Race Report: Timberman 70.3, August 21, 2016


31_m-100732743-DIGITAL_HIGHRES-1588_030688-3260407So, this was my 3rd triathlon in 5 weeks, and my last one this year before turning to focus on the NYC Marathon. I scheduled this one in part for logistical convenience: I had to drop off my older son for college outside of Boston, and that was more than halfway to Gilford, New Hampshire where the race was held. I managed to finish the load-in of duffel bag and boxes by midnight on Friday, and by 12:30 a.m. was in the beautiful, empty house in Lexington, MA of our cousin, the generous Jonah Cohen. (Jonah and his family were in Chicago.).

imageimage

Got to bed by 8:30. Woke at 1:30 a.m. And couldn’t get back to sleep again before the alarm went off at 3. “Well, THAT was fun.” Left at 4 a.m. to drive to the course (turns out, Concord is not 30 but really 45 minutes from the race site), and took another 25 minutes to park, along with the other 2,550 racers squeezing through single lane roads.

My transition setup was methodical, but actually getting to the starting line was more rushed than I would like: (a) there weren’t enough toilets and the lines were ridiculous; they were announcing transition closing at 6:15, and that’s exactly when I finally reached a stall; and (b) I didn’t know which wave I was in, as I couldn’t find it online the night before. Fortunately, our wave didn’t start until 7 a.m. Though I had shaved my legs for the first time (thinking it would be wetsuit optional), the water is 74 degrees and I’m wearing my sleeveless wetsuit — with long sleeve tri suit beneath. (not exactly hydrodynamic!).

It’s an “in-water start” — but in this case, it means standing in the water up to our knees. Still, much better than running across that rocky lake bottom.

image

I line up right next to the first triangle buoy, in the 2nd or 3rd row; better to be swum over than to be swimming over the next guy. HONNNNNNK goes the horn, we start the 1.2 mile, counterclockwise square, and we run and stumble a bit, and I dive in pretty quickly, and I am unusually calm as I start the almost-panting process of breathing every stroke, and I immediately start drafting off this guy with black, red and gold wetsuit (no, really, my very own superhero), and he’s fast enough that I have to work to keep up with him (instead of being lazy with someone whose feet are easy to slap), and he sights a great straight line, sometimes taking the guide buoys to our left, and there is more bumping and body contact than any other race I’ve done, people behind me, guys next to me trying to push me off course, but dammit you’re gonna have to swim faster to get past me, that’s MY drafting buddy, and I was sad when we rounded the first red buoy and he got away.

I should have breathed on the left side on that second leg, I’m stronger on my left, but it’s SOOOO comfortable to do the same thing over and over and breathe on my right, and by the time I reach the third leg (hooray! I’m going to survive another swim!), I don’t have the option, because breathing to the left means to stare into the rising sun (note to self: figure out pre-race where the sun’s going to be), and it feels strong and steady, passing the slow folks with different colored swim caps and close to the finish it’s almost too shallow to swim, but better than running on that rocky lake bottom, and we’re OUT! 36:32 (a 25-second PR for this distance – but at 1:53 min/100m, slower than my pace for last year’s Ironman).

Another swim DONE!
Another swim DONE!
Onto Transition 1...
Onto Transition 1…

The 56-mile bike course is some 2,100 feet of climbing (3,000, according to my Garmin) mostly on rolling but sometimes steep hills. Coach Debi warned me, ride no harder than heart rate Zone 2 (131-141 bpm), and “Be patient and enjoy the scenery,” and I kept remembering that.

...and Bike OUTBike OUT

At least 10 guys in my age group, and a lot more younger guys, pass me on the bike, but I am patiently racing MY race, and pushing hard enough to log over 21 mph on the first 30 miles (some nice downhills, of course); my heart rate actually averages in zone 1 throughout the ride; but my glutes and quads are on fire and aching with the effort; my left hip cramps at 45 minutes so I take a salt tablet (this is crazy, how much could I sweat in this mid-70s weather?), cramp disappears; and every now and then I look up to see the pine trees and the amazing Lake Winnepesaukee. Be grateful, I’m alive (despite that bike/car accident 8 weeks ago) and unbelievably, racing.

40_m-100732743-DIGITAL_HIGHRES-1588_053663-3260416

 

Something isn’t going right, too many people are passing me, and after the race, the stats show I had slowed to just over 18 mph on the second 26 miles, but this is MY race, I am not going to burn out on the bike and get shin splints like I did at Quassy last year, and maybe I’ll pass some competitors on the run. Bottom line: 2:48:21 on the bike, avg. of 19.6 mph. A 4 minute PR.

This turns out to be an alternative nutrition success story: despite my refusal to cut carbs out of my sandwich- and pasta-filled, vegetarian diet, this was the longest race on which I avoided carbs. I started with a breakfast of bullet proof-style coffee and two eggs (could scarcely eat any apple sauce with protein powder after that!); 3 tablets of BCAAs just before the swim; three bottles of NUUN water with pink Himalayan salt during the ride (really, could have done two, because grabbed a water at the 30-mile aid station and popped in more NUUN into the “torpedo” sippy cup); 4 crunchy, chalky, alkaline EAAs every 40 minutes or so; salt tablets at 45 minutes, 2 hours and just before the run (whee! Caffeine!); and twice, I was hungry, and munched on cashews, almonds, and dates. It worked, and when I started the run, I knew from my training that 4 more tabs of EAAs at 45 minutes would be enough to tie me through the race without getting nauseous chewing down super sugary gels.

The run starts surprisingly well  and I figure that if I do the 13.1 miles in less than 2 hours I’ll get a PR, and all I need is 8 minute/mile, right, to finish the run with a huge PR?

You can tell a photo from early in the run...
You can tell a photo from early in the run…

And I feel really strong at 7:30 min/mile for the first mile, but remember to get back into zone 2 for the first 4 miles, and managed to pass a couple of guys in my AG at the start (vengeance is mine!), but it’s gotten hotter, and the run has a few hills that don’t seem so bad for the first 3.3 miles out to the turnaround (mostly shaded, lots of water stations, “Water! Water!”, then by the end “ice! ice!”), but feel harder on the next way back, and I guess at the math again and give myself permission to do sub-8:30s, that still gives me a 1:45 finish, right? (WRONG), and I’m starting to fatigue…

Beginning the second loop ...
Beginning the second loop …

And I walk a few of the many wonderful aid stations (just a sip, not the whole cup, and dump the ice down the back of my shirt and into my pants, WAKE UP!), and we get back next to the finish line before starting the second loop (oh, the temptation to cheat and just FINISH like that damn woman at Ironman Whistler in Canada is so huge), and I take my last dosage of EAAs and a salt tablet I dropped from my race belt (get new race belt!) as we start the second 6 1/2 mile loop (why can’t this be a 12-mile race??).

 

And I’ve passed five other guys in my age group, and think (in my fantasy) that maybe I’m shooting for 5th or 6th place (not knowing how many guys beat me out of the water) until this guy with “51” on his calf, with yellow-edged jersey and visor, passes me. Just for a moment. Because now I have a real purpose: If I’m vying for 5th place, I want this more than he does, and I pass him, and he settles into running a few paces behind me, I can hear his feet slapping the pavement, and sometimes he’s next to me, and I do a Benji surge to get ahead, maybe I’ll demoralize him, but I look over my shoulder and he’s still there, and I think I hear him passing as I grimly want to quit, I could WALK from here and still get a PR, and it’s not him but some younger guy, then a younger gal, but he’s still there and we have a mile or two left and we get up that last hill (our third time on this looped course!) and I am miserable, no particular knee or muscle hurting but everything everything is crying out to stop and I don’t and there’s the grass path to the finish line

32_m-100732743-DIGITAL_HIGHRES-1588_043323-3260408

and I CROSS IT AHEAD OF THE OTHER GUY. (Turns out his name’s David, and I thank him.)

Final time, minus 30 minutes for our wave
Final time, minus 30 minutes for our wave

And finish the run in 1:50:40, avg. 8:26 min./mile, and complete the race in 5:21:09 — an 8-minute PR over 2014 (not counting a 5:26 HIM I did in 2013, where the swim was clearly less than a mile). And I was right about 10 guys in my AG passing me — I was 43/149 on the swim, and 53/149 on the bike. But I was wrong about passing 5 guys on the run: I actually passed 15 of ’em, ending at 38/149  AG. (Maybe they had slower transitions…)  And 447/2,095 overall.

image I was panting for 40 minutes after the finish, and couldn’t sit down in the lake without my calves cramping, and didn’t feel human again until getting fruit and ice cream in the food tent and sharing a beer with my gym buddy Nicholas Moore…

image

But the takeaway is not the numeric results, because 38th is very, very far from the podium. And 8 minutes is terrific improvement, especially being two years older. But that’s not it, either. This was the race where I dug deep. I pushed harder than ever not just to finish but to finish FASTER, and I survived. It’s not as good a sound bite as “taking first place for my age group” (as I did at the West Point Sprint, a week earlier), but I felt solid on each leg of the course, and pushed myself beyond what I thought possible. I guess that’s the nature of endurance sports. And I am strangely at peace with that.

image

Race Report – West Point Sprint Triathlon, 8/14/2016

Poster

In 2012, West Point was my second triathlon ever.  I was so nervous then, I drove up so I could ride and run the course — but I couldn’t run it, because a cadet was guarding the entrance of Camp Buckner with a machine gun. (These guys take their security, and their studies, VERY seriously.). At the end of that race, my gym buddy Drew Akhao told me that if I stopped putting on biking gloves and socks, and got a decent bike, I’d immediately shave off 3 minutes from my time…

This time, I drove up with Vadim Shteynberg, who was full of good cheer and a better sense of direction – turns out, Camp Buckner is a different campus, 6 miles away from West Point — and we got there around 6:45, which gave just enough time to get my registration, meet up with Tom Andrews, Kevin Carlsten and his wife Katie, and ‘Zander, all from Dobbs Ferry and Hastings, and get situated in transition before it closed at 8 a.m.

IMG_0634

A total of 37 guys signed up in my age group, and 31 raced — the heat and humidity were predicted to be pretty bad, which may have scared away some of them.  Got to the lake to warm up.  The water is an unbelievable  85 degrees, so wetsuit illegal – but I had bought a “speed suit” for the occasion.  I’m not really sure what it does other than pack me in even tighter than my one piece tri suit, and it’s allowed when wetsuits aren’t.

The national anthem, as you can imagine, is sung simply and beautifully.

I take my 3 capsules of BCAAs as the first wave begins, with plans to take 4 tablets of EAAs 15 minutes into the bike, and at 45 minutes a salt and caffeine tablet (whoo-Hoo!  Caffeine is still legal!).  Taking no chances in this heat.

The cadets take off, swimming in a STRAIGHT LINE, like a flock of birds, really  disciplined drafting.  We were 9th out of 10 waves, so didn’t start until 8:45 or 9 a.m. – as the temperature rose.  I’m still jittery at the start, after all these races, but I manage to remember my mantra:  grateful that I’m alive, that  I wasn’t hurt more when biking and hit by a car (now seven weeks ago), and that amazingly I am racing.  And strangely enough, that carries me across the mat and into the water.

The 0.5 mile swim starts well.  I start by the right side, closer to the weeds and triangular buoy and what looks like a shorter course, and I push hard and get into a groove, and I am swimming right next to my racing buddy BJ Wilson (in his purple Team in Training tri suit)

IMG_0623

which is fun and encouraging because I remembered he’s a pretty strong swimmer but damn if he isn’t pushing me off course, he’s going further and further to the right, and I realize I have to stop bumping him and pass him instead or he’ll add yardage to my swim as well as his own!  Round the buoys, a little slow in the turnover but feeling strong, pass a lot of people (including a bunch doing breast stroke — clearly, short races invite a lot of new athletes…). I go for a straight line to the shore, but it’s so far to the right of everyone else that I hit more weeds, actually have to walk a few steps, the get back in to swim.  Result:  14:06, (4/31 AG, 83/453 OA); not bad for no wetsuit.

Run a bit (mostly on paved road) to get into transition, where it looks like only 1 or 2 bikes have left before me, which is a sign that I swam better than most in my age group — but I’ve been overconfident before, and remember that all of my group probably didn’t fit onto the two racks of bikes I can see, and who knows how many guys beat me on the swim, but it’s okay, I’m here just to do what I can, and my goal is to feel solid on each leg of the race.  T1 in 1:25 (8/31 AG… maybe due to speed suit removal, when everyone else swam in their shorts …)

The bike, brand new Parlee TTiR on its maiden race, feels good.

Parlee TTir

I’m panting as I start, and I pant throughout, but it’s only a  14-mile bike leg, so I’m allowed to pant.  It’s a right hand turn and uphill to the first turnaround,  and a lot of folks on mountain bikes weaving a bit as they go uphill (“Left!  Thank you”), nice aero tuck screaming downhill.  Another rolling hill or two to the second turnaround, back along the same road, turn right into the entrance.  I’m doing what I can, this is fun, I think I pass a couple of guys in my age group, but hard to read the numbers on moving calves…  Bottom line:  41:44, or 19.7 mph.  I’ll take it. (And, I later discover, 2/31 AG…)

I get to transition, and there are NO bikes on my rack, again suggesting that I have arrived before anyone else in my age group, but who knows, another dozen guys could be on a different rack, I’ll just do what I can and it’s DISTRACTING to think about the podium before crossing the finish line… T2 feels pretty good, but I think what slows me down the most is ticking down the mental checklist before I leave the bike (not wanting, for example, to start the run with my helmet on, like I did at my first race… ). T2 in 0:59 (8th in AG).

The run is only 5k, thank you, and by this time it’s warmer, but breezy and not too bad, and I hate these out and backs with extra scenic loops, you see all the guys ahead of you running TOWARDS you, but other than one guy in my age group at the very beginning whom I pass while he’s stretching his shoulders (and squandering his lead!) I don’t see ANYONE who is competing with me for the podium, unless of course there’s a bunch of guys so far ahead I don’t see them, and I start leap frogging with this tall guy who is, fortunately, 5 years younger, and he eventually passes me and I don’t give chase and don’t really push my hardest because (a) it’s hot and (b) there’s no one close enough ahead or behind me to change whether I am going to make the podium.

Besides, my goal is to feel strong and that’s happening. And I’m doing 7:30s or a little faster on the downhills, not great but good pace, and it’s mostly shady, and I’m pushing hard on the up hills whereI feel surprisingly springy and pass more people, and then down again towards the finish line (that’s what I like about this race, the downhill finish) and I push and cross and DONE.  Run in 23:24 (7:33 min/mile).

Total time 1:22:05 (though my Garmin says 1:20:50 – who would you choose to believe?). Which in any event is nearly 5 minutes faster than my time on the same course four years ago (1:26:59).  And sufficient for …

1st place for my age group!

IMG_0664

1/31 AG, 42/453 OA.   I didn’t need the win to feel it was a good race – met my goal of feeling solid on each section — but this is turning out to be a pretty good season, despite all that’s happened.

And it feels GREAT to be alive and racing.