This is really long, so be prepared!
Days leading up to the race:
We arrived at the airport in Spokane at 1:00am our time! That didn’t matter much, because we had an
incredibly relaxing morning/day planned for Thursday. We stayed in Spokane that night and I had a
fabulous morning working out in the hotel gym, eating a good breakfast and
gorging on coffee. We took our time
getting out the door, did some ($175 ) worth of grocery shopping and began the
30 minute commute to Coeur D Alene. It
had been pouring rain for 2 days in this area, and the expo was a mess. It was cold, muddy and miserable. We snagged my registration and got the heck
out of there. I used tri bike transport to get my bike to and from...and I will continue to always do that. Worth every penny!
Let’s talk about food. I stayed
in a house with my friend Joe, my mom and a new friend (that I just met)
Susan. We ate all day every day! Our kitchen was full of almond milk, almond
butter, bananas, apples, sweet potatoes, all natural breads, organic this,
organic that. No starving athletes in
this house.
Some thoughts before I get into the nitty gritty:
I am not going to sit here and talk about the “what ifs”, the “would
haves” and “should haves.” I executed my
race plan perfectly, pretty damn close to my ability level. I, like most people had a few things happen
that could have lead to a better time, for me a 2nd place finish. So, I will just highlight those areas throughout
my blog and leave it at that. An ironman
is a long day. I have finished 8 of them…I
know all of the really bad things that can go wrong. I am sure the 2nd place chick had
issues as well. After seeing the 4th
place girl, she definitely looked like hell.
So, truth be told it was a battle out there. The good news is that I had enough things go right to snag a 10:27 race
and a 33 minute PR on a hilly course and on a beautiful day.
The Swim
I was a little freaked out about 1 thing: FREEZING and being cold on
the bike. I was not cold out all! The water temperature was 61 degrees, and I
had a neoprene swim cap and swim socks.
I had a great experience with the rolling start and I think it is a
great addition to Ironman swim starts.
There was still a monumental surreal feeling at the start, but just not
AS many people fighting for the same water.
I probably started a little too far back, but that’s because I was doing
my dynamic warm up exercises before the spotJ I’m getting old, I have to warm up the rusty abductors
and glutes!
The swim went very smooth and the water was calm. We had a perfect sun rise and it was very
peaceful out there. I glanced down at my
Garmin and it said I was swimming at a 1:30 pace for the first lap. That should have been a 1:04 pace. Apparently something was wrong, either didn’t
swim straight or the course was a bit long (maybe a bit of both). I came out of the first lap at 35 minutes
which is awesome for me. I had a huge
smile on my face and I felt like I was getting stronger as I went. I glanced down again, and now it said I was
swimming at a 1:25 average pace. Rock on
sista! And then…I turned around a buoy
and couldn’t see anything because of the sun.
So, I followed the group I was with and we ended way out in the middle
of nowhereL I probably lost 3-4 mintues in that move alone. However, 2 years ago, I was a 1:19-1:19 swim
finisher, even without going off course. Believe it or not, I was 31st out
of the water. Oops, but making progress… I know I am capable of a 1:07-1:10, I just
need to do it.
TOTAL SWIM TIME: 1:13:54
T1
I did not have a fast transition, but the reason is that I had to
pee! I cannot pee while swimming or
moving. So, the volunteer handed me my
bike and I said excuse me while I sit here and stretchJ Ha Ha.
It was so obvious that I was peeing in the grass! Total amount of time to pee in the grass :30 Other than that, it was fairly seamless.
Bike
So the whole reason I picked this course was because I was sick of “bigger/more
powerful” girls getting the best of me on flat courses. So I said fine, I will find a race that goes
up hill AND I will lose 10 pounds on my already petite frame. And, that I did. Thank you to Lindsay Langford for keeping me
on track with my bod pod assessments at St. Vincents! I got down to 13.5% body fat and gained 2
pounds of muscle in the process.
I trained my ass off on the
bike, not with volume…but with intensity.
I did a lot of strength work/high zone 3/low zone 4, more v02 sessions
than I can remember and whole lot of threshold workouts. Here are some key things to note about my
bike training:
·
I never rode more than 90 miles. But, that 90 miles was brutally hard (thanks
Scott Bond!)
·
I did intervals of some sort 3 times a
week.
·
I only rode 3 times a week (Tue/Thur/Sun)
·
I did a few bike races this spring/early summer
·
I focused on strength intervals on one of those
interval days
·
I lost 10 pounds of body fat
·
I never did a long brick or did a training
session that put me so far over the edge that I needed more than 2 days to
recover.
·
I rode with purpose, and rode the computrainer a
lot for most of my sessions. I probably
rode outside 1x a week.
·
I always train with power, and new just what I
was capable of if my stomach cooperated.
First Loop: Everything went
super smooth and I nailed my nutrition.
My goal power for this race was 160 norm power. Side
note: Everybody likes to keep their power numbers a secret, but I am a coach
and a teacher.
I think that it is important for people to understand why I use power,
and why training with power is such a training and racing advantage.
I hit 165 norm power on my first loop (my average was not that far
off, because I am fairly efficient at pedaling the downhills and not coasting
to drink, eat, ect… That is over a 3.0 power to weight ratio. Hell yeah to healthy eating and
discipline. I did get stuck behind super
slow people on the no pass zone. It only
affected me three times out of the 8 no passing areas. Total time lost in the no passing zone (about 1 minute). I also missed a bottle hand up, because there
were kids handing them out and the bottles were super slippery! So, I stopped very quickly, to grab the
bottle (about :30)
Total Bike Tiime: 5:33:28 and PR by 10 watt average and 11 minutesJ
163 Norm Power/ 154 Average Power
TSS = 368
IF = 81.5%
KJ = 3,085
I had the fourth fastest age group bike
split.
T2
Fairly uneventful. I passed a
few girls in the tent and never looked back.
I did pee in transition (porta potty this time (:30 seconds)
Run
This is where it gets rough out there, for all of us. I felt GREAT for the first 10 miles, averaging
7:40s on the flat sections and 7:50-7:55 on the smaller uphill sections. The big hill was a beast, but the downill on
the back side helped to even out the paces (as long as you ran the damn thing). The
running/bike path that we were on was off camber. That will mess with tired legs. I feel bad for anyone who had right leg IT
band issues, because it made things a bit rough.
At mile 11, my stomach started to get gassy. At mile 13, I started looking for a porta
potty. At mile 14, I found one and had
to wait in line. We were in a
neighborhood and it wasn’t like I could just pop a squat anywhere. Total time lost (2 mintues), but I really had to go or would not
have been able to keep on running. When
I crossed the dreaded “turn here for lap 2”, I was getting nervous about my
stomach. But, when I looked at my watch
I had come in around a 1:43 ½ marathon time.
Helz yeah! System shut down came
1 mile laterJ But, I rebounded thank God.
After the bathroom stop, I was ready to roll again and feeling much
much better. I wasn’t clipping a long as
fast as the first ½, but I was still running 7:50-8:15 pace (except for the big
hill section). I drank coke and water at
every aid station, power bar perform drink at every other. That worked out well for me, although I could
have used another gel. That might have
given me an energy boost on the back half.
But honestly, I couldn’t imagine choking that thing down with my queasy
stomach. The coke tasted amazing! Best tip ever from Maccas book!
Let me make it clear that my
previous Ironman marathon PR is a 3:49 and I thought that was awesome. So, imagine my surprise to see a 3:31 when I
looked down at my watch…even with the bathroom stop and a mother trucker of a
hill that I had to climb a few times.
This ended up being the 2nd fastest age group run time!
My goal time was a 3:30, if I had a perfect day…pretty damn close to
hitting that very optimistic goal. Here
are some fun facts about my run training:
·
I never ran more than 18 miles in training. My focus was on race intensity and recovery.
· Every long run had race pace intervals included
(7:25-:45) For example, my longest run was 6 x 15 minutes at race pace with a 4
minute RI
·
I never skipped a long run or key run
workout.
·
I never did a long run after a long bike.
Post Race Recap/Awards Ceremony
10:27: 40
3rd place 30-34
5th place overall amateur female
15th place overall female
What can I say, I have been working really hard the past 2 years, and
I would say that it paid off. I have
been using Justin Trolle, with Vanguard Endurance, as my coach and professional
coaching mentor. It has been a great
experience and I have learned a lot personally and professionally.
After doing some math on race evening, I realized that there were
probably only going to be 2 Kona slots.
With all of the Ironman races popping up, slot allocation has been
shrunk down to 50 for most US races. I
headed to the Kona tent anyhow, to see if there maybe…just maybe was a 3rd
slot. THERE WAS!!!!!!! I laughed, I cried, I jumped up and down…every
emotion possible took over me at that moment. This has been a dream of mine for a very long
time. The Hawaii Ironman is a bucket
list item for me. I have been to Hawaii
for a vacation once before (in 2005), and I told my mom that the next time we go it will
be for the Ironman. It’s been 8 years
since we had that conversation. I can’t
believe it took me this long to qualify!
BUT IT DID!
I cried twice out there on the bike because I was so happy. LAME!
I wished my husband was there like none other. He would have been so proud of me for passing
so many people and racing my bike! I
cried again when I saw that I had a slot.
I cried again during the Kona roll down because it was CRAZY intense
watching everyone’s Kona dreams come true. All of my tears were tears of happiness this
weekend.
The most ironic part about the whole slot allocation process was that
there was 1 roll down slot in my age group.
The girl who I thought won my age group, was actually in a different age
group. So, long story short I would have
gotten to go to Kona even with 4th place. I am happy that I get to go, 100% on me. No roll down, no lottery, no legacyJ Not to say that I wouldn’t have taken any of
those opportunities, but I knew I had it in me to qualify based on my
performance ability and my speed. It will
be a great feeling to be in the Pacific Ocean, waiting for the gun to go off,
knowing that I earned my place amongst my competitors. With that said, I am going to Kona to race my
ass off…to kick it with the best in the world.
Game on!
Until then, I am still racing at the 70.3 World Championship in Vegas
on September 8th. Both of my
goals for this year are achieved, so I had to make some new ones. One of those goals is to actually RACE, not
show up to both of these events.
I’ve eaten my weight in sugar today (Monday). I’ve eaten so much candy and chocolate that I
don’t want to even look at it anymore...for a good long while. I
am well on my way to making up for my 8000 calorie deficit from yesterdayJ
Thank you to everyone for cheering for me from all corners of the
US. I could feel your energy out
there! Here are some special shout outs,
although I won’t get everyone covered:
My mom – she has never missed an ironman…the ultimate ironmon…hands
downJ
My husband, Chad – as much as he probably hates it, he has been very
patient this year with my training and racing.
It takes a lot of compromise to be married to a long distance
triathlete. Early morning swims, an out
of control appetite, early nights and a lot of structure. Combine his elite level of racing, and we are two very busy people.
My coach – Justin Trolle, this guy has lots of great training ideas
and methodologies. I have learned so
much from him and his training has obviously worked for me.
My friends and riding buddies – Melissa, Joe, Polly, Patrick, Lynn,
Andie, Tina, Brian, Kyle, Suzanne, tamara, Carla, Cyndi…you guys sure helped me get through those tough day on the
bike (indoors and out)!
My good triathlon and swim friends/cheerleaders – Britta, Dave,
Bentley, Noah, Kevin, Catherine, Craig, Dee
Ann, Marci, Joe, Sharon, Jan, Matt E., Sean E., Lindsey L., the list goes on
and on.
Scott Bond and Brad Demott for dragging my ass through that last long
hard ride…that paid huge dividends, you have no idea.
Indy Aquatic Masters – Mel, George, Ben, Todd and Kris for taking
extra time with me to help me work on my swimming and providing a great group
training atmosphere. One day I will make you swim proud:)
Nebo Ridge Bicycles – A great bike shop with a solid support system
for me as a coach and racer.
My clients – especially Sandi, with Blue Ridge Designs, for being a
sponsor. I have an amazing support
system with my clients. I love them all
so much! They are all more than just clients,
they are great friends! Thanks for all
of your kind words and messages while I have been in Coeur D Alene.
Lisa and Pat –Thank you so much for watching my babies while I was
gone and for designing my kit! Love you guys!
My friends and family – Brittney, Dad, Erika, Susan, Willy, Lindsey…you
have all been so supportive even though I know you have to think I am
CRAZY. I love you guys.
2 comments:
So awesome!!! I'm so glad I clicked into this because I was feeling bad that you might not make Kona based on your FB posts. You kick ass. I'm so happy for you.
So glad that all your focus and hard work paid off! Thanks for the race update!!! You are an inspiration!
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