Sunday, July 14, 2013

New York City Triathlon

Tri Harder!

Goals:
Swim - 35 minutes (2'07 per 100y)
Bike - 1 hour, 35 minutes (16mph)
Run - 60 minutes (10min mile)
TOTAL: 190 minutes (3 hrs, 10 minutes plus transition)

Actual:
Swim - 21:49 (1'18 per 100y) - YAY! (Thank you Hudson River current...)
Bike - 1:48:35 (13.7mph) - a little slow especially on hills, but I had enough gas in the tank to finish
Run - 1:18:48 (12.75min mile) - a lot of slow running, walk through the hydration centers plus a potty break...
TOTAL:  209 minutes (3 hrs, 29 minutes plus transition)


Okay, so not super awesome, but not horrible either.  Plus I beat my arch nemesis' time by nearly half an hour, so all is well with the world.

Swim recap:
I actually felt alright with this one.  I swam straight, I maintained my focus, I sighted well.  In the first 1200m I probably swam 150m on my back, letting myself take some deep breathing moments and focus myself.  My wetsuit felt really tight around my chest so I was trying to stay calm and breathe deeply.  I swam the last 300m+ without flipping over and without altering my stroke.  I am very proud of the swim.  Last year, with training, I finished in 19:30.  A difference of only 2:19.  I'll take it.

Bike recap:
I rented a great bike (thank you, Bike Gods) from my favorite LBS, Sids.  A little Cannondale Synapse - carbon frame, lots of zip.  My average speed was around 14mph, which is down about 4mph from my "trained" speed, but I still was able to hit speeds of over 30mph almost every mile of the race.  Top speed (downhill, of course): 37.4mph.  zoom zoom.

Run recap:
This was not the greatest thing I have ever done, but I definitely went the way of "slow and steady".  I ran steadily when I ran, good form instead of sloppy.  I walked briskly if I walked - mostly through the hydration stations - and I smiled as much as I could.  It was a hot day, so I made sure to stay hydrated (definitely saw someone in non-responsive mode being taken away by the EMTs).  I also made a deal with myself: run the entire way in from the mile 5 marker.  I kept the promise, and had been running for about a quarter mile prior to that, so the last mile and a half were walk-free.

Transitions recap:
Setup in the morning went well.  I was fortunate to have my immediate bike "neighbor" missing AND I was right next to the end of a rack, which always means a little extra space.  Good position in an easy to spot row.  I didn't miss my rack running in either time, which is good on me!  The walk to swim start was lovely.  I probably jumped the gun with my wetsuit and put it on too early, but I thought I was making a good decision at the time...  Ended up biting me in the rear when I realized I hadn't used the potty and time was slipping away to do so.  This resulted in a moderately full bladder to start the race.  "Pee during the swim" you say?  I would love to... except I couldn't.  Mental block?  Inability to pee and move?  Exceptional potty training as a child?  Who knows... no dice.

So, that lead to bike transition.  I'm in Yellow, so we get 700m of barefoot running in a wetsuit.  Makes transition time a bit long.  I remembered to wipe my "Hudson beard" off nice and early and stripped down to my waist almost right away so that I could breathe again.  Took the actual transition into bike slower than normal, making sure to put on gloves (good idea) and open my shot blocks in advance (also smart) plus a hit of my inhaler (to be safe).  Not a bad transition, just a bit on the tortoise side of things...  Oh, and did I mention that I still had to pee?

Twenty-five miles of bumpy biking later, I transitioned into running gear - again taking some time and care.  I made sure to hit the ground running with a slow and steady mentality, plus smiling.  Smiling makes you faster.  A good thing, too, since I was wearing very little red (inside joke).

After about the second mile, I was really distracted by my bladder... so I did take the time to pitstop, which is obnoxious enough when you're wearing a trisuit.  Doubly so when you're wearing TWO.  I wore my regular trisuit under my team-issued garments (they are relatively cheap and ride up, causing VERY unattractive photos and minimizing comfort).  Potty break probably took 4-6 minutes.


Takeaways:
Train.  Duh.

Smiling is good.  Form is good.  Hydration is good.  Forgetting to use the bathroom is bad.

When it comes right down to it, I want to be a happy athlete.  And racing the New York Triathlon on a hot summer day makes me happy!

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