Monday 17 June 2013

The step up to middle distance

Last year I made a decision to take a step up to middle distance in ’13 as a new challenge to invigorate my training – and then decide whether to go back to OLY in ’14 or go long.  So in ’13 I have only signed up for 2 events – UK70.3 and Vitruvian.

Its fair to say I didn’t have a particularly great autumn – as I rarely seem to do – but in April I cycled from London to Paris for charity so this gave my cycling the much needed impetus for my training I needed.  I felt really strong on my return – and even after 3 weeks off with Scarlett fever -didn’t feel like I’d lost much of my new found cycling fitness.  The only disappointment was that after 10 years I finally had a new ride – a Felt F75 – however after a couple of short rides felt it was so different to my current bike it was too soon to risk it on the technical course in Wimbleball so went with my old one.

UK70.3, wimbleball, exmoor

I entered this as my first middle distance because a) its in the UK b) its renowned as the toughest half in the world so wanted to challenge myself.  The bike course with nearly 5,000ft of ascents was the biggest challenge – fortunately a couple of weeks before I rode the course with some guys who had raced it before and I would thoroughly advise doing this as it helped me enormously. 

I arrived at wimbleball early on Saturday for registration and the race briefing.  My first impressions were how professional the whole Ironman set up is – it is quite simply a slick, well oiled professional machine.  People may whinge at their prices to enter – but ultimately they are a commercial operation and they could have sold out this event twice over so if anything they are under priced?  

The whole Ironman ‘clean’ transition was new to me - It was strange making calls on what to wear for the following day and packing it into coloured bags to hang away the day before – so I erred on the side of caution and packed several options.  The race briefing was thorough and very detailed – which it needed to be as 1,100 out of 1,700 competitors were new to this distance.  Meanwhile outside the heavens were opening – an ominous sign.  The key message from the briefing was get your clothing right given the conditions.  Anyway will all transition bags packs and stored and my bike racked I headed off back to my hotel to rest up. 

Race Day 

Probably the most relaxed I’ve been pre race given everything was already sorted for transition in the bags – all I had to do was pump my tyres up, check them for stones etc; add the drinks bottles and get into my wetsuit.  Then we put all our warm kit into a white bag, handed it over and headed down to the lake.  The weather was overcast but still and no rain – not bad for the race.  My target was sub-6. 

Swim – 1.2Mi – 73rd in AG 

All the talk pre race was of the temperature, and on race day it was 13oC/14oC.  To be honest I have only done 1 open water swim this year but the temp felt fine.  It was the biggest field I have ever raced in with 1,100 in my wave (1) at 0700 followed by another 600 in wave 2 at 7:15.  However given the wide start it didn’t feel as crowded as some OLY races that I have done.  After a quick rendition of God Save the queen the horn went and we were off.  I settled into a rhythm quite quickly, and whilst my sighting was a little suspect felt like I was going well.  The first turn was quite tasty as it pretty much comes back on yourself so everyone was crowding together.  I carried on to buoy 2 and finally turned into the final straight.  However every time I looked up it didn’t seem to be getting any closer – the 3rd leg seemed to take ages.  My target was sub 38 so when I stood up and saw 36:11 on my Garmin I was pretty pleased.   

T1 – 7:58 

On exit I started running up the long steepish drag into T1, but was surprised to see most people walking?  I ran up and into the tent, grabbed my blue bag and ran into the main tent.  I emptied everything onto the floor.  I cramped slightly in my legs and a helper came and was an amazing help – reminding me to breath, asking what I did/didn’t need and packed it away.  I decided to go with my lightweight cycling gillet and some newly purchased arm warmers I bought the day before (that I had worn under my wetsuit) – rather than my heavy rain cycling jacket.  I also wore calf guards for the first time ever – mainly for the run.  I put my shoes on – rather than having them on my bike as normal – and ran out detouring via the portaloos – collecting my bike and off I went. 

Bike – 56Mi – 3:29:27 – 85th in AG 

I started out and knew the first couple of miles were subtly ascending so span my legs out at 90-95RPM.  Soon we were out onto the first loop and the pace picked up substantially – I was overtaking quite a few people but likewise some TT’rs were hammering past me.  What was noticeable was the amount of people dropping out with punctures – given the nature of the country lanes I guess it’s inevitable.  I also passed 1 guy who had come off his bike and they were calling in an ambulance.  Probably around half way round the course you get to the first of 3 steep climbs – and my strategy was to climb all 3 sitting down to save my ;legs  for the 2nd lap and run.  I survived those pretty well and at the top of the 3rd one was a big crowd of supporters with cow bells – they gave me a massive lift.  Soon I was out onto the 2nd lap and the drizzle on lap 1 had turned into heavy rain.  On the steep descent (no overtaking zone) I was near the bottom and saw a marshall rather close waving at me, I braked hard, locked up and almost came off veering into the other side of the road and missing a cone by inches.  A guy in front had obviously fallen off and was nursing his collarbone - again I heard an ambulance being called.  In light of the conditions I definitely eased off slightly from here – the roads had become really greasy.  The 3 climbs came and went fine and my legs were feeling fine, soon I was descending into T2.   I was hoping for around 3:15, I was nearer 3:30 but given the conditions I wasn’t too disappointed. 

T2 – 4:42 

I ran into T2, racked my bag, had another quick detour via the portaloos and into the marquee to collect my run bag.  A tip in the race briefing was to have a fresh 2nd pair of dry socks for the run and I was glad I’d listened.  Fresh socks on soaking wet feet were heavenly!  As were the 5 jelly babies I shoved in my mouth lol  Soon I was off onto the run course munching a banana – my watch was showing 4:20 so was comfortable I could go sub-6.  As a 1:21 half mara runner and someone whose running in triathlons tends to be similar to running ‘fresh’ I expected to be no worse than 1:40 – in hindsight this was probably where my pre-race research had a gap given only 4 people in my AG broke 1:30… 

Run – 13.1Mi – 1:54:20 – 82nd in AG 

‘A relatively flat run course with 1 steep ascent mostly on tarmac’ was how someone described it to me.  I started off running well – c.7 min km’s – although the course was less tarmac and more cross country deep mud and tracks.   Soon we ran up ‘the’ ascent up the side of the hill, then a few mins later ran up another steep ascent and then a third – not really flattish.  The first lap seemed to drag out as I didn’t know where the turns were.  Towards the end of my first lap my pace had dropped to 8< min kms, and I was having serious stomach issues.  Early into lap 2 I dived into a portaloo on the course and according to Garmin (sorry if too much info lol) I  lost 6 mins in there.  However I felt it was time worth spending as it sorted my stomach out and my pace upped itself again.  However into the second half of the lap my pace dipped again, I was just willing myself onto the 3rd lap hoping the adrenaline would push me round that final lap.  I was determined however not to stop running at any point and didn’t.  I kept thinking of seeing my kids later - who hadn’t been able to come and watch - for fathers day and reciting ‘Hog Roast Roll’ that would be awaiting my finish.  Finally I was into the third lap and as I crossed the dam saw a mate Stu going the other way and we exchanged words of encouragement, I decided to try and catch him.  Whilst I didn’t catch up it kept me going and soon I was running into the finishing chute.  As the commentator called out my name I raised my arms up for the classic finish pose and some guy came crashing through my arms to break 6 hours (obvs in wave 2) lol  I didn’t have the emotion of when I finished the London triathlon – my first Olympic – I was just thoroughly exhausted and needed a drink.  Anyway job done in 6:13. 

Post-Race Reflections

Total 6:13:12
82nd in AG / 230 finishers
354th overall / 1,666 finishers 
 

I am delighted to have completed a half ironman and in particular that one.  Whilst I am disappointed not to break 6 everyone has spoken about how tough the conditions were yesterday and you can’t ignore that.  Compared to most triathlons my run and bike were in line – but I am normally in the top 10% of runners so I was well down on that.

I am clear what I need to do to have a strong Vitruvian

1.      Build more bricks into my training – to help my legs work better post a long bike ride

2.      Get used to my Felt which is considerably lighter and also using my aerobars which I didn’t really do at wimbleball given its technical nature

3.      Get some cycling TT’s under my belt – including a 50Mi if possible

4.      Look at my nutrition – which worked well in terms of energy but with 4 gels and a powerbar maybe it was too much resulting in my stomach issues on the run. 

5.      Recce the course thoroughly – although having done the Dambuster triathlon I know this area fairly well

So going forwards I will be training for Vitruvian, mainly hoping to get in some bike TT’s and running races, and I may also race the Vachery OLY triathlon in July too. 

Thanks for taking the time to read this (slightly) long blog :)