Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Days like these
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free, pull
400 as 50 scull/50 pull
300 ez free
200 as 50 fist/50 free
100 ez free, 2'
100 free as 25 sprint/25 ez
200 ez pull
300 free as 25 head-up/75 ez
400 free as 100 each ez/moderate/hard/ez, 2'
400 as 100 each free/back/breast/pull
300 descending (2:10,2:05,1:58) (way too hard for that slow!)
100 ez non-free
Total: 3400m
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Legs not quite right
Run: 5 miles @ 7.5 mph
Monday, December 29, 2008
Sloppy morning
It took quite a while to find anything resembling good form this morning. I just felt like I was "off" from the moment I got in until the end. Still, I had a decent day, hitting all my pace times, and definitely got a good workout. Since we only miss Friday this week, we're back on the regular schedule and should be making things right pretty soon.
Swim: w/u - 3x(100 free, 15", 50 drill, 15", 25 kick/25 free, 15")
4x50 as 25 ez/25 build, on 1:10
11x100 free, on 2:10
4x100 ez pull, on 2:20
12x50 on 1:25, as 1) non-free, 2) 25 kick/25 free, 3) fingertip drag, 4) flick
Total: 2900m
Weights:
Bear - 2x4/48
Front squat - 3x8,8,10/105
Jackknifes - 3x15
Bent row - 3x12,12,12/85
Pushup - 3x10,10,12/60
Barbell curl - 2x10,9/43
French press - 2x12,12/30
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Blustery day
The wind actually helped restrain the effort a bit, although the pace picked up quite a bit during the tailwind sections. Otherwise, it was a pretty decent morning, and the five miles flew by. I'll slowly keep adding to these Sunday runs as race season gets closer, just logging some quality miles.
Run: 5 miles, easy
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Rolling out
Bike: 90 minutes, zone 1-2
Friday, December 26, 2008
Boxing day
Chaosbringer - 2x4/48
Deadlift - 3x10,10,12/165
Janda Situp - 3x12
Chins - 3x8,8,7
Reverse flye/Lateral raise - 3x12,12,11/10
Reverse curl - 2x12,12/38
Diamond pushup - 2x15,14
Thursday, December 25, 2008
I suck at days off
Hope the holidays finds everyone well, and best of wishes for the coming year.
Run: 4 miles @ 7.5 mph
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
The Eve
Weights:
Bear - 2x4/48
Front squat - 3x12,12,14/95
Jackknifes - 3x12
Bent row - 3x12,12,11/85
Pushup - 3x10,10,11/60
Barbell curl - 2x8,10/43
French press - 2x12,12/40
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Keep moving
Run: 4 miles @ 7.5 mph
Monday, December 22, 2008
Holiday swim
Swim: w/u - 100 free, 20"
50 one-arm
4x40 sec vertical kicking, 20"
50 one-arm
200 pull
2x100 free, 30"
400 free on 8:30
2x200 free on 4:40
4x100 free on 2:10
Splashing around
Total: 1800m
Weights:
Chaosbringer - 2x4/48
Deadlift - 3x10,10,12/160
Janda situp - 3x12
Chins - 3x8,7,7
Reverse flye/Lateral raise - 3x12,12,10/10
Reverse curl - 2x12,12/38
Diamond pushup - 2x15,14
Sunday, December 21, 2008
A step back to move forward
I did four miles, at 7.5 mph, which felt OK, although I'm now fat and slow. There has been some deconditioning over the last couple of months. I'm not disappointed by that at all, it's what was supposed to happen. Now, over the next couple of months by getting back to regular workouts, I'll bounce back to where I was, and even a bit further. It's all part of the flux of fitness. I have over 4 months until any racing is done, 5 months to the first triathlon. Plenty of time to get myself back to tip-top.
Run: 4 miles @ 7.5 mph
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Lifting
Bear - 2x4/48
Front squat - 3x12,12,12/95
Jackknife - 3x12,12,12
Bent row - 3x12,12,10/85
Pushup - 3x10,10,10/60
Barbell curl - 2x12,13/38
French press - 2x10,12/30
Friday, December 19, 2008
Wet before the storm
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free, pull
3x(300 ez free, 30", focus on form
3x100 descending, on 2:15 (1:55-1:57, 1:50-1:53, 1:48, 1:50)
100 ez non-free, 30"
4x25 sprint, 30")
c/d - 100 pull, 100 non-free
Total: 3200m
Thursday, December 18, 2008
I like the getting better part
Weights:
Chaosbringer - 2x4/48
Deadlift - 3x8,8,10/165
Janda situps - 3x12,12,12
Chins - 3x6,6,8
Reverse flye/Lateral Raise - 3x10,10,12/10
Reverse curl - 2x12,12/38
Diamond pushup - 2x12,15
The 500th post
Where I've been:
It all started here. It was at that point that I was beginning the journey to this triathlon thing. My focus was on a marathon, but I knew that I had to begin swimming, since by that point I had already signed up for this season's A race. And so, I went to the pool. I didn't drown. Then I got a fancy new bike, meaning that I'd need to do the work to justify it.
Once the new year rolled around, the racing began. First it was off to Florida. And then the real season began. I started off poorly, and screwed up some races. But I also had some successes, and 'finished' on a high note. Which actually meant that I wasn't quite finished. And that's when I took on the best in the world and learned I was among them, but not of them.
Where I am:
Anxiously making my way through a desperately-needed off-season, looking forward to starting some real workouts soon. (Maybe sneaking on the treadmill next week, a week ahead of schedule.)
Where I'm going:
This season, I'm hoping to go to a variety of races around the province. Nothing that I have to stay overnight for, nothing longer than a sprint. I'll be working on my short-course speed, so that in 3 to 5 years time, I'll make another run at 70.3 Worlds, or a full Ironman, and have more than enough kick to get it done (go fast then go far). With real-life looming, I'm happily changing my workout schedule to accomodate any major changes in my world. But there will always be a place for training and racing, and there will always be a place for me to write about it. (And bore the readers.)
See you in another 500 posts.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Morning after the snowfall
It was a good morning in the pool. The weather conditions had scared off most people, so crowding was not an issue. A lot more drill and kick work, which is good since that's where I need the most development. If I can get faster just by fixing some flaws, then imagine what will happen once I actually start working at getting faster later in the spring.
The most amazing part of the morning is that my car actually made it up the hill from the pool afterwards. I was more than a little concerned. Luckily, enough traffic had gone through to groove in a bit of path, and I got just enough traction to get over the ridge. It was close for a while. I would get winter tires, but I'm not driving to Quebec to get some.
Swim: w/u - 200yds each free, non-free, pull
300 as 25 scull/75 pull, 30"
2x100 kick, 30"
400 ez free, 30", w/flip turns, breathe to North wall
4x25 sprint, 30"
100 ez non-free
300 as 25 scull/75 pull, 30"
2x100 kick, 30"
Total: 2200 yds
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Up
Weights:
Bear - 2x4/48
Front squat - 3x10,10,12/95
Jackknifes - 3x12
Bent row - 3x10,10,12/85
Pushup - 3x10,10,9/+60
Barbell curl - 2x12,12/38
French press - 2x8,10/30
Monday, December 15, 2008
Set the bar
Have you ever accomplished a goal, and you should be happy, but you're a little disappointed because you could have done better if you hadn't screwed something up? That's where I am right now. I figured I'd be happy with anything better than 7:20 (averaging 1:50/100), and as long as I beat 7:30, all was well. And I pulled that off, hitting 7:13, but the effort was brutal. I went way too fast early, and was barely staying afloat in the last stretch. My 200m splits were 3:30/3:43. Not even pacing at all. Even worse, my first 100m was in 1:35, so my splits broke down as 1:35/1:55/(1:51.5 average x2). If I paced the first stretch better, went 1:45/1:45, I would have been at the halfway mark at the same time, but I probably could have been 1:48-1:50x2 coming home.
But this is why we do the tests: to learn. I've learned two things. First, my pacing sucks. I need to start slower on an effort like this. The fatigue catches up with you quick and what felt fine for a while suddenly becomes very hard. Second, I need to work on my stamina. But we kind of knew that going in. It's still the off-season, I haven't done any hard work since Clearwater, so things aren't in form yet. I'll be much better when we do the test again in January.
Swim: w/u - 200m free, 4x50 drill, 4x25 kick, 100 non-free
8x50 on 1:10, as 1) 25 hard/25 ez, 2) 25 ez/25 build, 3) non-free, 4) moderate
400m TT (100-1:35, 200-3:30, 400-7:13)
100 ez free
300 ez pull, 20"
4x50 non-free, kick or drill, 20"
200 pull, 20"
4x25 non-free, 20"
Total: 2300m
Oh, and one other thing I learned: fast people are fast. They're not like normal people. I had the pleasure of sharing the lane with Wolfgang who was training with us this morning. I spotted him 30 seconds, and he lapped me at the 200m mark (300 for him). I thought about catching his draft for a second, but in that second he pulled so far away that there wasn't a draft anymore. I think he finished in 5:20. He must've been taking it easy.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Not sticking to the plan
Run: 5.25 miles, EZ
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Small gains
Weights:
Chaosbringer - 2x4/48
Deadlift - 3x12,12,14/155
Janda Situp - 3x12,12,12
Chins - 3x6,6,7
Reverse flye/Lateral raise - 3x10,10,10/10
Reverse curl - 2x12,12/38
Diamond pushup - 2x12,14
Friday, December 12, 2008
Drills and skills
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free, pull
3x100, 30" as 25 kick/25 hard kick/50 free
3x100, 15" as 25 scull/25 pull/25 scull/25 fast pull
400 ez free, breathe to west wall, 30"
2x300 ez free drill focus, 1) body roll, high elbow recovery, 2) wide flat foot, 30"
3x200, 30", 1&2) negative split (2:05/1:50), 3) ez non-free
4x100, 30", 1&3) hard (1:42, 1:43), 2&4) ez non-free
Total: 3200m
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Lift
Weights:
Bear - 2x4/48
Front squat - 3x10,10,11/95
Jackknife - 3x12
Bent row - 3x10,10,11/85
Pushup - 3x8,8,10/+60
Barbell curl - 2x12,12/38
French press - 2x12,14/25
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Add a little speed
In the water, I felt good. I didn't drown using the snorkel during the kick set, my sculling was marginally better (thanks for the tips Mark!), and my pace during the extended easy sets was closer to EZ-plus. The day really hit a high note when we finished with a 200yd TT, and I went under 3 minutes (2:57). That was about as good as I could expect to do. It's not the blazing pace most folks can pull off, but next week we have a 400m TT, and I'd love to get 7:00-7:15. This was a nice confidence-booster that I might be on my way.
Swim: w/u - 200yd each free, kick, non-free
8x50 as 25 scull/25 pull
500 ez free, breathe to east wall
400 ez free, w/flip turns
300 free as 25 fast/75 ez
200 TT (2:57)
c/d - 50 non-free
Total: 2550yds
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Not as expected
Weights:
Chaosbringer - 2x4/48
Deadlift - 3x10,10,12/155
Janda Situp - 3x12,12,12
Chins - 3x6,6,7
Reverse flye/Lateral raise - 3x10,10,10/10
Reverse curl - 2x10,11/38
Diamond pushup - 2x12,12
Anxious
Patience is the key. By the time we get to real training, I'll be so fired up you won't be able to rein in the first few days.
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Arctic winds
Turns out, I was a little overdressed. It wasn't until I got a decent sweat going that I started to feel cold at all, due to the sweat freezing. Running into the wind wasn't pleasant, mainly because it was cold, and also strong enough to almost stop you in your tracks, thus making you be in the cold that much longer. Otherwise, the run itself was actually pretty enjoyable. Lots of folks were out shovelling their drives, or heading for church, so I got quite a few puzzled looks. That's always fun.
Run: 4.2 miles, zone 1-2
Saturday, December 6, 2008
A little of this, a little of that
Weights:
Bear - 2x4/48
Front squat - 3x10,10,10/95
Jackknife - 3x12
Bent Row - 3x10,10,10/85
Pushup - 3x8,8,9/+60
Barbell Curl - 2x12,11/38
French Press - 2x10,13/25
Then, in the afternoon, I watched the TSN coverage of the Ironman 70.3 Muskoka race. Unfortunately, I was not one of the featured athletes, although I am in the coverage. (They show the swim start of my wave, so it's kind of a 'Where's Waldo?' scenario, with 200 late-30's guys wearing black wetsuits and purple swim caps. Good luck on picking me out.) It was fun watching a race that I was actually involved in. I taped the show, with the plan of watching it while on the trainer, or just for motivation in the future. I don't know if I'll be able to do that, though, since a portion of the coverage is on my assistant swim coach, and her collapse on the day (second out of the water, falling apart on the bike, quitting at the side of the road in tears). It killed me watching her go through that, but I guess it's all part of racing. She'll be back, better than ever, and I know that I had my best race ever that fateful September morning.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Barely faster than stationary
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free, pull
3x(100 kick, 20"
100 free, 20" focus on kick)
3x200 as 50 scull/150 pull, 30"
100 non-free
3x300 free, descending (5:57, 5:55, 5:50), 30"
100 non-free
6x25 sprint, 30"
c/d - 50 breast
Total: 3100m
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Keep going up
Weights:
Chaosbringer - 2x4/48
Deadlift - 3x8,8,10/155
Janda Situp - 3x10,10,12
Chins - 3x6,6,7
Reverse flye/Lateral raise - 3x10,10,10/10
Reverse curl - 2x10,10/38
Diamond pushup - 2x12,12
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Oxygen
All of today's work was on pace times, so it was get the work done, and rest as much as you can before the clock hits the magic mark. In general, I was more than comfortable with this, and well within the paces for each set, but a few times I did find myself more focused on swimming fast rather than swimming well. My form would suffer a bit in effort to go quick enough to get some rest. When I caught myself doing this, I tried to force myself into better form, which not surprisingly kept my speed up, or even increased it.
I was surprised I got through the breathing sets at the end as well as I did. Sure, it's only a 25 yard pool, but I suck at hypoxic sets. Somehow, I was able to get across the pool with no intermediate breaths. It seems OK for the first few strokes, then you're working a balance of going slow enough that you don't demand more oxygen, but going fast enough that your stores will be enough. Once you see the T, there's an oxygen-deprived sprint to get to the wall. Not a pleasant experience, but I made it.
Swim: w/u - 300yds free, 200 pull, 100 kick
4x25 drill (6 beat kick, doggy paddle), on 30"
4x50 free, on 1'
4x75 as 25 overkick/50 free, on 1:40
4x100 free, on 1:50
4x75 as 25 back/25 breast/25 free, on 2:00
4x50 as 25 kick/25 free, on 1:30
4x25 free, on 1' (3 breaths, 2 breaths, 1 breaths, 0 breaths)
Total: 2200yds
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Better
Bear: 2x4/48
Front Squat: 3x8,8,10/95
Jackknife: 3x12
Bent Row: 3x10/85
Pushup: 3x8/+60
Barbell Curl: 2x10,12/38
French Press: 2x10,11/25
Monday, December 1, 2008
Swim
Swim: w/u - 2x(100m free, 50 kick/50 free, 50 drill/50 free)
2x50 one-arm/50 free, 20"
4x25 3-3/75 free, 30"
400 free, moderate pace, 30"
8x50 drill, 20"
4x100 on 2:05
100 ez non-free
4x50 swim golf (best: 54 strokes, 50")
c/d - 100 ez non-free
Total: 2800m
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Fine Fall Morning
Run: 3 miles, EZ
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Picking things up
So that's what I did. And things went a little better than Tuesday. I'm still weak, but less weak than I was. And next time I'll be even less weak. That's all I can hope for.
Weights:
Chaosbringer: 2x4/48
Deadlift: 3x12,12,14/145
Janda sit-up: 3x10
Chins: 3x6,6,6
Reverse flye/Lateral raise: 3x10,10,10/10
Reverse curl: 2x8,11/38
Diamond pushup: 2x10,12
Friday, November 28, 2008
Work, drill, flip
After a solid warm-up, we were assigned into three groups, each with a different sub-workout to do. After 20-25 minutes, we changed to the next sub-workout, until all three were completed. One of the sets was a free/pull set, the next was drills, the last (for me) was flip turns. I was happy to get the "work" set done early, so I could cruise through the remainder. It's going to take a few weeks to get used to the early mornings and longer workouts, methinks.
PS- Thirty seconds of vertical kicking (not eggbeater) is tough. They might as well call that "almost drowning".
Swim: w/u - 150m free
4x30" vertical kicking, 30" rest
150 as breast/back/free
2x50 free, breathing every 3/5
400 free, 45"
4x100 pull, 20"
200 free, 45"
2x50, 30" as 1) 1-arm, 2) catch-up
100 free, 30"
4x75, 30" as 25 3-3/25 catch-up/25 free
2x50, 30" as 1) 1-arm, 2) catch-up
100 free, 30" 100 free, 30" as 25, 3-3/25 catch-up/50 free
Flip turn practice
200 free, 30" with flip turns
c/d - 200 as 50 free w/3 somersaults/50 breast
Total: 2600m
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Weak sauce
Bear: 2x4/48
Front squat: 3x6,6,8/95
Jackknife: 3x10
Bent row: 3x10,10,8/85
Pushup: 3x10,8,6/+60
Barbell curl: 2x8,11/38
French press: 2x10,14/20
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Form
Swim: w/u - 200yds each: free, non-free, pull
3x(100 kick, 30", as 50 front/25 right/25 left
100 wide/flat/foot drill, 10"
200 ez free, breathe to windows, 30"
50 free, hard, 30"
50 ez non-free, 30")
c/d - 100 free, 100 non-free
Total: 2300 yds
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Belly up to the bar
OK, I guess I will put everything down, since this has transformed into an online training diary anyways.
Chaosbringer: 2x4/48lbs
Deadlift: 3x10,10,12/145lbs
Janda Situp: 3x10
Chin-ups: 3x6
Reverse flye/Lateral raise: 3x10,10,8/10lbs
Reverse curl: 2x8,9/38lbs
Diamond pushups: 2x10
A year ago I was knocking out repeats of 10-12 reps on chins, and deadlifting over 200 for reps, so right now I suck.
Monday, November 24, 2008
Getting my feet wet, again
Since it's early in the season, this is the time to work on the parts of swimming that make you faster, but aren't just swimming fast. Those things are kicking and sculling, and lots of it. I jumped into my old lane, noticed that there had been some serious shuffling of lanes (one of my lanemates was now lane 2, a couple were lane 4, one of the lane 2 gents was back in lane 3 ... lots of movement), and started into the workout. I performed OK, but I know I need to work on my kicking, and I volunteered to be the end of the train for the sculling sets. I need some instruction on how to scull better, since I shouldn't be so slow when I can actually swim at a decent pace. I got in a good workout, not bad for the first time out a couple of months, and first swim in two weeks.
Here's to as much improvement this year as last. Two lanes to to go (assuming I don't get shuffled back to 4).
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free, pull
3x200, 30" as 50 kick/25 left kick/25 right kick/100 ez free
100 ez non-free
12x50, 10" as 25 scull/25 pull (4 each high scull, mid scull, low scull)
10 ez non-free
8x100 ez non-free, on 2:20
Total: 2800m
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Don't call it a comeback
Getting really antsy on Friday, I did one of the few things that I could do with any tools, and just a little bit of floorspace: squats. And lots of them. About 210 to be exact. Now, it wasn't anything I would label a workout, so that's why it isn't logged, but after a year of no resistance training, high-rep squatting has left an impression in my legs. I've basically been reduced to shuffling like a cast-off from a George Romero classic for the last couple of days. But all that wasn't enough to stop me from heading out for a run tonight.
The plan was to do an untimed, flat three miles. That's all the running I plan on doing each Sunday for the next few weeks, just enough to keep form together while putting my focus elsewhere and allowing a slow build towards the season. I knew I was very sore, so I was just going to go as far as I could. My the time I was halfway down the street, I planned on heading back when I hit the corner, the soreness was so intense. But instead, I rounded the corner and followed my route. I was tempted quite often to slow down, or walk, or head home, but I just kept putting one foot in front of the other, and made my way through the run. It was a bit cool, and I didn't put on the right gloves for that, but otherwise it was great. Even as bad as my legs felt, I just enjoyed being able to get out under my own power. I'm pretty detrained right now, so no watches are needed for a while. I'll just get a bit of mileage while resting and be ready to hit it hard in the new year.
Run: 3.15 miles, zone 1-2
Thursday, November 13, 2008
A long answer to a short question
That's a bit of a tricky question to answer. Of course, part of the trick is needing to qualify. I had a pretty good race and was able to wrangle a spot,so at least I've shown that I have what it takes to get into position for a rolldown slot. As I continue to grow in this sport, I would hope to be able to finish even higher, increasing my chances, but it's still a bit of a crapshoot.
It won't even be a consideration for a few years. With family commitments, my wife and I have agreed on a plan of unquestioned training time every five years. (Thinking about it now, maybe I should have bargained for every 4 like the Olympics?) Since this year had a lot of volume just getting my feet wet, I'll be scaling back for the next few years. My plan is to focus on my short-course speed, doing sprint races for the next two years, build to Olympic or an under-prepared local HIM in year three, be slightly more serious with a HIM in year four building volume, so that year 5 would be either Ironman, or something similar. That means, at best, I wouldn't be looking at Clearwater for four years at least.
There's also the issue of scheduling. The two month period between Muskoka and Clearwater didn't work out well for me this time. Perhaps I can figure out a better plan, but it's such a weird stretch to deal with. If I could qualify at an earlier race, that would be optimal, like Calgary in late July, or Disney in May. Enough time to properly rest and allow for a good build. So what races I can get to, and get into, become part of the equation.
But then there's also the very short answer to the question: As long as the race remains in Clearwater, I'm 90% certain I wouldn't go back. I'm glad I went, and I would recommend to any first-time qualifier to go and have fun, but once you've been there and seen how the race plays out, I can understand why so many people won't return until a venue change is made.
It seems to be the cool thing to complain about the drafting after IMFL and Clearwater, and I don't want to fall into that trap (but I'm about to). Rather than just stamping my feet and proclaiming, "It's loaded with cheaters. I was never passed a single solo rider, but tons of groups wheel to wheel" (which is true) I decided I'd do a little analysis, being the analytical sort. I took a look at the top 50 times to T2 in the men's 35-39 and 40-44 age groups. Why these two? Well, M35-39 is my group, and M40-44 is the first men's wave that followed us, and most of the people who passed me were from this wave. Both of these age groups were divided into two waves, separated by five minutes, based on last name (A-L, M-Z for M35-39; A-K, L-Z for M40-44). My table below has the time to T2, total bike leg, and time for the last section of the bike, color coded by wave (Wave 1=blue, wave 2=green). All times were taken from the Ironman results pages, which list the top 100 finishers in each AG. Any missing values are due to the athlete not being listed in the top 100, or in the case of third bike leg time, no intermediate timing.
I should start by pointing out that none of this is proof of any drafting. An athlete is legal at 7m behind, which is about 0.8 seconds at 38 km/h. It should also be noted that the last leg of the bike ride has the causeway (which is one of the few places to break up a group), as well as the finishing stretch (people dismounting and running at different speeds).
Here are a few things I see: Obviously, there's some clustering. Either speed is dependent on your last name, or groups are forming on the road. Inside some of the clusters, you can find up to 3 minutes difference over the entire bike course, but only a few seconds over the last leg, and that the difference to T2 is very close to the difference in the last leg times. Probably the most interesting observation comes from a few riders down the list. If you look at M35-39, around positions 41-45, these guys do the last leg much faster than the riders immediately above them (by 90-120 seconds). These are all wave 1 athletes. If you look up, arriving exactly five minutes earlier (by race time) is a cluster of wave 2 athletes (positions 9-12), who ride the last leg at an almost identical speed. They all get to T2 within seconds by clock time. (There's a similar thing happening in M40-44, see 48-50 vs. 20-26.) There are probably a few other minor observations that can be made, but that should be enough.
None of this includes the riders even further back, or the women's field caught between these two groups, or the upcoming M45-49 and M18-29 waves that started later. If I had the time and the data, I'd love to do this for everyone on the course, and see what patterns arise.
I want to make a point that there doesn't seem to be any real drafting at the very front of the race. These folks are absolute hammers, who may benefit from the slingshot draft of passing everyone, but they seem to be that much stronger than everyone else. It's the MOP and behind where the issues are the greatest. During my ride, I didn't see a single marshall or any riders in the penalty tents. Everything seemed to go unchecked. I just wish I could redo this for a larger sample.
As I said before, this may seem like sour grapes, and maybe it is. I was 154 out of the water, and moved up to 153 by the end of the bike. I admit that I'm not the fastest biker on the block, but I've never been in the second half of bike splits, nevermind almost the last, so to only get one spot is surprising. I know I rode legally, and I know what I saw other riders do (less riding legally). And this exercise is, at least, some vague evidence that the complaints about Clearwater might not be that far off.
So that's why I wouldn't be going back. Unless you're at the absolute front, there's little chance of getting a decent placing without resorting to drafting (in my view). If they change the venue to some place for fairer competition, I'd love to attend another Worlds, but I don't see myself returning to Florida.
Still here
I do have a post about Clearwater I'd like to write, but I'm having some issues getting my tables that support my position into bloggable form. So it might be a couple of weeks if I don't figure it out today.
Saturday, November 8, 2008
I was there, it happened - Ironman 70.3 World Championships Race Report
My swim wave wasn't going off until 7:30, so at about 6:30 I jumped in the water to warm-up a bit and get things flowing. I was out early enough to watch the male and female pro waves take off, then I moved into the corrals. Every five minutes we would move a little closer to the front, and conversations seemed to get a little quieter. The M35-39 age group was divided into two waves by last name. I was in the second, so it was a bit disconcerting to know that you aren't racing all of the people you're actually racing (if that makes any sense). Finally we were in the last corral, and with 2 1/2 minutes to go, we were called to the start line. I seeded myself at the back of the group, knowing my swim isn't going to win me any races. Shortly after the "ten seconds to go" announcement (probably about ten seconds), the smallest loudest cannon on the East Coast went off.
Swim:
It begins with a sprint from the beach. I followed along, and when everyone else stopped running and started swimming, I did the same. I wanted to find a decent set of feet and just follow along. Amazingly, I felt good enough to go past the group I was with, and started working my way up to the next, even faster, bunch. Knowing I wanted to catch up, I put my head down, and knocked out thirty hard strokes. It was around this point that the guy in the kayak told me I was swimming off to sea. Not a great start, but I got myself back on course, found another draft and made the first turn a half-mile from shore. (For a non-swimmer, that's disconcertingly far from dry land.) Just a couple hundred meters later, we made another right turn for home. Home, at this point, was due east, directly into the sun. If you weren't blinded by the glare of the sun, you were blinded by the glare off the water of the sun. I was able to vaguely make out a buoy, and started swimming for it. A short while later, the guy on the paddleboard informed me I was cutting across the course, apparently trying to start again. Now I could see the buoy to my left (no longer looking east), and got back on course. I pulled in behind what I assume was the group I left in the first few hundred meters (what a worthwhile exercise that turned out to be). Now I just hung in and tried to get to T1. No more heroics in the swim. I was out and up the beach in 36 minutes and change, not too bad considering I lost probably a minute or two swimming all over the place. I noticed some green caps over my shoulder as I exited the water, meaning my number one goal was accomplished. Not last.
T1:
The run from the beach took us through a fresh water shower, then to the wetsuit strippers. I grabbed my T1 gear bag and was in the change tent as quick as possible. A helper came over as I sat down, and once I dumped the contents of my bag, he grabbed the bag and started filling it with my discarded material (wetsuit, goggles, swim cap), then took it to the pile of bags to be replaced. Once I was fully suited (glasses, helmet, shoes, race belt), I grabbed my bike, hit the mount line, and was moving.
Bike:
I passed a few people on the first roads out of town, up and over the Memorial Causeway. I tried to find my rhythm and let my heart rate fall back down to where it belonged. I passed the Hoyts about 20 minutes into the ride, and felt more than a little inspired. Then it was just a matter of pedalling, and keeping up with fluids and energy.
There really isn't much to report on the Clearwater course. It's a series of relatively long stretches of flat roads, not much scenery. I had my heart rate a bit higher than I probably should have (145-150 bpm), but I was trying to stay in the game. This may have cooked my legs going into the last discipline. There was a bit of a westerly wind, which was in our faces on the homestretch, but nothing too significant. Two hours, thirty one minutes after I left transition, I was back where I started, with a half-marathon to go.
** Note: I may or may not do a post about the drafting situation in the next couple of days. (I definitely have some things to say.) Unfortunately, I'm afraid it would just come off as sour grapes as an under-performer. I will make only two points:
1. I didn't see a single person in a penalty tent on course, and I didn't see a single official during my entire ride. And they wonder why there might be a problem.
2. I can look myself in the mirror and know I rode 100% clean, and that's enough for me.
T2:
A bike-catcher took my bike from me to rack it, and I was left to go get my T2 gear bag, and get back to the change tent. This time it was a bit more crowded in the tent, so I didn't have any assistance, which slowed me down a bit, but I felt like I made pretty good time. Once I had running shoes and a hat, I left for my foot-powered tour of Clearwater.
Run:
The run course is essentially an out-and-back 6.5 mile course, done twice. Each lap goes over the causeway twice, but is otherwise flat. I didn't feel too hot right from the start, but just tried to keep one foot in front of the other. I was running again without a watch, so I had no idea of my splits. It worked at Muskoka, so I was hoping it would work here. I did some passing on the first loop, and was caught by a few, but seemed to still be moving forward. Without "age on the calf" as part of body-marking, it was tough to tell if I was making any ground in my AG though. During the second lap, I was really feeling the effort, and that, combined with the beating from the sun, and a general sense of discouragement (I felt SOOOOO slow), slowed me down even more. By the last 3 miles, I was taking a little walk break every mile. It's hard to believe, but I was still smiling though that. My attitude was pretty much "OK, I'm out of the race, but I'm at the World Championships, and that's pretty cool, so I'm not going to kill myself. Enjoy the moment." I thanked the volunteers, got a little chuckle when the electronic message board read: "#847 - D. Wilton - Your Awesome!" and I thought, "My awesome what?" I had my last walk at 12.5 miles, then did the run for home. I didn't pass anybody in the last stretch, since they fought and earned their placing. I had some clear roads, and gave a double Guns Up all the way through the line. I hope it comes out in the pictures this time.
By the numbers -
Swim: 36:23 (1:54/100m, 154/169 AG placing after swim)
T1: 3:14
Bike: 2:31:07 (22.23 mph, 153/169 AG placing after bike)
T2: 3:05
Run: 1:40:44 (7:41/mile, 132/169 AG placing after run)
Finish: 4:54:33, 132/169 AG, 768/1254 overall
So a quick glance at my feelings about the race: Even though it's easy to argue that I could have done more (by my admission I gave up on the run), I had the best day I was capable of today. There honestly isn't any more I could have done. I'm disappointed with the time and placing, but I went sub-5, and I was here. That's still the big thing.
I was sick coming into the race, and I think that's indicative of begin generally overtrained. It's been a very long season, almost non-stop since marathon prep last August. I pretty much shot my wad for Muskoka, and tried to do too much in the build for this race. Two 'A' races two months apart is tough. It's too long to just recover and go again with the trained fitness, but too short to fully rest and build back up. Looking at the last month of training, I think those bad days on the bike weren't just computer issues, but more likely real issues with fatigue that I was trying to ignore. I bet if I timed my weekly long runs, I would have seen the same thing there.
Speaking of timing, the watch-free plan didn't work. I think Muskoka was just kind of magical in that way for me. If I was conscious of the time, I would have seen that I actually was ahead of pace for the first 3.5 miles (my 1:35 half plan is 7:15/mile), and pretty much bang on at the halfway mark. That would have been a great motivator to keep things up for the second half, rather than suffer that letdown. Live and learn. I'm not going to beat myself up too much about it. I may have been able to run my way up to perhaps 120th by leaving it all out there? That doesn't change much.
Now I get to relax for a few weeks. I didn't pick up any hardware, and it takes a long time to get to my name in the results, but I have a hat and a medal that say I got to the starting line, then got to the finish line, of the 2008 Ironman 70.3 World Championship race.
Friday, November 7, 2008
One more sleep
The first thing you notice swimming in the ocean is the extra buoyancy of the salt water. The next thing is the taste of salt water, which is not anything like pool or lake water. It's also the last thing you notice, since it's not going to leave you for a while. I just wanted a reasonably brief effort, so I went about halfway out on the course, cut across to the homestretch, then back in. It was around 8:45 am at this point, and coming back the beach was directly into the sun. It made navigation pretty tough. I'm not sure how that will play out tomorrow. I hope the sun is low enough at 7:30 to 8 (my expected swim window) that I can see all the way through.
After a quick bite to eat and the athlete's meeting (brief course description and pleads from the head referee not to draft) I went for a short bike ride to make sure everything was in working order. I didn't go to the actual course, but followed some other roads south of the hotel. My position felt fine and the effort was good. Of course, there were a ton of other bikes out on the road. Big race weekends always have a neat feel when you can see so many of your fellow competitors out and about. There's a real feeling of camaraderie there, even if it's just a nod as you pass on the bike.
Then I went for a short run along the beachwalk to shake out the running legs. It was almost noon, and getting pretty warm. I felt loose, but the sun seemed to be draining my energy pretty quick. I'll need to stay up on my nutrition and hydration tomorrow if the weather is going to be the same.
A couple of "celebrity" sightings: I put on my wetsuit this morning fifteen feet away from Sister Madonna Buder. She was the oldest female competitor in the race, as she is in almost every race. It's hard to believe she's 78 when you see her. I almost felt like I should apologize for listening to Children of Bodom on the iPod while she was right there. Then, on the walk back to my hotel, I passed Dick Hoyt out for a walk with his wife. Another of the IM inspirational stories, and I'm right there in the same race. How cool is that?
Now this afternoon I'll pick up my wife from the airport, drop off my bike and T1 and T2 gear bags, and try to find someplace for the customary pre-race meal (spaghetti and meatballs). Can you feel the excitement?
Swim: 20 minutes
Bike: 30 minutes, zone 1-2, 2x90-120 seconds zone 3-4
Run: 15 minutes, EZ
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Two days
I started off my picking up my bike. It was shipped down a couple of weeks ago with a service that runs down for IMFL and Clearwater. It was a short walk from my hotel, so I got that out of the way early, so I could do any last-second tuning and turn my attention to other matters. Then I was off to the athlete village, for registration and souvenir shopping. The registration went exceptionally fast, I sat down with a volunteer who dumped out the package and we went through every item before putting it back into the envelope. There's a fair bit to keep track of with all of the gear bags and stickers and bibs, but it will be managed. Next stop was to go to the official Clearwater store and pick up some goodies. I ended up scoring a couple of shirts, coffee mug, and a toque to remind me of sunny Florida on the cold days.
In another expo tent I got wrangled into giving Powercranks a demo. They definitely feel different than regular cranks. Maybe it's because I learned to pedal circles years ago, but I got the hang of them pretty quick. They use the hip flexors more than normal, whether that's a good thing or a worthwhile training adaptation is open for debate. The demonstrator did mention that I probably wouldn't get much benefit to my cycling (since I already have the form it's trying to teach) but it might be able to help my running. That was actually refreshing honesty, since usually you'll hear that they will raise your FTP 40%, take 10 minutes off your marathon time, whiten your teeth and give you longer-lasting erections.
After a nap in the afternoon, it was time for the welcome banquet. A great buffet spread on the beach of Clearwater, just as the sun was setting. Not by the beach, but on it. Great set up. They went through the usual speeches, and the a local Boy Scout troop acted as Color Guard, and brought out the flags of all the nations with participants. This was probably the first huge "OK, this IS the World Championships" moment. Very cool.
Now I need to get me some sleep and finally beat this cold that's been hanging around too long.
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Last legs
I don't know what my internet access will be like for the next few days, so even if you don't hear from me, assume all is well, and check me out on Saturday.
Run: 3 miles @ 7.5 mph, w/2x90 seconds @ 8.5 mph, 3 minute recovery
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Final preparations
Bike: 60 minutes, w/4x90s @ 220w, 3 min recovery
#847
I'm having a lot of trouble keeping the motivation up right now. There are a few contributing factors. First, I don't think I had myself ready for the logistical challenges of racing on the other side of the country. I'm spending so much time thinking about what all I need to take, and how I'll get it there, and making sure it arrives, and contingency plans, and everything else that I'm burnt out with the idea. There's a ton of stuff to keep track of, and I hope that once I'm in Clearwater and settled, I'll be able to take a deep breath and get ready to race. Second, this sickness is killing me. If I weren't racing, I wouldn't put any mind into it, since it's a fairly minor cold at this point. But I am racing, and I'm racing a kind of big race, so that makes the cold a big deal. I'm constantly wavering on whether to do a workout or not, whether to add any intensity, how much this all will cost me Saturday morning, if I'll be able to use heart rate to manage the bike leg, and Lord knows how many other things I've built up in my own head. I knew going in that I wasn't going to be winning anything, but with even my modest goals being pushed further out of reach, it's getting a little depressing. Again, if this can clear in the next day or two, I think I'll be able to get my mind right.
One nice little serendipitous boon is my actual race number. It's a good combination, since #84 was my number at Muskoka, and 7 is a regularly recurring positive number in my life. In the words of Carl Spackler, "So I have that going for me, which is nice."
Monday, November 3, 2008
Sick and tired of being sick and tired
Run: 3 miles @ 7.9 mph
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Where did you go?
It was only a sixty minute ride, all zone 1 by level of effort, although my heart rate was all zone 3-4. That's what illness will do to you. Maybe I won't be able to pace myself off HR during Worlds.
Right now, I'm just trying to get myself right. Not much else I can do at this point. This isn't quite how I wanted to end my season, but it is what I have to deal with.
Bike: 60 minutes, zone 1 (effort), zone 3-4 (HR)
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
One week
Bike: 30 minutes, zone 1
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
A day late
But I got myself home and knocked out my run, another easy 3 miler. Then I got to relax for a few hours before heading to the pool to make up for the swim I missed last night. It's a different crowd on Tuesdays for the most part, although I did recognize a few people. The numbers, however, were as high as any other night. I don't know how some of these people can do this on a nightly basis for months or years on end. At least I have a light at the end of the tunnel, with my morning swims returning next week. The workout itself went pretty well, I got in a few solid long efforts, so I can feel pretty good leading up to the race. No expectations, just trying to have some fun.
Run: 3 miles @ 7.6 mph + 4 strides
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free
2x400 free, HIM effort, 1' (7:35, 7:30)
200 non-free, 1'
2x400 pull, HIM effort, 1' (7:20, 7:10)
c/d - 200 non-free
Total: 2400m
Monday, October 27, 2008
Start resting
Run: 3 miles @ 7.6 mph + 4 strides
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Little sleep + long run = Extra tired
I'm looking forward to the end of the season, when I can stay out late, and not pay for it the next day. Last night was particularly late, not hitting the pillow until 2 am. Because I can't sleep in, I was up by 8 and on the road for the last long run by 9. Fifteen miles later, I feel like I've been hit by a truck. Actually, that's not really true. The run itself went really well, felt great the whole way. I'm not too sore or anything which is surprising considering I ran fifteen miles. I just feel one step removed from a coma. Luckily, we're now looking at about 5 days of "rest" leading into the peak for Worlds. Hopefully I'll get fully recovered sleepwise, and be flying by next weekend.
Run: 15 miles, hilly, no watch
Saturday, October 25, 2008
When Holland is like Florida
Bike: 135 minutes, z2-4, w/4x20 minutes @ 240w, 10minutes @ 210w
Friday, October 24, 2008
Fifteen days
Run: 4 miles @ 7.9 mph + 4 strides
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Race prep almost complete
The run itself was simple: 2 mile warm-up, 5 miles hard, 1 mile cooldown. Hard was an accurate adjective, or at least it described the last 1.5 miles. Not that I was ever in danger of not finishing, I probably had another mile or two in my legs/lungs, but it was well into the "discomfort zone". Now there's a day of recovery, then the last tough bike ride, and long run over the weekend. Then it's two weeks of rest/taper/peak, and off to finish my season in fine form.
Run: 8 miles, as 2 miles @ 7.5 mph, 5 mile @ 9.0 mph, 1 mile @ 7.5 mph + 4 strides
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Two weeks until take-off
Just a quick little run this afternoon to keep the legs loose, and a nice swim. No particularly hard work in the swim, but lots of time to work on form without killing myself. The pool continues to be crowded. I think the turn in the weather is driving people inside, and they all want to be in the 'fast' lane.
But I have to ask: what kind of ass do you have to be to do butterfly in a crowded lane swim? I almost appreciate getting to practice dealing with the big swells, but come on! Are people that hard up for attention that this is how they choose to get it?
Run: 4 miles @ 7.8 mph + 4 strides
Swim: w/u - 200m each, free, non-free
2x(200 free, 30", HIM pace
100 ez non-free, 30")
6x200 free, 30" (1: HIM opener, 2: 25 sight/75 free, 3: 25 quick/75 free, 4: 25 sight/75 free, 5: 25 quick/75 free, 6: HIM closer)
c/d - 200 non-free
Total: 2400m
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
More questions than answers
Bike: 65 minutes, w/2x20 minutes @ 240-280w, 5 minutes recovery
Run: 2 miles @ 7.8 mph + 4 strides
Ethics in racing
This will be the first time I'll be using "transition bags". The athletes are not allowed to have anything on the ground by their bikes in transition, so all your bike gear is in one bag, and all your run gear is in another. I can imagine I'll be taking a fair bit of time on Thursday night to lay out all my stuff and figure out what goes where, then try to rehearse how each transition will play out.
I'll be in the 7:30am wave, 45 minutes after the pros start, and part of the second wave of men 35-39. I find it amazing that two of the age-groups have been split like this. It makes racing your AG that much tougher, when who never know if the person who just passed you is now seconds ahead, or still five minutes behind, or essentially five minutes up the road. I guess that's why they'll be waiting until the awards banquet at night to hand out trophies.
I can't say I'm happy about starting so far back, as well. Clearwater is essentially a flat course, and you'll have 1500 of the best athletes in the world on the course at the same time. With this many evenly-matched people, drafting is inevitable. At Muskoka, I didn't have to worry about crowds or drafting, since I was well out in front. That won't be the case this time.
Clearwater's reputation for drafting is well-known. And that puts me in a very difficult position. Although I mostly have a "happy to be there" attitude to Worlds, I would still like to perform well. I'm not in the running for a podium spot, but maybe the top 100. I know I'll be one of the last in my AG out of the water, so I won't be involved in any draft packs that form there (putting me at a disadvantage). However, shortly after exiting the water, hot on my heels will be the superstars of the M40-44 age group. Any draft pack of theirs will be moving faster than the mid-pack M35-39 groups, so if I latched on, I could get pulled right back into the race. If you go through any of the forums, there doesn't seem to be any way to avoid the drafting, especially further back, short of pulling over and waiting for the race to go by.
So I'm left with three choices: 1) Actively seek out the drafts, disregarding the rules and using whoever I can to move up, knowing that a number of my competitors are doing the same; 2) Actively avoid any drafting, even if this means slowing down to unreasonable speeds, having the worst bike split on the day, but safe in the knowledge I raced clean; 3) Be passive and if I get sucked into one of the groups, then that's what happens. I may get some benefit, but there wasn't anything I could do.
Option 1 will get me my highest placing, and fits into the "everyone is doing it" paradigm. Option 2 gets me my worst pacing, but I'll be able to say "I raced clean" although that will hardly be a great explanation why I'm 200th in the race. And honestly, Option 3 is pretty much Option 1 but trying to pass off some of the guilt.
So I don't know what's going to happen. I'd like to think I'll stick with Option 2, and be secure about it, but once the competitive juices get flowing, it's tough to say. If I keep getting passed by groups, the frustration could drive me to saying, "Screw it, I'm doing it too." I think this whole dilemma is part of what's tempering my enthusiasm for the race. But I'm worrying about things that haven't even happened yet, and that's not worth the effort.
I guess this whole post is a way of admitting I see the issue, and putting pressure on myself to face up to situation, and setting in myself my plan beforehand. Everyone who reads this (admittedly not a large number) will have reason to question my ethics after the race if I turn in some otherworldly bike split. So now it's on me to do the right thing, whatever that is.
Monday, October 20, 2008
Only three more of these to go
My times weren't stellar. I definitely didn't have the massive improvements like last week. I don't know if that's some level of fatigue (unlikely) or I just wasn't concentrating due to the frustration of dealing with the crowds (much more likely). But, whatever. It's done, I'll try to put a better effort in on Wednesday, and that's all I can do right now.
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free
400 pull, HIM pace, 1' (7:15)
2x300 free, 45", as 25 quick/75 ez
3x200 pull, descending (3:50, 3:37, 3:30), 30"
4x100, 15", odd: sprint (1:40, 1:40), even: ez non-free
Total: 2400m
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Just getting the miles in
Run: 10.7 miles, ~1:21
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Three weeks
Today was the last long ride, over 3 hours. I played around with the pace a little, but essentially I was zone 2-3 the whole ride, with three fifteen minute blocks of Z4. That should be enough to be ready for about 2.5 hours of flats in Florida. If Clearwater goes to form, I guess I can always draft my way in if I get tired. ;)
Bike: 180 minutes, zone 2-3, w/3x15 minutes @ Z4
Friday, October 17, 2008
Getting closer
Run: 4 miles @ 7.7 mph + 4 strides
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Again We Rise
I didn't hit the wall (figuratively or literally). The crux of tonight's session was 4 miles at 9.0 mph, the longest and fastest I've done any sustained run. I'm actually quite surprised with how the effort went, since I wasn't completely on the rivet the whole time. In fact, I was able to go to a 4-4 breathing pattern for a while, even in the last mile. When I finished, I was tired, but not completely strung out. That's a good day as far as I'm concerned.
Run: 7 miles, as 2 miles @ 7.4 mph, 4 miles @ 9.0 mph, 1 mile @ 7.4 mph + 4 strides
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
And then this happens
Even though my bike session last night kinda sucked, the transition run that followed felt really good, and I was light on my feet doing strides. Today was just an easy four miler, but again things felt really smooth the entire run, not taxing at all, and again I was quick through my strides. The running legs feel really good right now, so that's a boost of confidence.
Then I went to the pool. Since Monday was a holiday, this was the first time I got out in a week. Continuing from the night before, I wasn't expecting a whole lot. I repeated a workout from a few weeks ago, and right from the start I felt strong in the water. I didn't check my old times so I didn't know what to compare to, but when I got home to take a look, I was significantly ahead on every rep. The only one that was even close was the last one, where I tried too hard to go fast, and ended up in the "work harder, go slower" box. I'm sure if I focused harder I would have scraped another 5+ seconds off.
So the bike sucks right now, but that could be for any number of reasons. The run is good, and the swim is good. Now if can get a really good night's sleep, I'll be in great shape.
Run: 4 miles @ 7.6 mph + 4 strides
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free, pull
3x300 free, 30", descending (5:48, 5:40, 5:30)
100 non-free, 30"
3x200 pull, 30", descending (3:40, 3:30, 3:27)
c/d - 200 non-free
Total: 2400m
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Burning up or out
The plan was to hit the bike and knock out a 3x12 minute session on 300w. That lasted until 6 minutes into the first interval, before I had to back out to 280w. That's where I stayed for the rest of the night, except for the last 6 minutes of the last interval, where I forced myself back up to 300w. It shouldn't have been as hard as it was to get through this. Three weeks I did this workout on 280w the whole way. My heart rate tonight was a minimum of 8 bpm higher than at any given point in the workout compared to that session. I don't think I'm getting sick, but I have to wonder where this loss of power and subsequent raise in heart rate is coming from. Before I started I felt really good, nicely rested, since I wasn't able to hit the pool last night. But everything just went south by the time I got to the good stuff.
It's been a long year. I really feel that on some days, and sometimes I'm looking forward to the break even more than I'm looking forward to Worlds. It'll be nice to switch things up for a few weeks as an off-season, and I'm really anticipating the training for next year, with lower volume, and bit more high intensity, less specific threshold work. I'm hoping what I'm dealing with now is a mental issue, and I can push through it. I'll keep an eye on things and if my body starts rebelling in these last 3.5 weeks, I'll go to a rest/maintenance schedule and go race a bit undercooked, but at least I'll be relatively fresh.
Bike: 65 minutes, w/3x12 minutes @ 280w, 3 min recovery
Run: 2 miles @ 7.6 mph + 4 strides
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Thanksgiving morning
Run: 13.7 miles, hilly
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Four weeks to go
Bike: 135 minutes, w/4x20 minutes @ 240w, 10 minutes @ 175w recovery
Friday, October 10, 2008
And a little bit more
Run: 3 miles @ 7.3 mph + 4 strides
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Monsters of the Deep
Then in the evening, back to the pool for a quick workout. This was the first of two 2k pull time trials I'll do in preparation of the race. I felt like I got in a decent groove right from the start. I had a minor issue with some new goggles and a bit of leaking, but I tried not to let it throw me off too much. With the other denizens of the pool, it got a little annoying trying to get the workout in, but there's nothing I can do about them. My time was 36:20, which means I've either lost some speed since the last time I did this in a 50m pool, or I was, in fact, short the last time (35:10). My times from the 25m pool don't really translate, since you can push off twice as much and just hammer along. Assuming I only did 1900m last time out, that would be 37:01 for 2k, which means I've picked up 40 seconds. Or I lost 70. Who knows? We'll find out in about four weeks.
Bike: 30 minutes, zone 1-2
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free
1x2000m pull (36:20)
Total: 2400m
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Quick, over and done
I got a little surprise in the mail today. Although I'm not much of a "picture" guy, and don't own a camera, I ordered some of the race pics from ASI Photo from Muskoka 70.3. One is a finish line shot, that I'll probably put on my desk at work, the other is a finisher's certificate that I'll put up on my "look at me" wall. (I'm really not trying to brag about all this. Whenever I talk about the result, I feel like I'm talking about someone else that I'm proud of, because it couldn't be me that did it.) The picture that's part of the finisher's certificate is me cresting a hill on the run course, running straight into the camera. You can't really see my face because I'm looking down and it's shaded by the cap, but you can see the rain pelting down. It's a pretty hardcore shot, if I do say so myself. The other photo ... not so much. When I hit the tape, I had my arms raised in victory, a big smile, and was giving a big Texas Tech "Guns up!" This photo was taken right after that. I'm staring blankly into space, and my arms have fallen into a pose that resembles a Tyrannosaurus Rex. It's definitely not my best look.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Feels like Monday
The run went well. Just three miles, easy pace, a few strides. My cadence fell right into the groove, so things felt smooth. The evening swim was survived. I felt fantastic during the free sets, but not quite as sharp during the pull sets. It wasn't as crowded as two weeks ago, so hopefully this will continue for a few more weeks. I'm really looking forward to the start of swim club. The 4:50 wake-up call might not be the most fun, but at least I can be assured I'll be getting good, uninterrupted work in.
Run: 3 miles @ 7.3 mph + 4 strides
Swim: w/u - 200m each free, non-free
2x400 free, 1', HIM effort (7:32, 7:30)
200 ez non-free, 1'
2x400 pull, 1', HIM effort (7:20, 7:15)
c/d - 200 ez non-free
Total: 2400m