The Iron Geek

My personal journey of going from an overweight IT leader to an Ironman.

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5 posts tagged Triathlon

kswiss-triathlon:

We are already have Kona withdrawals. All that adrenaline and energy from the Ironman world championships gets addicting. We have been watching this race day video to take us back to those exciting moments. We’re so proud of our athletes! 

I so want to go next year!

getfast:

This is probably going to be my last article before racing Ironman Canada on Sunday, August 28, so I thought it’d be a good chance for me to talk about race planning and visualization.

Parents, coaches and mentors have long been telling me to visualize winning, but it wasn’t until I started…

The 5th Fastest Fat Guy

I had a great race this morning!

I competed in the Peachtree City Super Sprint Triathlon.  This was a 300 yard swim, 8 mile bike and 2 mile run. 

I completed the race in 1:03:26 - Good enough for 5th place in the Clydesdale division (Men over 200 pounds).  I finished 104th out of 205.

My splits were:

  • SWIM: 6:44
  • TRANSITION-1: 1:31
  • BIKE: 28:56 (16.6 MPH)
  • TRANSITION-2: 2:10
  • RUN: 24:07 (12:04 min/mile)

Now my GPS watch showed the run at 2.29 miles with a 10:39 min/mile pace, but whatever.

This is a HUGE improvement over my first triathlon where I came in 166th of 171.  I also made substantial improvement on my swim.  The first triathlon swim was 400 yards and I completed it in 18:35.  This was 300 yards in 6:44.

The Swim

The Swim felt really good.  I was able to get into a nice groove and just stick with a slow and steady stroke.  I concentrated as much as possible on keeping my kick to a miniumum, as that is normally what wears me out (too much kicking).  I did get a little freaked out with sighting (making sure I was heading in the right direction), causing me to pick up my head too often.  But for the most part, I felt really good.  I was surprised how tired I felt getting out of the water.  But I blew away my pre-race goal of 10 minutes.

The Bike

The bike kicked my ass.  I’m not used to starting out bike rides with a high heart rate and it really shows, especially on hills.  It was super draining going up those hills.  I just felt like I was constantly out of gas.  I went as fast as 32 mph and as slow at 6 mph.  I spent a lot more time on the low end of the scale than the fast.  I do most of my riding on a fairly flat trail and this race showed me that I need more time on hills.

The Run

When I got into the transition area off of the bike and started to change into my running gear, I got a really bad cramp in my leg that caused me to fall down right in front of my racked bike.  It took me a few seconds to massage it out and get my shoes on.  I made my way to the transition exit, but immediately started walking due to the cramps.  Thankfully there was a Gatorade stop right there and I was able to get some nutrients that really helped.  It took about 1/2 mile, but I eventually got into a rhythm of about 10 min/mile but had walked once on each mile, bringing my average up.  I ended up finishing strong, and I even had a little left in the tank.

Overall I am extremely happy with the results from today.  I had a goal of finishing in 1:00:00, but 1:03 is good enough for me.  Last year that time would have been good enough for 2nd Fastest Fat Guy, and an award.  I’ll take that.

Next up is the Savannah Sprint Triathlon (500 yard swim, 13.1 mile bike and 3.1 mile run) on June 11th.

Actually, next up is the Warrior Dash tomorrow.  =)

My First Triathlon: Holy Crap That Was Hard!

My first triathlon kicked my ass, and hard!  That was 10x harder than I thought it was going to be.  I was feeling pretty good about the event, leading up to that morning.  I have trained hard and have come a long way, including huge fitness gains and losing close to 35 pounds.  But guess what?  I took an absolute beating on this course.

“I haven’t seen a beating like that since they shoved a banana down my pants and turned a monkey lose!”

This was a sprint triathlon: 400 yard swim, 15 mile bike and 5K (3.2 mile) run.  I completed the event in 2:05:17 - 287th place out of 291 people.  

Not quite dead-last, but pretty damn close.

Anyone who calls this a “mini triathlon” or a “baby triathlon” can kiss my ass.  There is nothing mini or baby about this distance when you are 225 pounds of Nick Tahou’s fed, Labatt cooled, mass of couch potato like myself.  To me, this was the hardest physical thing that I can remember ever doing.  Period.

The Swim

As I took my warmup in the water, I felt pretty good about the swim.  Sure it was dark and muddy, couldn’t really see in front of you, but the water was warm and my stroke felt good.  We had a wave start, with 4 different groups of people starting every 3 minutes.  As luck would have it, I was in the first wave.

After the horn went off, I let everyone else start swimming before I started.  I wasn’t going to join the mele of swimming in close quarters.  After everyone had gotten a few feet out, I joined in.

For the first 50 yards or so, everything was going fine.  I was swimming well, breathing well, and just focusing on my form.  And then, just before the first turn buoy, it all started to go to hell.

I got slapped across the back from a random arm heading in the absolute wrong direction.  A bit freaked out, I lifted my head only to be hit from another arm, heading in almost exactly the opposite direction.  I am heading straight at the buoy and one arm is heading towards 9:00 and one is heading towards 3:00.  Then someone grabs my ankle.

What the hell is going on?

From that point on, I was never ever really able to gain my composure in the swim.  I was forced to back-stroke or doggy-paddle often to just keep my head above water.  At one point, I was floating on my back, trying to catch my breath, when from behind me I see a CHURN of water.  Turns out the next wave was about to run me over!  I rolled onto my stomach just in time to have a girl swim right over the top of me and just keep going.

After about 300 yards, I wasn’t sure I was going to be able to make it.  My shoulders hurt and I was having a hard time keeping my breath.  They support crew kept asking me if I was okay, and I told them yes.  I was going to make it out of the lake under my own power.

I got out of the water a little over 18 minutes later.  I was staggering like a drunken sailor and didn’t even have the strength to waive to my kids.  I was like a walking zombie.  

The Bike

The bike went the best out of everything.  It took a little over 3 miles to calm down from the swim and finally catch my breath.  But once I did, it was pretty uneventful.  I managed to pass about 12 folks or so while on the bike, and probably myself got pass 6 or so times.  

There was one downhill where I was really flying.  I was pedaling hard in my top gear, down on my aero bars, puttin’ the boots to her. I’m not sure how fast I was going, but it was awesome.  I got off the bike 55 minutes after I got on it.  I was happy with that time.

The Run

Oh the run.  Maybe I should call it the walk.  My previous best for a 5K was 31 minutes.  That was not going to happen today.  As I started to run out of the transition area, it felt like my chest was going to explode!  My heart was racing and I couldn’t catch my breath.  I was absolutely exhausted.  Between the swim and the bike, my body had told me that this wasn’t going to work.

I started walking about 100 yards from the transition area, and then for more than 1/2 of the entire 5K.  My body was really struggling.  Every time that I would run for 100 yards or so, my heart would be racing again.  I just had to keep walking.

As I’m walking, I am getting passed by the few people that I had managed to beat out of the water.  I am watching people go by with age markings that say “60” or “54” or “59”.  These people were running.  Damn.  I managed to run the last 300 yards across the finish line, with no energy to “sprint” across the finish.  Time on the “walk” was 48 minutes. 

Moving Forward

So it’s obvious that I have a lot of work to do.  My next sprint triathlon is in 5 weeks in Peachtree City.  I have already talked with my coach and we are going to focus on improving my swim (Job #1) and improving my fitness, including losing at least 10 lbs before the race (Job #2).  

I feel that if I had a better swim, I wouldn’t have been in such bad shape for the rest of the race.  And if I can lose weight, that will turn more of my energy into propulsion versus carrying weight.  Besides, if I look that fat (the pictures above), I can’t imaging what I looked like before!  It’s time to start dropping LBs again!

I am very glad that I did it.  Overall, I enjoyed the day (everything but the swim).  I am confident that by keeping at it, I will get much, much better at things as time goes on.  

I have completely re-dedicated myself to achieving my Ironman goal.

Bring it!

Race Calendar

Working with Coach Fink, I wanted to create a schedule for warm-up race before my 1/2 Ironman in October.  He suggested doing two months of solid fitness training before entering a race, and trying to space the races out about a month between them.

As a result, I have created the following race calendar for 2010:

Wish me luck!

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