Thursday, 5 May 2016

Ironman Australia – Sunday, May 1 2016

Ironman Australia – Sunday, May 1 2016

Well that’s it, another season done, and Ironman #5 completed, and if it proves one thing correct, it’s that consistency pays off. I’ve done this race 4 times now, with a Melbourne IM squished in the middle, and each time so far I have dropped my time down… I really hope I can continue that trend for at least a few more years to come.
When is #6? Who knows? It’s not been the provisional plan to do one next year. The plan was to switch back to OD racing after the Ironman 70.3 World Championships in September and focus on winning my Australians colours for the ITU season grand finale on the Gold Coast in 2018. After finishing this race so well though, I am finding that decision tough to justify… to just ditch all that built up endurance and strength, for the smash and grab weight loss racing of Olympic Distance… to be discussed internally and with the Coach and wife later on.

To Port Macquarie though, I made the decision after 3 x 70.3 late last year that I needed help. I was busted after Ballarat 70.3 in December. Physically knackered and mentally drained. EVERYTHING went into those races (and I mean everything!) in my attempt to qualify for the World Champs in September this year and I had nothing left. Thankfully, even though I only finished 9th in Ballarat, it was enough and I punched my ticket… because in coming 9th I was somewhat disappointed. In finishing chute in Ballarat my legs actually buckled… there was nothing left. There were no mishaps in the race... I swam well, I rode well, and I ran well… I was stoked with how it went actually. It was the best race I could put together… all my strength and endurance all rolled out in this great effort… and 9th was the best I could muster. 9th would not be enough… I’d have to back up and go to Geelong… why bother… this is the best that I can do… there is physically no more this body can do. I can’t even walk.

Hayden Armstrong. There’s a name I have seen before… 35-39 killer… AG killer… sub 4hrs as an Age Grouper... 5th overall for Ballarat (including the Pro field) and winner of the 35-39’s by a country mile. How the fire truck does he do it? Who coaches him? The mind boggles how anyone is capable of going that fast! Anyhoo, a few days later it had me on the search for the right person to seek help from… and I kept coming back to one person who struck a chord with what I had read.

Enter, Grant Giles. Team Aeromax, I’m in.

The consistency that has been added to my training since the moment I started in January has been phenomenal. Each week carefully planned out and executed. Slowly building a strength base (physically and mentally) until 4 to 6 weeks out from Port Mac I am suddenly training up around 20+ hours a week regularly with no side effects and not even a hint of injury. Love it, love the grind and graft. Perhaps I shouldn’t say that out loud…

Ok, I’ve digressed enough already… back to Port. Perfect location, nice and close, staying with 4 animals and my lovely wife. Lots of experience in the joint… laughs, hints and tips being thrown around everywhere, most notably, and deservedly so by the new 60-65 Port IM race record holder Brett Stewart. Very much appreciated… and also appreciated the use of his many various rollers and torture devices to get my muscles even more ready!
 All soaked up… registrations and pre race sessions done, it’s time to get down to business.

Sleep the night before was perfect. 6.5 to 7 hours clear sleep with no wake ups. First time ever… geesus; I must be in a much clearer frame of mind than in previous IM’s for that to happen. Normally I’m tossing and turning all night, getting up for a leak etc… not this time though… bed… sleep… wake up to Animals prowling and squawking in the kitchen 1min before my alarm was due to go off! It’s funny, I had mentioned to the missus in the immediate days before that I wasn’t sure if I was being too blasé about the race, or naïve, or just slightly arrogant… but I was ready to race, I wasn’t panicking at all, and I had everything I needed ready to go. Sure, I went out and bought a few supplies, but they weren’t necessary… I just bought them because that’s what you do at IM races… you buy new stuff and walk around with all the other peacocks at the Expo!
I got kitted up, had my breaky at the last minute as I always try to have it bang on 2 hours before race start (which is the exact time the lads wanted to leave) and visited the WC just before exiting. Disappointing really, we’ll try that again in the porta-loos. Parked reasonably close for an IM, quick walk to Transition and in I go… who should be standing right in front of me on the other side of the Transition poles… Zim! Perfect… now there is no stress with pumping up the disc with help right here. All done… too easy. I am calm… Transition was set up easy… almost too easy… and we head back to the car and the race start.
Quick trip to the loo, then off for my warm up jog. 10mins of jogging out onto the road then up and back down the main street… bouncing along, striding, stretching, and all manner of twisting and turning in order to get me ready to roll. Seriously casual stuff just to be with my thoughts for the day and to loosen up.
Spotted a few CCTRI… handshakes done then it’s wetsuit up time before getting into position for the swim start.

I chose to start in the sub 60 group for racing reasons… simple as that… and probably much to the disdain of the actual sub 60 swimmers! Fck em. Sub 60 is where I see myself and it’s where I wanted to be… I chose the group (4/5ths of the way to the back of the group) so I could use those fast swimmers to drag me around the course as far as possible. I’ll give it some gas and see how far I can hang on. It didn’t quite work out like that BUT gee it was a helluva lot more comfortable swim than last year when I started on the front line of the 60-70min swimmers and I had heroes swimming over me left right and centre at the start. This swim… starting toward the back of the sub 60’s was as smooth a swim as I have ever had in any race. Not once was I swam over... not once was I hit, kicked, grabbed etc… It was just smooth sailing and I was able to grab on and sit on feet quite easily.
The swim for me was easy… I cruised through with some effort, but not too much. In hindsight… maybe I should start even just a little bit further forward and try to grab some even faster feet?? As it stands, I grabbed the feet of anyone who passed me and just sat there… I probably had about 4 or 5 lead out men for the whole swim and very rarely was I left stranded swimming solo. In hindsight again… maybe I should have put in MORE effort in an attempt to get a better time??? This swim was seriously a cake walk and I was able to get out of the water running into T1. I’ll note here that I did actually pass 2 people on my way to a 3:07:07 T1. Not lightning quick as I did drop a couple of things… but all in all it wasn’t that bad… especially when I look back to Melbourne a few years ago!!




SWIM – 1:01:19 – A NEW IM PB!

Out onto the ride. I used Mr Stewart’s advice and ran from the tent to my bike with shoes in hand and put them on there. Much easier to run in bare feet than with cleated shoes… locked in. The other tip I have for the punters out there is to put anything you intend on putting in your pockets… assuming it’s not that much… is to put it in a small bag… or elastic band and just shove it all in at once. You can sort that shit out later when riding a downhill or flat section. Just reach back and sort one thing out at a time.
A clean mount and off we go!
Up the first hill out to Matthew Finders… spinning easy (as best I can) for the adrenalin filled start of an IM bike ride! I don’t recall too much about my numbers and the people around me during this ride… and I even did NOT stick to a stringent nutrition ie. Must take this every 20 mins, or must drink that every 32.5mins etc… my plan was simple. 2 bidons of liquid fuel on the bike, 2 more in special needs… approximately one bidon per hour with water and one gel per hour to supplement. It’s a simple plan, uncomplicated… easy to follow in what can be the high stakes pressure cooker  that racing can bring on… even if I don’t think pressure was going to get to me on this particular day, I eliminated the risk.
I did take one change into the race with me that could have backfired if I was a sensitive soul. I purchased, AND USED, an untested aero bottle on the front of my bike. A brand new Profile Design FC25… essentially I saw it as low risk. I have had many incarnations of aero bottles on my bike… this was just another one… what could go wrong? Anyhoo, I had 3 gels in my back pocket that I transferred to the fuel section of the aero bottle (there’s a little nook at the back of it behind the actual bottle)… immediately one gel exited stage left on the first bump I hit… leaving me with 2 gels (I had 3 in a flask velcro’d to the top tube… hence only 3 in my pocket). I shoved those tight into the nook… 1km later… #2 gel falls to the wayside. Clown. I grab the last gel and put it back in my pocket… lesson learned… secure the nook or take it off! All good… my guts aren’t that sensitive to anything sugar so I simply grabbed a couple of spares when going through the next few aid stations… just in case, and I would have those at sections where the exertion levels might be down a little ie. A flat or downhill.
Out to Dunbogan, Laurieton etc... I kept the monitoring myself to make sure I wasn’t pushing too hard or taking it too easy. Not necessarily looking at the Garmin, but more so just mentally checking my quads weren’t burning or my heart wasn’t racing… If I was coasting, and quick look at the HR and/or Power to confirm and I’d up the ante, or if I felt I was working hard and the HR confirmed I was knocking over 80-85% then it was probably best to be mindful. I let myself fly on the odd occasion… and I also held back when I thought it best. In short, I rode at a comfortable working pace. Not easy by any stretch, but not a threshold set either by any means. I honestly thought after lap 1 that I was in for a 5:15hr - 5:20hr… even though during Lap 1 I did start to notice a few drops of rain coming more and more. 2:37hrs for Lap 1. Perfect.
Lap 2 started much the same... spin up and out of town. Give Lighthouse a little stick while avoiding potholes and turn left at the roundabout to get going toward Ocean Road. The rain started picking up a little more now, as did the wind. It wasn’t awful though… just annoying... and it did slow things down a little at times. I didn’t slow down on purpose for anything except the turn corners and street turns at Dunbogan and Laurieton, so it wasn’t that bad really. I did stop for a leak out near the turnaround… so strike a minute from my time there… but it was raining already… windy… I didn’t feel like adding piss to my knicks and socks just to top off what was already starting to look like an uncomfortable run coming up (weather wise)!

A reasonably uneventful back 90km if I am honest. I did have 2 clowns try to play games with me around Lake Cathie on the way back… one looking over his shoulder then teaming up with the other to draft each other and try to get away from me… really though, what is the point? Sorry… but I have just caught up to you, I am clearly finishing this ride stronger than you… so why bother trying to pick up the pace and ride away from me??? Please. Sorry Gilesy, but I let them have a little futile for about 5mins as I sat 20m-30m back… and then I just thought fck em, and put my foot down. A quick burst and within about 90secs the tables were turned and it was them trailing me and dropping farther back by the second. I eased up back into race pace and before I knew it, after this little foraying into racing mode, I was at the end of Ocean Rd and into the rollers just before the Lighthouse Beach turn.
Matthew Flinders had the worry of the tyres slipping out from under me… but all ok there. I got up with no fuss at all and rolled on to the finish. My tip for Flinders? Ride up the right hand side… then with 5m to go, cut over to the left hand turn… you basically just cut 5m of climbing off it… not only that, it is at the steepest part as well… so you’ve just saved a few heart beats for later in the run.
Back to transition, feet out of the shoes and jump off the bike… plenty of energy, quads heavy but not wobbly… I run.
My bag was standing out like a beacon on the hooks so I was able to sprint past and just grab it off in full stride. I was going so fast I nearly bowled straight into the women’s transition! Given this was a 1:05min Transition I don’t really have much to say… 2nd in the AG for T2 speed… and I could easily have gone under a minute had I not had an overly enthusiastic helper who tipped all my stuff out! All good, he was only trying to help… however I had everything bar my runners in a plastic bag which I was just going to grab and run with. I quickly picked it all up and I was gone… sunscreen? They asked…err… no thanks (it was raining)… vasso? No thanks… got it already.
Off and running. I had moved up from 45th in T1 to 26th out of T2.



BIKE 5:25:15 (Lap 1 - 2:37hrs / Lap 2 – 2:48hrs) – 3 mins off PB time

Off I went, kitting up as I went. Hat first, then belt and fuel + nurofen & stop cramp for emergencies. Already had vasso in pocket. My strategy in Port is simple… carry as minimal as possible. There are 4 laps and you have access to Special needs each and every lap. I carry enough fuel for 1 lap, then I get my next laps fuel handed to me on the run each lap… I am surprised more don’t do it, as the helpers are more than obliging to get out what you want and hand it to you on the run. Simply call out your number loud, wait to see who responds then yell out (politely) what you want… simple.
The first thing I noticed out of T2 was the water… on the paths, in the grass, on the road… and mud which was already forming in parts. I was at first a little annoyed that I hadn’t put a change of socks in my T2 bag, but that was soon gone after about 2km when the socks were already re-soaked again due to the puddles :-)
The second thing I noticed was burning calves... it didnt last much further than the climb at the town end... but it was there at that stage. Similar to the feeling of a torn calf muscle actually... or trying to run out a cork?
Forgetting this early sensation, I ran and ran well in the conditions presented. I just tried to stick at a comfortable tempo pace that I thought I could hold for the entire 42.2km. Most of the time I looked down and saw 4:40 pace… or close to it… 4:42, 4:43, 4:41… It was always there or thereabouts. Nutrition plan for the day was now in phase 3… after breaky and the Bike… the plan was coming together. On the bike I had the carbs in my bidons. Why? Because 20+ gels all day in an IM can go from “not bad”… to “fcking awful” pretty quick (and thats despite how palatable the Pro4mance range is!) especially when you get to the run and you’re trying to throw those badboys down… and liquid is just so much easier to consume with riding rather than trying to wrestle 1000 gels.
 I normally end up ditching all thoughts of gel and having just water by the time I get over the 20km mark of the run... Not today though my friends… my guts were good to go after having just a few gels on the bike and I consumed on average 3 per hour in the run very easily.
Laps 1 and 2 I saw a whole host of Coasties, I low fived a few, hollered at a few… and made note of a few positions as markers for my own running pace. Lap 2 also saw the death of my Garmin. WTF is that all about?!?! 18.69km and my running buddy just upped and left me in the dark! Oh well… I was running on feel from there on in. Surprisingly it didn’t bother me too much. My training had seen me not look at the Garmin in many sessions so I kinda had a good feel of how I should be feeling for an IM paced run. I think I slowed a little on Lap 3 but it wasn’t really that noticeable as my markers that I was keeping tabs on were where I expected them to be… one foot in front of the other I ploughed on.. a few little cramp twinges in the hammys started appearing so the Cramp Stop came out from this point on… a spray here and there every few kms kept the cramping at bay, plus a couple of nurofen for good measure for my tiring ITBs (which had been a little uncomfortable in race week for some reason) and I was able to keep a decent pace. It was toward the end of Lap 3… coming back past Transition that I started to really fire up… no Garmin so I wasn’t 100% accurate on how far there was to go, but I didn’t have to be a genius to know it’s a 4 lap run covering 42.2km and I only had 1 lap to go… 10.5km give or take.
Keep strong buddy.
I felt good… yeah, of course I was hurting... it’s an IM… but I wasn’t in agony and I was still running. In fact I walked just once in the entire 42.2km and that was at the far turnaround at settlement point while I had to wait for a couple of people to get around the witches hat… I walked and fck me it was hard to start running again… so why stop if I don’t need to! Actually I did stop one other time. Lap 3 I think? Something in my shoe that was rubbing my foot raw… it had to come out. 15secs tops.
Up the hill on Lap 4 and down the other side, surprisingly I am still overtaking people at this stage… who were these people to be going so slow now after being in front for this long?… surely I should have been ahead of them already…I was literally passing some of these Sub 10 candidates with ease as their race came to an end. It was strange to me to see some go that strong for that long and then with the finish line in sight… that is when they decide they cannot finish it off. For me, even if I am on deaths door in a race the finish line is always a huge motivator to get the job done… 10km to go… 45min… 9km to go… 40min… keep going… hurt yourself for just another 15mins and its over… or something like that.
I see Zim not far from the far turnaround at Settlement Point… “shall I wait?” he yells out… “don’t you fckn dare” I think internally… and mutter something illegible out loud. Hahaha he got the message and bowled on to the finish line as he should. Hahaha mate, I am glad you saw the funny side of it… coz I thought it was funny, and a perfect end to the race to be honest. I hammered 3:34min pace for that final few kilometres from settlement point… and you know what… you did too my son, because I did not catch you, nor did I even see you!
Just goes to show what we / YOU are capable of on the run huh.

Over the line, hands on knees… helpers please.

Missed a Port run PB by 6secs. In those conditions, I think it’s more than acceptable. I don’t mind running in the rain… I am not a regular mud runner though so that took some sting out of my run pace. Between that and the constant dodging of others trying to avoid the puddles, I felt I ran strong and I felt I ran well. I thought I was going to run faster… say towards the 3:13hr mark… and maybe I could and should have… but on the day I was happy with my run.

RUN 3:23:41




 

 


The only question I leave myself with for not only the run, but the entire race is: Should I have gone harder and faster at all in any of the race? For the entire time I thought I was moving at race pace, but in the end, I still had a burst of Power to give on the bike with 20km to go… and I still had it in the tank to run 3:34 pace for the final couple of kilometres on the run… and the swim was solid but essentially easy. I exited the Swim and the Ride legs both running to the next… and while I think that’s great and I felt awesome at the time, I don’t ever want to finish a race with too much in the tank. I certainly didn’t feel like I had heaps in the tank left… but the speed bursts were there when I wanted them… so maybe I did?

Overall satisfaction levels now a week later. Slightly wondering what might have been had I not stopped for a leak, stopped to piss, had my run gear tipped everywhere, fixed my shoes etc… 3:40mins is all I missed out on a Kona slot by… and as silly as it sounds, I could have swam faster had I known… I could have biked harder for just a few minutes… and I could have sprinted for home 2km earlier… what if… what if… what if… don’t get me wrong though, I am not pining over it, it’s just those fleeting milliseconds you think you yourself…gee, that was bloody close… I could have been booking my airfares to bloody Hawaii this week!

What I will say though is that I am VERY SATISFIED with my overall progress. The weather wasn’t great on the 2nd half of the bike leg… the conditions were certainly not ideal on the run leg…and  I went into this race on about a 5 weeks solid block of IM training where I logged up 17 to 22hrs solid and consistently… AND I finished in great shape with a 10minute Port Mac PB to boot… yes, a 10min Port Mac PB in conditions that I would rate as a 10min handicap compared to last year is awesome… and if I am honest, I have even now, pulled up in great shape and feel I could get straight back into it all again next week. A little residual fatigue and wife are the only barriers really J

As for IM? The original plan was to move on after this… concentrate on Ironman 70.3 World Champs on the Sunshine Coast first… then maybe Western Sydney (as it’s the “local” race), but after that I was going to turn my attention to Olympic Distance racing with 2 eyes firmly on making the Australian Team for Gold Coast ITU 2018…use my 10km run pace to full effect… we’ll see though. I don’t think I am too bad at this IM stuff and I think I can get better despite the hours it does take me away from the family while training. The Aus team has been a goal for a while now… but so has Kona and / or a top 3 finish in a major IM/70.3 race… which way to go? That is a discussion for me, the wife, and the coach another time.

Very much looking forward to training for Sunshine Coast now… not so much the winter riding and the freezing toes and fingers… or the running from pool deck to the change room at 6am… but very much keen to see what Gilesy and I can continue to build and extract from this engine over the next few months… oh, and a new Cervelo P5 won’t hurt ;)

OVERALL TIME – 9:54.29hr



THANKS!

Usual thanks to all who helped me this season: the Wife and kids (and parents) for all their help and understanding… the again wife for letting me buy a new bike as I chase Sunshine Coast… Colin Leeson from TLR Performance wheels, once again; they didn’t let me down… Pro4mance Nutrition for the huge discounts I get on their fantastic energy gels, hydration and protein; Titan Performance Group, in particular Wade Burns for working through my custom kit ideas… as painstaking as I made it for him… and for selling me the Cervelo P5 at the best possible price I could get… and of course Gilesy, through Aeromax Coaching. Love it. It’s been a breath of fresh air to take the stress of planning out my own training programming and letting someone else do it for a change. Cheers all.





Wednesday, 2 December 2015

Ironman Western Sydney 70.3 - Nov 29, 2015

Another swing and miss @ automatic World Champs Qualification in Western Sydney… but overall, I am happy with this one, and I will be back as I loved the course!
Good ride, good run… undone by wetsuit non-wetsuit swim.

Western Sydney was originally looked upon as the local race for me. Didn’t come with great wraps about the course… boring… hot… etc… but I entered none the less as it was an easy bird to take down that was relatively close to home. As it was both mine and my sons birthday, I decided long ago that this would be a smash and grab race… drive down and back (90mins each way) on Saturday to drop my bike in and register… then drive down again on Sunday to race.
Worked out quite well actually as I didn’t get caught up in the pre-race nervousness, the hype… the expo… I simply dropped my bike in, go a couple of supplies and headed home for dinner and my own bed. Perfect.
Up early the next morning, 3:30am, got dressed and left. The only negative of this was the traffic line up at the venue. Single lane, 2 lines of traffic covering several lanes all converging into a single lane entry road. Next year I will leave early so I get more than 15mins to set up my transition. 15mins is enough, it does add pressure though when the clock is ticking.
I forgot my disc valve cover… and in my haste I dropped an ear plug for the swim. All good.

To the race itself; the Swim was good… the murky waters of the regatta centre weren’t that bad. You could see the ropes underneath the surface and the water didn’t leave a foul taste or have any smell about it like some lakes can.
I DID know though, that right from the start… right from when I was swimming from the waters edge to the start line that it was going to be a slow one. I did a short warm up and it felt like I was moving nowhere hahaha!
The race started and I took off all guns blazing… like I do at every club race… up there with the front men for the first 100m or so… although based on my swim ability this was probably more like the first 30m, not 200m :p
Swimming fast, but at my limit, I quickly jumped on the toes of a swimmer starting to gradually pull away from me and I held on tight… better than I normally can. Very happy at this point… swimming faster with slightly less effort, I start to wonder if I can jump on someone else’s feet if they go past both of us… done… another swimming going slightly faster… in I go.
I hold this until the first turn at the far end… I turn… and I lose the feet on the acceleration out of the corner… I work hard, but can’t quite muster the speed to get back on. The fella behind me goes around me and I get his feet to the next turn.
Rounding turn 2 we have caught up to the stragglers from the wave in front and some navigation is required. I lose my tow-truck… for good this time... and the swim down the back straight is a looooong solo one. I look forward a few times to sight to the buoys and I see the other lads just up ahead… but alas I just don’t have the turn of foot in the swim at this stage and I can’t catch up. Still, I felt strong and continued on. I had 2 blokes on my feet clinging to my every move so I couldn’t have been going too bad.
I started counting strokes to get me to the end… in the pool, it takes me 23/46 strokes to swim 100m normally, so I just counted them down and sighted after each 23… hahaha it felt like I was going nowhere a couple of times. I got there though… having dreamt about a 32-33mins swim (after my 28min in Port), I was pretty shocked to see 36:50 on the Garmin. Not disappointed… but shocked. I have never really swam fast at the Regatta Centre so I shouldn’t have been surprised… but it was what it was… I moved on and ran out of the water up to T1.

52nd in the AG. Top 50 is usually my benchmark for a fair swim for me, so I’ll take it, despite the time lost…




T1…. A little hard to get the swim skin off… and tough to then also get the sleeved Tri suit up over my shoulders when soaking wet. Not the slowest Transition I have ever done, but easily my slowest 70.3 transition in quite some time, and way slower than my fellow 35-39’ers. To be vastly improved.

Comment on the Blue Seventy swim skin – the jury is out. I felt tight and snug in it… and as written, I felt fast… and I felt the goods… but I was not fast and it was hard to get off in the heat of the moment. I only got to test this out in the pool once and it did have some advantages according to the Garmin, but obviously not as much as a full wetsuit. Also; any practice I did… it was hard to get off… and surprise surprise in the race itself, it was no different. Funny that!

Onto the bike… being politically correct, I got onto the bike and got my feet into my shoes close to the worst I have ever seen a fully functioning human being do it. It didn’t take me long mind you, but it was slapstick. Think Chris McCormack v Marino VanHoenacker in Kona 2012… that was me… and it’s not the first time I have tried to do this too fast.
My issue this time was that I bumped my bike getting around people in transition and the rubber bands I had holding my shoes snapped and the shoes flapped loose… normally no problem… but it was not was I was prepared for. I do like to mentally visualise each part of T1 when coming to the end of the swim… and this was not part of it…

Anyhoo… no biggie. Boom time!
Out on the bike and I am flying. I did a velodrome TT the week before to simulate this ride and hit 2hrs @ 38.4km/h… perfect. If I can hold that I will be riding a 2:21 ride in relative comfort and be ready to run.
On the way out of town I looked down to see a 41km/h average. I didn’t feel too much wind tbh, I just felt good. I checked the HR and the Power and while HR was over slightly, I went with it for a wee while before concentrating on getting it in check and around the 80-85% mark max. Perfect, done.
1:10:25sec for the first 45km.
A new 40km PB for me in 1:02:01hrs
For me, I was smoking and feeling great. I stayed aero for just about the entire trip that I can think of and had zero issues.
I obviously didn’t know it at the time but I had moved up from 52nd, to 31st.
Lap 2 was almost a carbon copy of lap one except I seemed to have run out of “I” AG’er bunnies to chase down. I still overtook a few but it was noticeable at the far end that I was well behind the leaders. I won’t say there was drafting going on BUT they were very easy to spot a couple of times… and I knew how far behind I was. In addition to this, I was riding solo… that’s damn hard work for 90km when especially when chasing a group that is feeding off each other. No matter how hard I thought I was trying, it was no use trying to catch a pack when riding solo… so I settled in and did my thing.
I felt like I TT’ed the h*ll out of the course.
Lap 2 was almost a carbon copy of lap 1 according to the splits. 1:10:52secs and I had moved up to 23rd… going by feel, I thought I might be around the 15th mark and in with a shot at a top 5 or 6.
T2 was a lot faster. Not awesome, but a lot faster than T1. Newtons on, I grabbed my hat full of gear and ran.

I do like this run course out here… its wide open and there are plenty of bunnies to chase, you can see everyone… and of course you have the spectators to cheer you on just about the whole way around the run course!
Aprt my poor run in Port, I enetered this race with one goal… run well. I had to start leaner… and I had to start faster. I started out with 1 goal from the outset…  to run 4min pace for the first km or 2. Establish my running legs and get a feel for it.
3:55min and 4:03min… check. Time to settle in to goal race pace and hold it before a final kick. Goal race pace was a minimum of 90mins so 4:16 was the benchmark to stay on or under…
4:05, 4:07, 4:02, 4:08, 4:03… I’m doing it… so I drop my goal to 4:10pace minimum… with the exception of 1 or 3 km over that new goal pace I did manage to hold it quite comfortably… well as comfortable as you can be in a 70.3 race and your HR being mid 160’s to mid 170’s.
At the 3km to go mark… the far turn point from the finish line, I decide its time to have one last crack.
I’d seen my great mate Shane Chamings out there having a great run a few times in passing but I hadn’t passed him yet… so I decided I would at least catch up to him (albeit a lap in front) and then go from there… the tough bugger made it harder than I expected though hahaha and I think I caught him with 1.5km to go or close to it. It was a highlight for me… that and cheering on all the other locals that I saw out there and swapped encouragement with.. Shane though, was having a belter. Catching up to Shane involved me running 4min flat pace, then 3:55, before finally winding up for the last km in 3:38mins with a 180 max HR… wowzers!


 

Crossing the line I thought top 10… not quite there in the end, but chuffed enough to see I dropped from 52nd out of the swim, to 23rd off the bike… to 12th after running the half marathon… I went past exactly 40 people after getting out of the drink… I’ll take that, now I’ve just got to get out of the water sooner!

4:28:22hrs - not quite a PB for the distance, but damn close! A time good enough for 5th last year...




To summarise the race; again, disappointed in 12th. I am hoping to Qualify for the 70.3 World Championships off one great result… a top 5 or 6 should do it… BUT, I am very happy with the turnaround from my Port Macquarie Ride (where I had mechanical and nutritional issues), and my Port Mac run, which I just didn’t have in me that day.
In Western Sydney, I had it in me… and then some… I had a personal point to prove in regards to my 1:35 run in Port… and I did that… and possibly even had a little bit more in me now I reflect on how fast I finished and I look at the numbers… not too much more though and I will bank it.

Massive thanks yet again to Big Sexy Racing, for being such an awesome team to be in. Wonderful group of people, being led by 7 x IM champion Chris McDonald.
PRO4MANCE Nutrition - Yet again; no nutritional issues at all during the race and full of energy from start to finish! No cramps, no flat spots or stomach issues... perfect!
The TLR wheels kept me rolling all day as usual... great wheels!

Also a HUUUGE thanks to my wife and boys... allowing me to nick off on my birthday... and my son Harry's birthday :) 


As far as the World Champs are concerned… I WILL be there by hook or by crook. I’m currently 6th on the 70.3 season pass rankings, with 2 in front of me already Qualified… so technically I’m 4th.. and currently in a WC’s Q spot based on the 75 slots being allocated via normal allocation procedures… fingers crossed I stay on track.

Ballarat next up. Seems like a similar profiled course… not sure what the weather is going to do, but hopefully I at least get to don the wetsuit again!!



A Freebee to anyone who cares… this is my mental strategy to a 70.3 Half Marathon…
* Start Fast, with very fast feet. 100 cadence (or close to it). Don’t look at the HR at all… it’s going to be high from the adrenalin rush of transition… calm down after 1km or 2km
* Then… know the pace you want to hold (you should have trained for the course and the pace you want)… I then try to hold that overall race pace consistently, or just under… if 90mins is my goal, I now stay on or under 4:16pace. I have the early advantage from the first 2km… so I am ahead.
* Start to rationalise the pain… if I am hurting… I only have to hurt for XX more minutes. If I am 8km in… then I only have 13km to go. At 4:16 pace, that is 55mins or under. I have done that heaps in training!!
* Get past that 12km barrier… I always find around the 12km mark to be the hardest. It’s all mental… guess what though… if you have made 12km, then there is only 9 to go!! That’s approx. 40mins left! How many times have you ran uncomfortable for 40mins. You can do that!
* 14km, 15km, 16km… all equal 7km, 6km, 5km… the distance is ticking down.
* Pick a point in the run you can identify as the final stretch… the HR gets up to 175 for 10 to 12mins… the final 2 to 3km… and just go for it. I look at the watch now.. there’s only 1.6km to go… there’s only 1.43km to go… it’s now 1.25km… count some strides… beauty, now its 900m to go… whats left in the tank… go… 600m, 400m… I do 400m reps all the time… there it is… finished!

* If I want one final distraction… I count steps! I did this twice in this race. Pick a minute mark and then count the steps you want to have before the minute is up. I am always looking for 90/180 strides per minute. eg. @ 32:00mins I count my next 90 steps (one foot count)… when I get to 90 steps, I then look at my watch to see if it has hit 33mins or not… if not, or it’s hitting it exactly, my cadence is perfect… if my cadence is too slow and 33mins has already passed, I look to up it… if I am ahead… well then good for me!


Data for anyone who cares…

Pics credit to Finisher Pix (yet to purchase)... looks like I need to be more aero on the bike... will get another bike fit... and a P5... one day in my dreams hahaha!


Monday, 19 October 2015

Ironman 70.3 Port Macquarie - October 2015

Disappointment?… Satisfaction?… a waste of training?... simply not quite good enough?

Wow… what a long build into Race #1 of my 70.3 World Championship qualification campaign. All through winter… training long and hard (but not too hard)… staying consistent… injury free apart from a few little aches and pains which are expected… I trained as well as I possibly could.
Such a long build did take its toll at one point though. 3 little boys, a full time commuting job and the process commenced to try and sell our house. I had my hands well and truly full and eventually it took a toll at about the 8 weeks to go mark where I started to feel a little run down and unmotivated. Sure, I was still hitting my target numbers in training… but it was taking so much more out of me to get there and one threshold run a week was starting to take 3 days to recover from. This is not normal for me. Am I fatiguing or just getting older?
Lesson learned… too much Christopher! Too much. If I am going to keep up that schedule I need to be getting at least 8 hours sleep a night… and that just isn’t possible with all that I have on my plate. It just doesn’t fit in mathematically so something has to give.

Anyway… a few lighter weeks to freshen up and I was back. 3 good solid weeks followed by a 2 week gradual taper and I was good to go for this one. Confidence back, ready to roll.

After hitting the velo early on Thursday, it was up to Port Macquarie with the whole tribe 4 days before the race… plenty of time to settle in, give the boys the attention they deserve from Daddy and get my gear ready slowly.
Friday – no training. Family time + get registration out of the way.
Saturday – 45min pedal and a 20min trot with Shane Chamings to get the legs moving again first thing in the morning before heading down to the beach to play with the boys. Standing in the ocean was fantastic on the legs… piggy backing my eldest nearly 2km back to our apartment… was not.
All good. It was a much busier day that I would prefer for race eve… especially in a hot sun… but I was ok at the end of the day. I fuelled up and put the feet up. I woke a few times during the night as is traditional pre race… but I had gone to bed early enough to be able to wake up feeling good and refreshed. Not stiff, sore or tired in any way shape or form. I took my time getting ready then headed into transition. I felt good… and ready.

Any nerves I had were soon eradicated by catching up with Shane Chamings first, followed by Clay Murphy, Brett Isaac, and the infamous Allen Pearson. Good banter and chat… taking our mind off the race to such an extent that we nearly missed the start of our race… diving into the water with less than 2mins before the start and 100m to swim to get to the start line. I suspect the starter held his gun slightly though as I had plenty of time to swim up to the group and then move my way to the front of the pack.

The gun goes and I’m off!
I held good arm speed for a good few hundred metres… which was a surprise to be honest. I’m not a great swimmer by trade but the arms kept going. I started to see a couple of early thrasher’s slowly drop back so I held onto my pace for just a little longer so I could settle in front of them and still hope to be at the tail of the faster guys.
Success… I think?
I didn’t feel any great current while out there… but it had to be there, as all things being equal over all my 70.3 races, this was a swim PB for me… easily. I have swam faster in a 70.3, but that was waaay back in 2011 at Ironman 70.3 Yeppoon which is just a straight 1.9km swim parallel to the shore and we had the current the whole way… so for me to swim 27:59mins was fantastic!
Shane and I had our pre swim predictions… 36mins for Shane… 32mins for me. So the plan was for Shane to try and sit on my toes for as long as possible and see how he goes. If he could pass me and let me drag for a bit then great. I think Shane did start on my toes but within minutes we were swimming side by side for quite some time. I did lose him  by the half way point for a bit however he popped up again right near the finish and only ended up exiting the water mere seconds behind me. Great swims by the both of us!!



T1 – smooth. 2:07mins to get my wetsuit off and onto the bike. Looking at other T1 times, I am not far off the mark at all. 1:57mins is the fastest I have seen so far.

The bike… This is the story of my day right here and now.
To put a qualifier on the bike leg… I have worked hard on this over winter. I’ve been ultra consistent in getting my sets done, I have upped my Power… I have even experimented with chain rings and gear ratios to try and get just that little bit more out of my body’s strength.
I went into the race with an 11-28 cassette to combat the rolling hills and the even more infamous Matthew Flinders hill. I also went into the race with O-Symmetric chain rings after about 10 weeks of testing them out. Noisy bastards they are, clunky to get used to at first, difficult to change smoothly from big to small chain rings and vice versa… but boy are they powerful and smooth on the downhills and flats. Uphill was tougher than expected… but all in all they seemed like the perfect weapon for Port.

Wrong. Insert here; lesson 2. I am not Chris Froome. I cannot just do as I please on the bike and expect it to work.

All going well, I head out of the CBD easily… spinning up the hill and keeping it simple. Dean Waterman, young whippet of the 18-24 AG goes past and motions for me to keep up... he’s cruising up, looking very comfortable and primed for a cracker of a ride!
Don’t fret though lad, I aint going anywhere… just wait til I get to the top J
Up to the top of Flinders and down I go, descending into Lighthouse Beach. Flying. Shaking, rumbling, bumping, jarring all the way through… man that was rough this year! I seriously didn’t recall the roads being that sh*t through there… ever… but it was and I just sucked it up and ploughed on through.
I turn left at the big roundabout at Bonny Hills and hit the small downhill that heads toward the golf course… I see the rise up to the bend ahead and I decide to drop back into the small chain ring so I can roll up it before hitting the Ocean Road with full throttle.

FAIL. If there is one thing to note about O-Symetric rings, it is that you CANNOT go from big to small or vice versa with ANY pressure on the stroke/pedal action… you have to back of and gently move it over or it comes off… without fail… every time.
I had almost perfected it in training and was very comfortable with the process.
This was not training though and all did not go to plan…. Off it came. It teetered for a bit and I tried to reach down and save it, but alas it finally dropped off completely and I had no choice but to say bye bye to Dean and Co and I pulled over to fix it up.

All fixed and off I go.
Out of the saddle to get speed up and I powered over the rise before settling back down… phew I thought, that was a bit harsh, quick check of the heart rate to see what damage I had caused…. Nothing… apparently I’m dead.
HR is gone… not only that, but Power is gone too… and cadence and anything else you can think of that you might want if trying to pace yourself and be sensible. I had time, distance and speed.
Fck it I thought… lets use the speed to its full capacity and give this thing a throttling. Quick squirt of the gel flask and I’m off…. Or not. Apparently the juddering the bike took going through Lighthouse beach must have been enough to dislodge the gel flask which I have velcro’d and fastened onto my top tube. That’s 1.5hrs nutrition gone… fck it, I thought again… I’ve trained a lot over this prep with no fuel… I can do this. I may pay for it later… but here and now… I can do this ride.

Hammer time… but shit comes in 10’s apparently because my bike is now also rattling... the noise is coming from somewhere in the front… No idea what it is… it’s annoying… but its apparently not slowing me down, so I press on.

I catch the group I was with my the turn point, which is approx. 24km into the ride. I then gather myself and head back into town. I’m surprisingly feeling great. Not fatigued at the effort, the legs are strong today!
Coming to the end of lap 1, familiar faces are still about. Over taking here and there in bursts of energy around me, I’m pretty confident I remained pretty steady in my outputs and only gave a little extra on the downhills… quite simply because I could and no one else could. I’m sure I would have been annoying one or two of them…
Lap 2 commences the same way as Lap 1 started… spinning up the hill. Off they went… all and sundry bowling up the hill and towards Matthew Finders. Out of the saddle, in big gears, all trying to be the man in front… and here I am, spinning away and hitting the downhills and staying right in the thick of it. I’ve got this….

Wrong again. This time on my way out of town I decide I am going to get in the big ring as soon as I get to the top... the left hand turn as you head in the direct of Matthew Flinders.
Off it comes again… to the outside this time. Again, it teeters… but I can’t save it.
I have enough speed to roll almost to the top of MF hill however I know I am going to have to pull over ASAP before going down… so off I get again… and off my group goes again L
Quick fix and away I go. As far as momentum goes, I have lost at least a minute this time… the roll time as I waited for the right moment to get off… and then the fix time. I jump back on and hammer it yet again… through the bumps and bruises of Lighthouse beach and onto Ocean drive… my bike rattling away incessantly now and I am starting to fear I have snapped or cracked a fork… or the front wheel is going to fall off… something disastrous anyway!!?? I reach down and feel to see if the front wheel skewer is loose but it’s all good… so I press on… at full speed… waiting for my bike to fall apart…

Almost identically I catch my group by the turn point… I’m feeling strong still though so I just think bugger it… I’m gonna keep going. So I do. I nail that group to the wall and leave them behind... chasing down each lonely figure in the distance at a time until I get back into town.

Thank Christ that is over. Off the rattling bike I get… only half my nutrition consumed and I am sure my Watt bombs dropped than I would have in normal circumstances. I’m all in on this one… and I do the maths.
A 90min run and I am sub 4:30hrs… that’s gotta have me close to a Q spot… a 4min pace run and I am sub 4:25hrs… surely that’s good enough?

 

A sub 50sec T2 and I’m off!

Ride time – 2:27:38hrs – conservatively I think I lost 3mins or more on the dropped chains… however I did go hard to make up the time… so who knows what might have been?

I start the run with 4:16 in mind… the magic pace number that gets me under 90mins….

Km 1… tick.. well, close enough: 4:17
Km 2 – tick: 4:08
Kms 3 through 8 – tick
8 ticks in a row but all was not comfortable. I was battling to hold on, and by kilometre 8… the mere fact I was debating whether a small surge to stay under the 4:16 pace was needed, I knew I wasn’t going to be able to sustain this pace! It was killing me.
Incidentally I didn’t surge, but relaxed instead, knowing that although I was well under my target pace, this was not going to be a sub 90mins run in any shape or form… so I accepted the fact and just ploughed on as best I could.
I didn’t hit 4:16 again for the rest of the run, but I don’t regard it as a mentally weak run… a run in which I gave up… because right from the start of the run I was running above my body’s capability. I knew I wouldn’t be able to sustain it… simple as that… so I fell back into Thursday morning Long run pace and got the job done.
I think I overtook maybe 5 people, maybe more… and I know at least 2 people went past me from the AG… Peter Clark from TriNova was one of them, so no shame there as I know he can run. As I was catching on Brett, he had been gesturing that there weren’t many in front of him… maybe 4 at best, but I was certain there were at least 10 in front based on my race number studying… Jared Medhurst, the AG winner was a country mile in front.

All in all, my 1:35:14 run was just about the slowest 70.3 run I have ever done… and certainly the slowest I have done while staying in one piece (ironically, my Yeppoon race also holds a 2nd record… for the slowest run as I succumbed to sickness and had to walk large sections). I am satisfied in that I gave it what I had left. The catcher after the finish line was used and I was helped into the recovery area… still walking I might add, and in no need of medical… I also noted that there wasn’t many lightning runs on the day, if any… so my 1:35hrs doesn’t look too bad when compared.

What I do see though… is 4:16 pace would have got me within 50secs of a slot… so for 8km, I was mathematically in it up to my eyeballs @ 4:095 pace… but not REALLY in it as I didn’t have anything left :(




Onwards:
The bike is being worked on at the bike shop. What on earth is that rattle!!
The O-Symetric rings are coming off for now, even though I think they are better suited to a course like Western Sydney… and back on goes the Sram TT ring, Sram Red front Derailleur and chain stay to keep that bastard on!
A new magnet is going on for the Power meter… and the HR strap is already working again.
I will be super gluing my gel flask to my bike in future… no, not really… but I will be making sure it is more secure despite having done 3 IM’s and countless 70.3s with the same set up…
…and I will be working on my run… especially my run off the bike.

I’m not sure how much time I wasted on the bike?... or how much extra effort I used in catching up?... or how much I needed that lost fuel in the end?… or if I am even good enough to Qualify off my own merit and not through the points system?… I’m just not sure about any of it really… which is a little disappointing and hollow. Have I just wasted all that time training over winter?
That’s the negative… What I DO know, is that I am now equipped with the knowledge to make decisions in races, and I know they MAY cost me in the end. I made some decisions in this race and rolled the dice hoping I’d pull out a cracker… it didn’t pan out that way based on the end result… but without data I can’t be sure if my decisions this time cost me. I have that knowledge though.
My legs today (not sore), indicate I simply ran low on explosive fuel? Should I have picked up some on course nutrition to fill the void?... I didn’t feel flat in that regard, so why should I?

I can’t honestly say I would have done anything differently. I am happy with that… I gave everything I had.


Ironman 70.3 Port Macquarie 2015 officially ends now. Analysis is over…. Failing all else, I have just had a cracking training session!… and I can’t wait to go again in 6 weeks time in the heat of Western Sydney!

Last but very much so, not least... a HUGE thanks to Chris and Erika McDonald for putting up with me and allowing me to be part of Big Sexy Racing! You guys, the team and the whole host of sponsors that help us out are simply fantastic!
ome that I have personally used a lot in racing and training this past campaign are Newton runners, Bonk Breaker bars, OGIO bags and of course the Zoca kits, which are awesome!
Also huge thanks to Pro4mance for the assistance with my nutritional needs, and TLR Performance for making my racing wheel so much more affordable!
Cheers all :)

Thursday, 19 February 2015

Ironman Geelong 70.3 - Feb 8, 2015

Righto, it’s been long enough for me to dissect the race that was Ironman Geelong 70.3, 2015.
In short, it was a race that went 98.95% to plan… the numbers were correct, the nutrition was correct, I had a great swim time (for me), a good ride and a solid run.
Pre-race my predicted time in good conditions was 4:20hrs – 4:30hrs… I have been riding and running strongly in training and all pointed to a solid final official hitout before the laser pointer was being aimed wholly and solely on Ironman Australia on May 2.

Setting the scene; no family for this one… race prep for Port Macquarie maybe, when all will be staying at home again… just 2 mates. Andrew “Roo” Mildren and my old man, making his debut as a race traveller sans the rest of the family.
Good company.
The life and times of TA Scott, the Holbrook submarine, Gavin Miller, the big merino’s massive balls… the list goes on. Random conversation, plus the Grill team & Triple MMM one the radio and some Sufferfest soundtracks made the trip a breeze. Arrival… 3pm?

Easy stroll down to register for the race to get it out of the way, and a quick swim… very low tide, squishy slime between the toes, lots of reeds… but got a quick swim in to get the body moving. Good gear. Walk back to the apartment to settle in before strolling across the road for fish and chips.



Saturday morning greeting us with a downpour of rain… nicely timed to steam everything up for a morning ride! Only lasted 5mins though before clearing and there was no more for the rest of the weekend.
40-50mins of very easy riding. Roo, Chris Fuchs, Tim Lang, some fella and I give the course a very quick look over. I’m all good with that as I raced last year… following the actual course map would have been better… but close enough. Easy run after this… 20-25mins easy, then feet up for a bit before fixing up the bikes for check-in.




I’m feeling quite blasé writing this… but seriously everything went to plan. It is a 70.3, I think this was my 12th race of this distance and I had everything prepared with nothing to buy except for some compression calves which I had forgotten to bring. My only hiccup prior to the race was an elevated Heart rate when putting my arm around Crowie for a happy snap… good man that, actually stopped to have a quick chat before posing for the obligatory photo… oh, that, and the massage I got may have well had been done by Helga the destroyer… a thickly set blonde lady absolutely savaged my calves and quads and left me feeling very uncomfortable the afternoon before the race! Lesson learned… if I do it again, tell them to take it easy!
Hahaha… a warning to the Melbourne IM participants dragging the chain… I do believe I heard she is working the IM, but only starting at 7:00pm… good luck to those people :)






Great to catch up with old mate, Simon Belleflamme and his lovely fiancée Giulia as well. Back from Belgium and here to stay… very gracious of them to accept my poor pre-race dietary habit of McDonalds :) Don’t hate people… just think… fats, carbs, protein, salt, calcium and protein… everything you need for an endurance race of this nature! No, it aint for the every day diet and I barely ever eat it… but I cant ever remember having stomach issues after Maccas either, so it’s winning all round in my book.




Ok… enough of the chat… race time.

Pre race nutrition on the money… followed the plan. Easy… then walk down to Transition.
Carefully and methodically set up the bike and T1/T2. Again… easy. I have a ton of gear in the bag, but barely anything is ever left in transition… where does it all go?
Helmet on the ground with the straps folded out for easy put-on… runners next to that and behind them both is the cap with sunnies folded up inside… and that’s it.
I swim with my race belt already on and a couple of gels already in my pockets… and my cycle shoes are on the bike, rubber banded up for ease of entry.

Done.

The Swim – beach wave start.
After best wishes to Roo and not being able to locate Fuchsy I go test the water before lining up on the second line of swimmers in my Age Group. Normally I would have started front line in this race but my cohorts already waiting for the gun were not giving an inch. All good, I am no superfish so I was quite happy to run and dolphin dive before trying to find some space… and maybe some feet.
Not much to say on the swim… it was relatively calm, although just enough movement to make the turn buoys hard to sight. I concentrated on staying calm myself and holding as good a technique as I am capable of. I thought I did ok to be honest. I grabbed some feet here and there but also felt comfortable and solid throughout with no low points and no moments of “How much longer is there!!”.
No one hit me and my goggles weren’t flicked off.

Swim done in 29:46 according to Multisport Australia. Given I had predicted 33-35mins, I was clearly happy with this.

T1 – wetsuit off in a flash, and chucked. The Aquaman suit was actually a treat to get off and was off to my waist (along with cap, goggles and ear plugs) before I was even out of the water.
Helmet on easy, crab the bike off the racks (as the bar never fits on the Giant Aero bars that well), and run to the mount line… someone bumps me, one of my pedals clips something and bang… rubber band holding my shoe in place comes off…. Only a minor detail… but gee it was a pain in the bum to get my foot in the shoe after that… you see, the Specialized Trivent NEEDS the rubber band… or it needs to be put on when in transition. They are not easy to get your foot in while riding as they aren’t as rigid as most shoes on the top side.
I struggled, I got the shits and the conscious decision had to be made to calm the fck down and take my time.

That’s the ticket… I’m off.
2:14mins – 20th in the AG in T1… I can do better but it was pretty good seeing as the shoe issue would have been part of the ride.

Ride.
Up out of transition… sitting up, easy gear, high cadence up the hill to the gardens area, before dropping the gears and lighting some fires out on the main road.
A relatively simple course to follow and quite fast in areas. The only hindrances were the one climb out of Transition, which you do twice, one longer elevation on the road out of town, a couple of minute rollers and an unsuspecting breeze in parts. Nothing diabolical though and my bike time… or should I say, the bike time of Chris Fuchs points to this being a fast course when the conditions are right.
The weather was perfect from a sun and temperature point of view. Mid to upper 20’s with cloud cover.

I stuck 100% to my numbers on the ride. It took about 20mins for the HR to drop down into range after the swim and T1, but once it was down I pretty much had it on the money for the entire ride.
I got out of the saddle once or twice to go past a competitor here and there but by and large I stayed aero for most of the way with just a few small patches sitting up… albeit on my drop bars which are still quite low.
Chris Fuchs and Tim Lang caught me at the half way mark… at the end of lap 1. I gave a small burst to keep up with Chris… but no chance I was going to be up to it… he was slaying this course good and proper… so I let him and TL go.

A couple of Roo sightings while out there… but no catch today… unlike the flying Roo in Port 2013 who went past so fast he didn’t even see me!

Lap 1 – 1:14:19 / Lap 2 – 1:15:12 – total time 2:29:35

57secs difference in it indicates I was pretty consistent through I guess… and I was more than happy with my ride by the time I got to T2. Legs were good and ready to run. I had eased off slightly coming back through the park and downhill to T2 and the legs were fresh.

My gear… perfect. No bottles dropped, the XLAB torpedo did its job, the TLR wheels would have rolled to the end of the earth, the helmet had perfect ventilation… no sweat issues whatsoever, and the GPP Tri shirt was as comfortable as it gets. Perfect… no issues is what you want.

T2 – nothing to report… I exited my shoes, re-thought my idea to do a flying dismount and got off calmly and bolted for my T area. Easily found.
Rack bike, helmet off, shoes on, grab cap and run. See Tim Lang exiting transition at the same time and exchange pleasantries… well I did… TL was furious about 2 busted spokes on the ride and could feel cramps in his legs… I ran with him for about a km before he tailed off to re-gather himself.

1:32mins – 4th in the AG for T2… that’s more like it!

The Run
This is what is was all about for me… well it was all about the ride run combo in that I wanted to pace myself and get off the bike ready to run well… so far so good, it was time to see if I was better placed for a run off than in Forster.
2 out and backs to the left of transition (into town) with an out and back run through the park (up the hill and to the right of transition) sandwiched in between.
The 2/3 of the run on the CBD side was good gear… I held a good pace throughout that section. I lost a little time when heading up into the park area… actually that part of the run stung the legs a little, but as we finished the run in the CBD and the footpath with the crowds it wasn’t too bad.
A highlight for me was having Crowie looming up for an inevitable pass… I tried to quicken up to run with him for a bit (and get a photo opportunity), but I was no chance. Sub 4 pace for me, Crowie was easily down into the 3:30’s or even lower…. Stop it clown I thought, slow down or you are going to ruin your run!!!
So I did… and promptly ran my race.
I don’t recall overtaking too many on the run… but apparently I did… all said and done though, I held a 4:04 pace for the who run with it being sub 4min pace for the first 8km… I had dreams of sub 4 pace… but they just weren't to be on the day. I ran well I thought though and clocked in a good time.

1:25:52 – 8th fastest in the AG.


The wash up
When all is said and done, I had hoped to place high in this race… top 10 was the provisional hope… although one of my big goals in this sport is to finish top 3 in an Ironman event.
In hindsight, the record books show even 4:20hrs is a struggle to get top 3 here… so it probably wasn’t going to happen just yet… it will one day though.
To quote Crowie after Kona 2010: “happy with the performance, disappointed with the result” (the placing). 15th is nothing to sneeze at though… and neither is 4:29:01… not at all… sometimes you just have expectations though, and on this day, they were not met. I was beaten by others better on the day.

On the whole though, the performance was a cracker from an IM point of view.
I was consistent.
I swam well for me, I rode to my numbers… with great consistency as well… and my run was solid… not spectacular… but very solid and unwavering in the end.
The execution of this race was exactly what I wanted with a 12week IM prep coming up.

I shan’t be getting my hopes up too high for Port Mac… but a good result is possible.
I have the physical and mental tools to get the job done.
I have good equipment which will be maintained as well as I can.
My result on the day will come down to who else is in the field and who can deliver as well as (or better than) I can. I know I will be 100% ready though… and my performance won’t be in question.

Thanks
Huge thanks to all the support I get from my team, Big Sexy Racing and all the great sponsors involved. Too many to name and I may not race using them all, but I certainly train using a lot incl. Zoca Gear, Newton, Bonk Breaker and Ruby's Lube to name just a bare few.
Thanks also to Colin @ TLR Performance wheels for making my race wheels very affordable... and also huge thanks to Pro4mance Nutrition for adding me to the team, thus making important nutrition such as energy gels and protein a lot more accessible.
Very much appreciated.
Last but by no means least, huge thanks to my great friends and family. My mates who I train with day in and day out... always challenging me... I have improved out of sight this season with their assistance so far and look forward to it continuing if possible... AND... my lovely wife and 2 boys (soon to become 3). No chance I could do this stupid sport without their help, assistance and patience. Its a huge sacrifice to let me travel to places like Geelong without them... and again to Port in May while leaving them at home... and I cant say thank you enough. xxx

Baby #3 next... then Onward I march to Port Mac and Ironman Australia 3.0.