Computrainer last week.
Just checked the Ironman USA Lake Placid website and I confirmed that I am entered for my 9th race in a row there. What really go me thrilled was seeing my good buddy Angus entered. I knew he could not pass it up and let me do it alone. Retirement my @$$. Good to also see the "BOAT" entered as well (you know who you are), I am glad I had the chance to return the favour since she lined up after IMCAN last year and signed me up and I did the same for her at Lake Placid. IMUSA 2007 will be a fun time.
Finally, I am slowly getting excited to do this race. The new ride is making that a big factor but another huge factor is the friends that are coming out to watch -- but not me necessarily (Wooly, Goose, Mich, J.P, Anna). And as of today a few more are coming. Marie, Andrew and their kiddies are making the trip out to BC to visit family but will stop in Penticton for a few days to check out the race. How cool is that? There is no way that quitting is ever going to enter my mind on race day.
Til next time
Hoss
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
The New Ride is Here!
Here it is in all its splendor, the beautiful Litespeed Siena.
It is sweeeeeeet!
Got it tonight, thanks to Eon D'Ornellas. Knowing that I needed a bike for Ironman Canada (in 12 days), he came to the rescue within hours of talking to him. The folks at Litespeed also recognized my dilemma and helped out huge too.
Why did I need a bike so desperately? I sold off the 2 I had once the Litespeed sponsorship came through. I did not expect the bikes to be sold in less than a week but they were.
Now I have to take it to Ian MacLean of imfit.ca to get it fitted. I must also thank him for squeezing me in with such short notice. The bike is being shipped out to Penticton on Saturday.
Do I really want to ride a new bike and position this close to the race? Sure, it doesn't matter to me. What better way to check out the position than on a 180 km ride? After my crappy bike ride at Ironman USA, I could not ride worse. Or could I? We shall see on August 27th. I do know that I am likely not going to be using aerobars for IMCAN. The new handlebars are flat and don't allow for them to be put on. Should be interesting.
I do look forward to getting a Saber or Blade in the spring so I can go seriously aero and super fast during next year's races.
I can't wait for 2007 to come. Thinking of getting a bike? Go with Litespeed.
They are the ultimate machines. Check out the link on the side.
Til next time,
Roger
Monday, August 14, 2006
The Cobourg Double
Date: Saturday August 12 & Sunday August 13, 2006.
Location: Victoria Park, Cobourg, Ontario
Description: 5 km Run, 20 km Bike, 2.5 km Run (Sprint Du), 5/32/5 km (Regular Du)
Website: www.multisportcanada.com
With Cobourg being only 1 hr away “doing the double” (racing 2x in 2 days) was in the cards for this past weekend. Plus, it would be my final blast weekend before Ironman Canada.
I had planed a big training week (17-18 hrs) and then do the 2 week taper for Ironman Canada. That big training week never happened. I did manage 14 hrs last week, but I did not feel like doing a thing this week and pretty much didn’t. Heading into race day on Saturday, I had done just 4 hours of training for the week! I figured after doing IMUSA less than 3 weeks ago that things were finally catching up to me. The body was telling me to rest and who am I to argue. Better to be well rested than overtrained. So the next 2 days would be all about getting in some top quality training and intensity.
The Sprint Du (5/20/2.5) was a lot of fun. I did the entire first run with Kelly Anthony (big Clydesdale dude who is darn fast and funny too). We always seem to run a similar pace so when his heart rate monitor stopped picking up his HR, he asked me my HR and he figured he’d go at my pace for the rest of the run. We had a nice chat and our effort felt comfortable despite our heart rates being right up there. My average heart rate was 172 bpm for the first 21:22 split but it didn’t feel painful at all. I made a 39 second transition to the bike.
The Cobourg bike course is a hilly son of a gun. I rode the course with my Pyro Pedal platforms, which is not ideal for hilly courses but with only a 20 km bike, I can pick up at least 1 minute of free time in transition over most of the rest of the field so I made that strategic choice. Take at look at the race results and you can see the amount of time people spend in transition. I think I made the right choice. Good ole Gord Avann came flying by early on the bike (he would eventually smash everyone with a 34:30 bike split – he is crazy fast). I would finish the constantly rolling hill bike course in 40:25. Posting an average HR of 171. I took 29 seconds (fastest of the day) to transition to the run and off I went.
I pushed for the first kilometre and then shut it down (still have to race tomorrow) for the rest of the way when I realized no one in my age group was close behind and I was not going to catch the first place guy. I finished the final 2.5 km in 12:02 (avg HR 175). The total time was 1:14:55 (avg HR: 172, Max HR: 183, Calories burned: 1555 cal). This was good enough for 9th overall and 2nd in the 30-39 age group. I stayed for the awards, watched the Give It a Tri Race and headed home.
Got up on Sunday and for some reason I was not sore. Usually my calves and Achilles area are sore as hell. Not today. That could all change once I start running of course. Got packed, did the new morning coffee routine and made my way to Cobourg.
Chatted with a Kent Parkinson and racked my bike beside his. Then my buddy Angus showed up (minutes before the race – as usual) and I started the trash talking early. “Are you doing the Tri today?” He replied, “No, doing the Du today.” I then threw the first dart saying, “So you’re looking to get your a$$ kicked today, eh!” This got everyone laughing. We started talking smack at Ironman Lake Placid. I played him a podcast of Macca being interviewed and Angus joking started trying Macca’s mind game techniques. The race was about to start soon so I hustled over to the start line.
I wanted to get out to a nice start to test the legs out and force Angus to keep up. The legs felt fairly good, and I ran alone clocking 22:35 for the first 5km (Avg Hr: 169). I chose to use regular cycling shoes today but still had the quickest T1 time of 39 seconds.
Like yesterday, the bike course was hilly, just more of it today. Last night I moved my saddle forward one inch to see how things would feel (verdict: good on the few flats, but my back ached on the hills). I bike along and waited for the “Freight Train”. It took a bit longer today, but the train came and Gord came zooming by. I yelled at him, “What took you so long?” Kelly came by too and joked that his legs were already finished. Yes, three of us crazy dudes were racing again today. I continued along and for some reason the chain came off 2x while I did my shifting. So now I’m losing more time on this hills. Damn! I did manage to catch up and eventually pass a group I was riding with (but no drafting). I was now not doing too much shifting because I did not want the chain to fall off again. I finally completed the 32 km bike in 1:04:57. Without the chain drops I would have averaged over 30 km/hr, so I was satisfied. I transitioned to the run in 40 seconds.
I came out of transition a few metres behind fellow Team Running Free athlete, John Yip, but he was doing the triathlon so I just kept my pace behind him and looked ahead at which duathletes I could catch. With no one to catch, I made sure to stay ahead of those behind, and achieve a goal of slowing down no more than a minute from my first run split. I finished the run with a time of 23:32 (goal achieved – Avg Hr: 175). The final time was 1:52:21 (close to one minute faster than last year and we rode and extra 2km this year). The average HR for the entire race was 169, I maxed out at 186, and burned 2249 calories. I was happy with how the legs felt on the run, and hopefully that translates well to a nice run at Ironman Canada in 2 weeks. By the way, my buddy Angus came in at 2:01:53 so that is 2-0 for me in the Back Up the Smack Competition. I look forward to our next meeting.
After the race I had some nice chats with John Yip, Alan Faulds (he always kicks butt at any race he enters), Paul Smith (OAT Official), Rico Medeiros (excellent race today), Gord, Kelly, Nigel Caseby (one of the fastest 60+ year olds on the planet), Jimmie Georgas (the fastest 80+ year old on the planet), and a quite a few others. Some people inquired about my bike (I put it up for sale), but no takers. I stayed for the awards (I still have not won a draw prize all season – I hope that means I win big at the end of season draw) and headed home at 12:30 pm.
Don’t forget about the cool Calabogie Peaks race on August 27th. Visit http://www.multisportcanada.com/ms/index.cfm for more details.
Saturday, August 12, 2006
Parry Sound Award
Nothing much to say. Just a scan of my 2nd place award from the Parry Sound Du.
I just returned from the Cobourg Sprint Du (5/20/2.5km) a few hours ago. Managed another top 10 overall placing (9th), and 2nd in the 30-39 age group. Quite a fun day. Race report to follow after I complete the regular Duathlon tomorrow (5/32/5).
Later
RH
Friday, August 11, 2006
I'm a proud member of the Litespeed Factory Team!
Well, I was notified a few days ago and it appears that Litespeed wants me. Man I'm excited.
I've always believed that Litespeed made the ultimate bikes and made long term plans to get one. Now, not only do I get to ride one (hopefully 2), but I am on their team and get to represent them locally and internationally at my races and other events. That is sweet and I can't wait.
More details to follow. Especially pictures of the new ride.
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Parry Sound Duathlon - A Top 5 Overall Finish!!!!
Location: Wabano Beach Park, Parry Sound, Ontario
Description: Sprint Duathlon - 4 km Run, 19 km Bike, 4 km Run
Website: www.multisportcanada.com
Depending on how fast you drive, from Markham, it can take you anywhere from 1 hr 45 minutes to 2 hrs to get to the race site.
This race was supposed to take place the day before (Saturday), but all races were cancelled due to the heavy rain and thunderstorms. In a very classy and generous move by John Salt of Multisport Canada (something he really did not have to do), he moved the race to Sunday, and offered a 10 km running race for those who could not return on Sunday. Even those returning the next day were invited to participate.
After 5 days of doing absolutely nothing (recovering from Ironman Lake Placid), I was itching for some activity so I decided to do the 10 km race and the Sprint Duathlon on Sunday.
Running in the 10 km Race
The 10 km was a lot of fun and it was great to be out there again and running. I still felt the effects of IMLP as the legs were still a bit sluggish. I decided to run the entire race in my aerobic zone (150-165 bpm) so that I wouldn’t fry my legs for tomorrow. I did the first 5 km in 24:55, which I was really happy with. It was tough letting all those people run away from me but I stuck to the plan. I kept going at that intensity for the next 3 km and with 2 km to go I picked up the pace and out of the zone a bit to finish the second 5 km in 24:36. Total time 49:31 with an average heart rate of 168 bpm.
Now lets get to the Sprint Duathlon on Sunday. The race was scheduled to get going at 9 am, after all the Half Iron Distance athletes got out of the water and onto their bikes. This gave me a chance to cheer on some fellow Team Running Free athletes such as Tara Norton and Kelly Boucher. We were informed that the bike segment of the race would be shortened to 18 km (from 30 km) to ensure everyone’s safety on the course (Iron Distance athletes were using the same roads). No big deal for me today since I needed to get home as soon as possible for a family lunch.
The first 4 km run was better than I expected. My goal was to go sub 20 minutes but the legs felt a bit sore from yesterday. I took the first kilometre easy but then took off from the pack I was running with. I caught up with Gord Avann (an athlete who totally smokes the bike segment) and we ran together the rest of the way. We talked about pushing harder and going for a top 5 finish. I told him that with his biking skills that would be a sure thing for him but only a possibility for me. We pushed on and I clocked a time of 19:32 for the first run (avg. HR: 168 bpm). I made a very quick 33 second transition and hopped on the bike.
The start of the Bike leg
Since I had not ridden a bike in one week, I felt sluggish. With the rolling hills you get early on in this course, this is not a good feeling to have. It was not a stellar performance on the bike but I managed to keep the rest of field from passing me (aside from Gord of course). I finished the 19 km course in 31:26 (avg, HR: 169) and took only 20 seconds to make the transition from bike to run. I set my mind to hammer, make sure no one passed me, and possibly catch anyone if I could. At the 2 km mark I gave it a little extra and pushed to finish. I ran that final 4 km in 20:11 (avg. HR: 174), which was what I ran the first leg of the run last year. The finishing time was 1 hr and 12 minutes, with an overall average heart rate of 170 bpm and burning 1464 calories. Good enough for 5th overall, and second in the 30-39 age group. I also had the fastest transition times on the day. Those Pyro Pedal platforms are to thank for that.
I was pleased with the result considering the fact that I have done nothing for 5 days. I could not stay for the awards (due to my family lunch), so I thanked John Salt for going the extra mile and putting on the race for us and headed home. This has become one of my favourite races to do, but for the ultimate challenge you must do the Iron Distance race (tri or du). It is probably the toughest race out there (largely due to that hilly run course).
I should also mention the new Multiman Race that is also put on by Multisport Canada. The goal is to make it a cool and relaxed race and weekend just like the famous Wildflower race. You put together a relay team and do the 4km swim, 120km Bike and 30 km run. There are multiple laps of each segment but you decide who does what as long as no athlete does two consecutive loops. For example, a 3 person team can share the bike segment equally, or one person may do 2 laps of the bike and another just one. The venue at Calabogie Peaks Resort looks nice too. Check out the cool format at http://www.multisportcanada.com/
Gracefully Finishing the Duathlon :)
Ironman Lake Placid 2006 Race Report
IMLP Bike Course 2006
Ironman USA Lake Placid Race Report - Sunday July 23, 2006.
Ironman Distance Triathlon: 3.86 km Swim, 180.2 km Bike, 42.2 km Run
Website: www.ironmanusa.com
The drive down to Lake Placid takes between 5.5 and 6 hrs, via the Cornwall bridge crossing. I regularly stay at the KOA at Whiteface. My first 2 years there I did the tent thing but never again. I now rent a Kamping Kabin (which holds up to 6 people), which has beds. Washrooms and showers are only a short walk away and are kept immaculately clean. A great low cost option where you can use that saved money for race wheels, etc.
On Thursday morning Angus (friend of mine doing the race too) and I went for a 22 minute swim. My first open water swim in the Aquaman Bionik Wetsuit felt slippery, fast, and very comfortable. Afterwards I ran into fellow Team Running Free athletes, Rick Choy and Mike Leader. We then headed off to register. The process is very quick, and after a passing through the Expo to get free samples, I stopped to chat with the Chris Travers (Profile Design), Michael Folan (Infinit Nutrition), Frank Day (Power Cranks), and Vinu Malik (Fuel Belt). We made our way back to the KOA and went out for a quick 36 minute ride along the Whiteface section of the course. My legs felt lethargic but I chalked that up to it being a taper week.
On Friday, I swam for 21 minutes (7th swim of the year and last before the race). My left shoulder popped out of place a wee bit (one reason why I don’t swim a lot) and was stiff and sore. After the swim, I did a quick 20 minute run along Mirror Lake with a couple of friends. The legs felt fresh and ready to be let loose on race day. My friends and I did another pass though the Expo for more samples. I stopped at the TPMassageball booth and Cassidy did some work on me to get rid of my shoulder pain and stiffness. It worked and the pain was virtually gone while the range of motion returned as well. The Welcome Banquet was a fairly plain affair. The food was a bit more plentiful than the previous year but it is still not worth the $25-30 it costs to bring guests. I suggest that you spend the money on a nice dinner in town.
Saturday’s plan was to check in my bike and transition bags as soon as the oval opened at 10 am and then get the heck out of there. I have learned from past experience that if you leave it for later, the line up to get into transition gets ridiculously long and you do not want to be standing around in long line-ups the day before the race. I had a nice Chinese and sushi lunch, shopped briefly, and then grabbed some Subways subs for dinner later. Back at the KOA I prepared my nutrition for race day. I planned on exclusively using Infinit Nutrition the entire day (they custom make a drink formulation based on your needs), so I had to mix concentrate to carry with me all day.
Race Day - My 37th Birthday (What a way to celebrate)
I woke up at 3 am and drank 2 bottles of Boost along with a Quaker Oatmeal to Go Bar (Oats & Honey flavour), then went back to bed to catch some more shut-eye. Woke again at 5 am, drank another bottle of Boost, ate one more Quaker bar, and sipped Gatorade and water while I prepared my stuff to get down to the race site. We parked just outside if town and walked a mile to the race site. Conditions were cool and calm, too bad this would not last for the rest of the day.
I made my way into the transition area to pump my tires, put my nutrition on my bike, and do a final check of my transition bags. I headed back onto the street to get body marked, made my final “pit stops”, put on my wetsuit, and made my way down to Mirror Lake. At that point I said my goodbyes to my “race crew” (wife and 3 friends). I hooked up with Angus in the water and we waited for the cannon blast to signal the race start. Off the cannon went and the chaos began.
The first 10 minutes was a huge battle for space, the worst I’ve experienced in my 8 years doing this race. It was quite apparent that there was a lot of first time Ironmen in this race (over 400). People were stopping and treading water, breast stroking, and swimming crookedly. Frustrated, I decided to get out of the big mess of people by heading wide. This was much better for getting into a calm rhythm but the drawback was that I had no one to draft off of. I got to first turnaround buoy and got punched in the head. I am pretty sure it was intentional but I let it go and used my anger to fuel a bit of a surge to move away from that group of swimmers. I soon found a big dude in the water that was swimming at a speed slightly faster and clearing out everyone in his path. I hooked unto to him and drafted off his feet right into the finish. I recall a 42 minute first lap. Not mind blowing speed but I will take it. For the second lap I lost my draft partner and stayed close to the underwater buoy line (a unique feature at Lake Placid). Staying along the line was still busy at this point but I toughed it out and created my own space right until the end. I finished the swim in 1:26:29 with an average heart rate of 142 bpm. Got my wetsuit stripped off quickly and made the long run into transition.
The change tent was a busy place. I saw Angus there already so he must have had a good swim. I got changed fairly quickly and ran out only to discover that I didn’t have my sunglasses with me. It was still cloudy at that point but I did not want to be bombing down that 10 km downhill section at 70+ km/hr without them. So I ran back into the tent, where after 10 minutes I finally found it. Not a good start to the day. I was certainly hoping that it was not a sign of bad things to come.
I could go into great detail about the 180 km bike ride but I wont. Have you ever had one of those days when you legs felt like cement? Well this was that day for me. I knew I was in trouble after about 2 hours. I was taking to easy and aerobic but whenever I wanted to pick up the pace my legs felt dead and extra speed never came. I did the first lap in 3:23:47 (avg HR: 144), which is ridiculously slow for me and made any ideas of a PB likely out of the realm of possibility. However, I decided to make to best of the day and hold a steady pace for the second 90 km, get in my nutrition and save my energy for the marathon. Throughout the ride, the weather kept changing. There was rain, wind, cold, and heat. Quite nuts. I finally completed the bike in 7:13:56, my worst ride ever. My pedestrian like pace was confirmed by my average heart rate of 137 bpm. Too bad everything felt great except my legs. Grrrr!
I hustled my way into the change tent and to get out on that run as quickly as possible. I wanted to redeem myself from such a crappy ride. I did wonder if my legs were going to feel the same out there on the run but I made my mind up that I was not going to walk unless I physically couldn’t. I headed out of the change tent and saw my buddy Angus at the exit putting on some sunscreen. I was now motivated to at least stay ahead of him. He did not want to race in Lake Placid next year but we joked that if I beat him by an hour then he must come back.
I ran the first mile in 8 minutes, and kept going at a fairly good clip. I continued using my Infinit Nutrition in concentrate form, pouring a little into a cup of water as I reached each aid station. The plan was to use it for the first 2 hours and then survive on coke the rest of the way. I progressively slowed down throughout but finished that first lap in 2:16:24 (avg HR: 142). I saw Rick Choy and Mike Leader out there and we cheered each other on. Rick looked like he would finish in the 12 hr range and I was happy for him. Mike was just ahead of me and looked fairly good in his first Ironman. My legs were starting to feel it by the 21 mile mark, and I resisted the temptation to walk several times. I just keep telling myself that unless I am cramping (an issue I have experienced in the past that now seems to have been solved by my Infinit Nutrition formulation) I have no reason to walk. I am sure my “Ironman shuffle” was as fast as my regular walk but I was not actually walking. I kept pushing hard to the end (especially that long final uphill section in town) and finished the marathon in 5:01:20 (avg HR: 137) and clocked an overall race finish time of 14:02:27. According to my Polar 625x, I burned off 11 872 calories, my average heart rate on the entire day was 139 bpm, and my heart rate peaked at 164 bpm (meaning that I never went anaerobic).
I was hungry so immediately chowed down on some pizza, coke, cookies, and a turkey sandwich. I got a nice massage and found my friend Angus who got a personal best of 14:31:44. This meant that he didn’t have to race next year but I knew I could still convince him. By 10 pm it started pouring rain, I felt for those poor souls still out there on the course because by now it was quite chilly. I got all my stuff together, walked down to the car and drove back to the KOA.
The next day I was not as sore as I thought I would be and we headed to the Horseshow Grounds to sign up for next year’s race. While in line we were informed (at 9:30 am) that the race was sold out online, and that the only spots left were for us in line. The race was eventually totally sold out in 90 minutes. Once you have experienced this race you will understand why people are dying to get in. The atmosphere can’t be matched and the people of Lake Placid make it their duty to make you feel welcome and totally catered to. The organization and attention to detail by Ironman North America is top notch. I have never experienced a better race out there. That is why I will be returning for my 9th race in a row and I plan on doing all of them until the day I am no longer able.
By the way after 8 years of coming down here to race I finally made it to the top of Whiteface Mountain. This is a must do for anyone coming to this area because the view is incredible. See below.
Ironman Arizona Race Report
IMAZ 2006 - Run (1st Lap)
Ironman Arizona Race Report - Sunday April 9, 2006.
Location: Tempe, Arizona
Description: 3.86 km Swim, 180.2 km Bike, 42.2 km Run
Website: www.ironmanarizona.com
The flight down to Arizona was fairly uneventful and that is always a good thing. All my belongings got there on time and damage free, nothing more you can ask for. Catching a cab that could accommodate a bike box took a bit of time but 45 min later I was able to get one just before she went off duty.
I was all set to stay at the Country Inn and Suites. But got there to find out that they had no record of my booking. I showed them my documents and they said that they could put me up starting on Thursday but for Wednesday night I was out of luck. Since they screwed up they drove me to the Quality Inn and covered my accommodation there for the night. This is a nice location, which would be a value option if I were to do this race again. They rooms are clean, the free breakfast is good, and it is about 2 miles from the race site.
Upon checking in to the Country Inn and Suites (about 1 mile from the race site), I walked over to the race site to get my first swim in and to register. It was a nice set up. The new Ironman TV Studio, the many booths with product giveaways, a huge Ford set-up (cool thing: they had a computer spectators could type messages into that will flash those messages to athletes as they ran by a huge electronic billboard on race day) and of course the merchandise tent.
Race Day
Woke up at 3:30 am and drank 2 cans of Boost and a bit of water. Then went back to bed to catch some more shut-eye. Woke again at 5 am, drank another can of Boost and sipped Gatorade and water while I prepared my stuff to get down to the race site. Walked the mile to the race site and the conditions were cool and calm. Too bad this would not last for the rest of the day.
Got to the race site, pumped my tires, put my nutrition on my bike, did a final check of my transition bags, got body marked, made my final “pit stops”, put on my wetsuit (found out I had quite a few holes/tears in both of the arm areas—time to get a new wetsuit but not right now), and chilled with the wife until race start.
I jumped in the water at 6:55 am and swam over to the start line (a deep water start about 100 m away). The water was much warmer and clearer this year. The water temperature was around 70 degrees (it was in the high 50’s last year) and I could actually see my hands in front of me. Much better than the chocolate milk we were swimming in last year. The race started promptly at 7 am and we were on our way. Unlike the swim at Lake Placid, the swim at Tempe is much more wide open. The space is there if you need it. Since I walked the swim course everyday to go back and forth from the race site to my hotel, I realized that the canal has a bit of a curve and therefore so does the swim buoys. I scouted out and picked a nice line and swam a much more direct line this time around. Only on the way back did I run into any kind of problems running into people. I finished the swim in 1:24:24 with an average heart rate of 140 bpm. This is not breakneck speed for most but it is a good time for me considering that I was not pushing hard, my swim training consisted of the 9 minutes on Wednesday I got to Arizona, 12 minutes on Thursday, and 30 minutes on March 10. Plus it was big improvement over my 1:32 last year. This is a training plan I don’t recommend for everyone but I’m not trying to get to Kona.
The transition was crowded. Had to change outside the change tent, and spent extra time getting a bunch of dry grass off my feet. This is unavoidable since the transition area is all grass. T1 time – 9:20
Sporting my Rudy Project Syton helmet and Maskeryna sunglasses. Hopped on the bike with the mission of keeping aerobic the whole bike segment. If that got me a 6 hr bike split then that would be great but I was expecting 6:15-6:30 (By the way, I went to Ian MacLean at http://www.imfit.ca/ to get tested and received all my training and racing zones. I strongly recommend this to everyone who: is serious about their training, uses with a heart rate monitor, who wants to drop some a few pounds – I lost 20 lbs from November to race day). The bike course was a simple 3 laps. Not the crazy mega turn fest that occurred last year. There was actually a slight bit of incline near the turnaround. The first lap was windy on the way out (not as breezy as last year but still enough to slow you down) but I was flying on the way back. If these conditions remained the same throughout the bike leg then I was going to go sub 6 hrs. This did not happen. By the second and third lap the conditions changed. It was more of a crosswind that affected you in both directions. It also began getting hotter as the day went on. During the bike segment I took in 6 bottles of Gatorade Endurance, 3 bottles of water, 14 GU Gels, and 21 Hammer Endurolytes. I finished the bike ride in a comfortable 6:14 with an average heart rate of 146 (I did 6:44 last year), feeling fully fuelled, and confident in pulling off a decent run and PB.
In T2, I took my time in order to set myself up nicely for the run. A quick glance at my bike shirt and shorts told me that I lost a lot of salt. There were white stains everywhere. I don’t know where the time went but I spent 8:52 in T2.
Headed out on the run and got in my nutrition early. Everything felt good and I was on pace to pull off a 4:20-4:30 marathon. This all fell apart by mile 6. The temperature had now reached its peak for the day and we were out there in 90 degree heat. Every time I would try to maintain my goal pace I would experience nausea, dizziness, and would feel like passing out if I continued running. I decided that I better go into survival mode and just get to the finish in whichever way possible. Therefore it was the “zombie march” to finish line. I did manage to meet and chat with a lot of people all experiencing the same thing so it was a fun but frustrating time. Finished the run/walk in 5:47 and an average heart rate of 132 (not a true indication of the effort due to the walking). Finished the day in 13:44:18. Fairly satisfied since I thought that my finishing time might be 15+ hours after I started my “zombie march”. A few bouts rejuvenated running when it got dark helped reduce that time expectation. I even more pleased with the effort once I realized that the race conditions had eliminated 217 athletes from the race (about 12% of the field). My only regret on the day was not having my Running Free Team gear to wear during the event.
Some other great memories/highlights: 1. Meeting and chatting with Tim DeBoom and Michellie Jones (After the race Michellie went through my race pictures and commented on each one of them. I won’t forget their class and graciousness). 2. Pigging out at PF Changs. 3. Picking up Peets Coffee (Lance Armstrong’s favourite brand) at Cincinnati airport. It is the best coffee I’ve ever tasted.
Posing with Tim Deboom