Tag: triathlon

IRONMAN 70.3 Syracuse Recap

Race reports should be written and posted in a timely manner, but sometimes it gets pushed back 2 months. Better late than never, right? In lieu of my normal race recaps, I wanted to share a quick recap of the 2017 Ironman 70.3 Syracuse triathlon race. After a dismal result at the Boston Marathon in April, I quickly shifted gears and started building cycling fitness. With less than 2 months to build towards Ironman 70.3 Syracuse, the race was purposely placed on the calendar as a motivator/icebreaker in order to jump-start the build towards Ironman 70.3 World Championships in Chattanooga, TN. So how did I perform?

The swim in Jamesville Reservoir is pleasant. Having done a handful of swims since last November’s IRONMAN Cozumel race, there was no expectation to swim ‘fast’. The result? A mid-pack swim finish in 38 minutes and 22 seconds.

The bike portion of the race is normally my favorite. However, Mother Nature had different plans this year, giving the racers a steady headwind/crosswind for the majority of the bike course. There aren’t many windy race conditions where I regret using the disc wheel but this bike ride was one of them. Nevertheless, I put my head down and let the legs do their thing, producing a 2 hour 38 minute, 56.8-mile bike split – is it really that difficult to map out a true 56-mile bike course?

Does an extra eight tenths of a mile on the bike course equate to a short run course? In this case, it does! Total run distance was 12.8 miles, instead of 13.1 miles. The run was not enjoyable, but luckily, Christina was out on the course cheering and I was able to steal a kiss. The two loop format made it easy to spot some familiar faces along the course, which made the hills and heat hurt a little less. The result of this run was consistency, bringing me to the finishing line in 1 hour and 31 minutes.

Total race time – 4:52:36

 

Thank you to Christina for being my race support. 

Thank you to CEEPO Triathlon Bikes, ISM Seats, Rudy Project, Zoot Sports, Brickwell Cycling & Team Chocolate Milk for the continued support throughout the race season! 

IRONMAN World Championship Race Report [October 8, 2016]

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A total of 11 days have passed since racing the IRONMAN World Championships in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii and I’m finally ready to reflect how my race-day unfolded.

This was my second time to the island and I really wanted to do much better than my 2014 result. But more importantly, I was looking to have a strong performance – something that I have been building up to for almost a year. Unfortunately, just a couple days before the race, I came down with a fever and chills that lasted nearly 24 hours. I knew something was wrong when the water in Dig Me beach felt cold…not even the delicious coffee from the coffee boat helped warm me up. This sudden turn of events left me with one option – to rest as much as I can and to head into race day knowing that I will try my best.

And so I did just that. It wasn’t pretty but in the end, I got myself to the finish line in 10 hours and 47 minutes.

Swim – 1:11:34

If you have been following my progression throughout the year, you might already know that my weakest part of a triathlon is the swim. With half ironman swims ranging from 34 minutes to 39 minutes this season, I had predicted that I would swim close to 1:16 in Kona. So imagine the surprise when I exited the water nearly 5 minutes under my expected goal! I drafted off the swimmers in front of me for the majority of the swim and exited the water feeling good; pumped that I had taken 11 minutes off my 2014 Kona swim. I took my time in transition to put on sunscreen before heading off to grab my bike.

Bike – 5:19:06 (21.06 mph avg)

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Anything can happen on the Kona bike course. The first two hours were fine; power was a little lower than expected and I was passing lots of faster swimmers along the way. It wasn’t until about 50 miles into the ride that I realized that the nutrition was not going down (or staying down) so I made the switch to try and take in more liquid nutrition at the subsequent aid stations. The approach to Hawi and the climb to the turnaround was met with a cross-wind coming over the right shoulder so I sat up during the climb to gain some more power.

I hit the turnaround, ditched my bottles and grabbed two new ones before the descent. Things were heating up and my nutrition plan had been compromised, either by the heat or the residual effects of my fever earlier in the week (or a combination of both).

Nonetheless, I hammered away as best as I could, knowing that I can still overcome a bad day by playing it smart. After descending from Hawi, I made sure that I would fuel up at each aid station since none of the solid foods were going down. At one of the last aid stations, I saw a volunteer hold up a bottle of Coke and I couldn’t resist. Coke never tasted so good after four and a half hours of drinking orange flavored Gatorade and water. With about 15 miles left, it was all headwind, a pretty steady one that forced me to stay tucked into aero-position in an effort to minimize drag.

I rolled into T2 feeling very hot, a little overcooked and ready to tackle the marathon run.

Marathon – 4:06:13

The original plan for the run was to negative split it by running the first half very easy. That plan went out the door at the very first aid station on the run when I felt light-headed and out of energy. My stomach was not having it today and I tried to nibble on some pretzels and bananas. At that point, I was hoping that this feeling would pass and that I would feel better. I decided to run between aid stations and walk through aid stations to grab enough water and nutrition.

Around mile 4, a guy ran up to me and told me to run with him. He introduced himself as Craig, wearing a Team Timex kit. We ran together for a couple of miles before he had to stop to take care of nature’s calling. But before we split up, he reassured me that “We will get to the finish line”. I used his words to motivate me at times when I wanted to just quit.

After walking up Palani Road towards Mile 11, lots of clouds rolled in providing some relief from the sun and heat. By this point of the marathon, some pretty nasty blisters had formed in under the balls of my feet. To remedy it, I took off my socks – which worked briefly but the pain from the blisters came back every time I ran longer than a couple of minutes.

There wasn’t much I could do to get rid of the blister pain and there was no medical tent along the Queen K. Along the highway, I saw some familiar faces…first Hugh and then Talbot, both of whom where not racing and were out cheering and taking photos.

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photo credit: Hugh W.

After passing the point where spectators were not allowed on the Queen K, I made my best effort to not stop running until the aid stations. I hit the energy lab and grabbed an entire can of Red Bull, chugged it and maintained a slow but steady shuffle. For the first time during the marathon, I did not stop to walk at an aid station. Exiting the energy lab meant I had about an hour left on the run (at my current pace). The blisters were killing my feet and I tried to focus on the runners ahead of me to take my mind off the pain. Eventually, I got to Palani Road and it was all downhill to the finishing line.

With all I had left, I ran as fast as I could down Alii Drive and across the finish.

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celebrating with Kristin on her 4th place Age group!

Ironman Kona was yet another humbling experience that heavily tested my mental ability to keep going forward when all seems to go wrong. I certainly did not materialize my training on race day, but was able to dig deep mentally and not give up. 

Thank you to my family and friends that helped make this endeavor possible.

Thank you…

  • CEEPO Bikes, Marc-Andre, Gilles, Steve, and Joe for the bike support. The CEEPO Viper held up to those crazy crosswinds!
  • Team Chocolate Milk for the post-race recovery
  • ISM Seat, Brickwell Cycling, Headsweats, Honey Stinger and Rudy Project

The next blog post will include more about Kona, some more take-aways, and what is up next.

Thanks for reading! 

TOUGHMAN Triathlon Race Report [Sept. 18, 2016]

First and foremost, I want to thank Richard and his team at TOUGHMAN for consistently putting on such an excellent race experience. New for 2016 was a complete change of venue, from Croton Park at Croton-on-the-Hudson to Harriman State Park in Stony Point, New York. The entirety of the race now takes place in Harriman State Park, which makes logistics (i.e. parking) a lot more family, spectator & racer friendly.

Second, with the emergence of more and more races, it is important to choose races that will provide the greatest amount of joy – ask yourself, which race will I likely remember 5, 10, 15 years from now? For the past 5-consecutive years, I have raced TOUGHMAN races primarily because of its commitment to quality and the race experience and there’s no ‘M Dot’ involved, but you cannot beat the fun from watching the kids races, the post-race BBQ…and of course, the tough but rewarding race course.

So mark your calendars for September 17, 2017 for TOUGHMAN Championships. I know I will definitely be there…Registration is now OPEN!


On Saturday, I watched the TOUGHKids and TOUGHTEEN races while providing some bicycle support with Brickwell Cycling. Watching the little ones run through the finish line was really cool but the cutest part of the kids races would be the carnage of bikes in transition. Good thing some bikes had kickstands!

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cute kiddie bikes in transition

Race Day – Sunday, September 18, 2016

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I left the house at 5am and arrived at Lake Welch at 6am. Transition was right next to the enormous parking lot so prepping my transition area was a breeze. For the day, I was seeded race number 5…I was 5th overall last year so maybe it was a lucky coincidence? Nevertheless, I was sandwiched between eventual race winners: 2015 Ironman Lake Placid Women’s Champ Amy Farrell (#4) and Argentinian Professional Andres Darricau (#6). Lucky me!

Swim: By 6:15, I had finished my preparations and went straight to the swim start area to check out the swim course and water conditions. At the start line, I saw that my former Perfect Fuel teammate, Jeremy Howard was racing. I knew he would be first out of the water, so I told him that I’ll see him out on the bike course. The Elite wave started at 6:45am. There was plenty of room to spread out in Lake Welch so I never got elbowed during the swim. Within a few minutes, I found myself swimming alone and that would be the case until I reached the shore 34 to 35 minutes later.

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When I got to my bike in transition, I noticed that most of the other bikes were gone, meaning I probably had one of the slowest swim splits compared to the other Elite athletes.

Bike: The game plan on the bike was to ride as conservatively as possible to produce a low normalized power to average power ratio. Since Harriman Park features a good amount of climbing, there weren’t many sections of the bike course that were flat – you were either climbing or descending. Within the first few miles of the bike, I was able to pass a handful of athletes. Then, for the remainder of the ride, I focused on front loading enough nutrition so that I wouldn’t get hungry on the run. After 2 hours and 33 minutes, I dismounted my CEEPO Viper and left T2 in 6th place.

i wanted to climb faster so shallow training wheels for the day
i wanted to climb faster so shallow training wheels for the day

Run: A few minutes into the run, as I was going downhill, I spotted two guys ahead of me, with Jeremy in 5th position. They were at least 4-5 minutes ahead of me because they had just passed the 1-mile marker going back up the hill as I was going down. It wasn’t until the turnaround at 3-4 miles later that I would see them, so for most of the run, I kept telling myself that I would be content with a 6th place finish.

After the turnaround, I kept the pace going (around 6:50 min/mile) and calculated my run deficit to 3rd, 4th, and 5th place. I realized that I had bridged the gap by over 2 minutes in 3 to 4 miles, so I decided that I would focus on catching one guy.

At mile 8.5, I saw Jeremy and he had moved up to 3rd position, with two guys on his heels. This was the same uphill/downhill section in the first mile of the run, so I was able to calculate how far back I was – which was less than two minutes!

Shortly passing the mile 9 marker, we ran pass the transition area and did a quick out and back before heading out on a 5km out and back section. The guy that was in 2nd position the entire race had failed to make the turn around and went from 2nd to 5th. At mile 10, I passed him and the two guys that were behind Jeremy were only 10-15 seconds up the road. My leg turnover increased with each mile and shortly after passing the mile 11 marker, I overtook for 4th place. There was a slight incline towards the final turnaround of the run and that is where I passed for 3rd place.

By then, 1st place had probably already finished the race. The only guy left up the road was Jeremy. At the turn around with 1.5 miles to go, Jeremy was about 30 seconds ahead of me but as I creeped up for the pass, he stopped to stretch out his leg cramp. I couldn’t believe my eyes. Within the last 3 miles of the race, I went from 6th place to 2nd place. With SO MUCH EXCITEMENT in my head, I cruised the last net-downhill mile in 5:45 and finished in 2nd place overall!

Photo Credit: R.Barkan
Photo Credit: R.Barkan

 

Go Team Brickwell!
Go Team Brickwell!

So what are the important take-aways of this race?

PATIENCE – from swimming alone, to biking alone, to running alone for the majority of the race, I was biding my time and staying consistent. My power output faded slightly during a short lull, but I managed to pick up the effort in the last 10 miles to set myself up for a strong run. And as for the run, the decision to not go hunting early on saved my legs from burning up, and with enough gas left in the tank, it gave me the extra boost the last 5 kilometers of the run.

NUTRITION – With only a couple of weeks until IRONMAN World Championships, the TOUGHMAN race was a keen opportunity to dial in my race nutrition. Throughout this season, I have learned that intaking just slightly more calories on the bike (and slightly less on the run) is what works best for me.

CADENCE – Yes, leg turnover has proven to be one of the key factors to sets me up for a strong run. (Thanks Derek!)


Thank you Brickwell Cycling for the best bike support in NYC & Long Island. And kudos to all my sponsors.

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NEXT UP…

IRONMAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

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