Sunday 31 July 2016

In Full Swing in July

Training was now generally following the plan below (other than recovery every 4th week).

Monday
  PM - 60 min WattBike in Altitude Chamber @ Bodyology
Tuesday
  AM - 75 min Swim Squad
  Noon - 60 min Easy Pace Run
Wednesday
  AM - 2 hour hard ride
  PM - 75 min Swim Squad
Thursday
  AM - 60 min Treadmill in Altitude Chamber @ Bodyology
  PM - 45 min Run Technique Session
Friday
  AM - 75 min Swim Squad
Saturday
  AM - 4 to 5 hour long run
Sunday
  PM - 90 min to 2 hour long run

Nothing ever goes completely to plan. But in general I was following the program pretty close.

Originally Tuesday's run was supposed to contain threshold intervals, but I found the double run on Thursday, long run on Sunday and hard bike on Mon & Wed was too much to combine with a hard run on Tuesday. So Tuesday just became an easy run - often 2 laps of the Tan so at least it contained a steep hill twice.

In general this is the most intensity I can ever remember doing. Getting back from overseas on 23rd April (after a 3 month break from training) with the 70.3 Worlds on 4th September was simply too short to do a full length program with a big base. Instead I designed a much shorter program that is a little light on distance and duration, but heavier than usual on intensity. Over 12 years of training (more or less non-stop) should account for a fair bit of base.

Hoka One One Trail Run - Plenty Gorge

This series was previously called the Salomon Trail Runs, but Hoka One One have obviously taken over the naming rights. Otherwise everything else is still the same, still being run by the folks from Rapid Ascent. Although I did notice that the numbers were down a little, especially in the Long Distance. In previous years the Long Distance race sold out at every event, now it looked like it had the least numbers of any event.

This was the 4th year Elaine and I were doing the Trail Series. First year we raced Short Course, second year Medium Course and last year the Long Course. I found it took too long to recover from the Long Course races and Elaine is not really training this year (taking a season off from Triathlon), so the Medium Course looked the wiser option.

Plenty is Elaine's favourite course, mainly because of the river crossings. Medium Course only have 2 crossings (Long Course has 4). Days before the race we learnt that the Medium Course now only has one river crossing (Elaine was devastated). Part of the course is on a Mountain Bike track and apparently the mountain bikers had got together and placed a long plank across the river (ie. a bridge). Not only was there now only one river crossing, but the makeshift bridge was across the deeper part of the river (again Elaine's favourite). The good aspect of this bridge was that it removed the bottleneck that always occurred at this crossing, meaning I didn't have to push the pace in the first few kilometres to beat the crowd to the river.

We had a good turnout at the race - Steph M, Shaune & Tania racing the Short Course, Renee, Steph G, Sarah, Elaine and myself doing the Medium and Sonia and Lee racing the Long. It was Steph M's first trail run and she was wearing normal runners. After a lot of encouragement we finally convinced her to make use of the free trial Hoka One One runners. Plenty is a course where proper trail runners make a big difference.

Under 10 degrees celsius, it was still much warmer than the below zero temperatures of last year. I wore shorts and a t-shirt (no gloves), but soon wished I had selected a singlet instead.

A combination of the slightly smaller field and the knowledge that the first river crossing had a bridge meant the pace at the start was not quite as ridiculously as previous years. There were still plenty of people who went out too fast, but the I didn't feel too crowded and generally had plenty of space to pick my own lines. Among the other competitors I noticed a young girl (about 16yo). Sarah had pointed her out pre-race as she had been first female in the last race. Within the first kilometre she was almost out of sight ahead.

After a sensibly paced start, I started to pick off other competitors (who didn't pace so well) about the 2 to 3km mark. A small pack formed, including the young girl and we started to distance ourselves from the rest of the field (with the leaders now well and truly out of sight).

The Plenty course has a bit of everything - single track, rocky sections, winding bits, open fields, technical descents, long open downhills, very steep climbs, long sustained climbs and of course river crossings. As always happens, different terrains and gradients suit different people. Sometimes I thought I had successfully broken away from a competitor only to find they passed me when the course changed. Just over half way and our small group of 4 had come back together as we entered the section of single track. The pace felt a little slow, but I decided I would sit behind the others, get a little bit of recovery and then really push the pace with about 2km to go. Great plan, but while I was daydreaming about my great finish, the leading two runners were starting to gap me. Initially it was just a few metres after a twisty section or short technical descent, but before I knew it they were 50 metres ahead and barely within sight. Not really sure how that happened when the pace seemed to so easy.

Now it was just the young girl and myself. She obviously was not in my age category so she was no concern to my overall result. I asked if she wanted to pass, but she preferred to sit behind and let me to the pacing and navigation.

About 3km to go, another very fast looking competitor raced passed. Confused how he ended up behind us, as he passed I asked if he missed the start, but he replied that he went off course. The front end of the field tends to thin out pretty quickly and it is not unusual to end up alone with nobody in sight ahead or behind. There are course markings, but they are certainly not abundant. If walking, they would be very easy to see, but running with the heart rate approaching red line and sweat dripping into your eyes it can be easy to miss a turn. His spurt of speed must have been fuelled by anger from getting lost, because he only gained about 50 metres on us and then stayed within sight for the rest of the race.

Despite lots of puffing and giving every indication she was struggling, the young girl managed to stay with me for the rest of the race. The last kilometre contains an extremely steep climb straight up the side of the hill which is then followed by a long climb up a 4 wheel drive track to the finish line. As you get nearer to the finish line the crowd of spectators gets bigger and of course they all cheered on the young girl. Nobody wants to see a middle aged man out sprint a young girl to the finish, at least this is the excuse I used when I decided to let her win. The fact that I was really tired and the finish was uphill had nothing to do with it. Unfortunately she finished in 10th overall which meant I missed out on my pre-race target of a top 10. I also missed the age group podium, as the two runners who pulled away from me with 5km to go were both in my age group.

Sonia and Lee did the Long Course. Sonia could not believe how the obstacles just kept on coming, she described it as like the amazing race where you never knew what was coming next. Unfortunately Lee went off course which cost him an age group him, so he was not in the best of moods after the race.

Steph G was also not happy. I suspect this was the 2nd longest race she has ever done (after the Olympic Distance Triathlon in Jan) and by far the longest run (time wise). The continual hills were definitely not to her liking and she was mumbling and grumbling for the next 15 mins after the race. Luckily time heals all and she was able to recognise the great achievement she had accomplished and her opinion of the course slowly improved.


Steph M did really well in her trial runners and was happy with her race, as was Shaune, Tanya, Renee and Sarah (who scored a podium in her age group).

Thursday 30 June 2016

Getting into Tune in June

After the slogging it out in May, things started to fall into place in June.
- easy run pace dropped close to 5m00s per km
- biggest weekly run mileage 51km
- longest run of 2 hours (20.7 on Trails)
- lots of crap weather meant longest ride was only 106km
- starting adding extra swim and bike sessions

Still feeling a long way off peak fitness, but with over 9 weeks till the 70.3 Worlds I feel I'm in a reasonable position to put in some good training blocks before the race

Monday 30 May 2016

Dragging the Body Kicking and Screaming Back to Fitness in May

Some people had suggested that 2 weeks hiking at high altitude would do wonders for my training - they were wrong. After 3 months break from all Triathlon training, it was a very hard slog back to fitness.

We arrived back in Melbourne Saturday night, 23rd April. Sunday morning I went for an easy 55km ride - unfortunately there was nothing easy about it. This was followed by a very slow 2.9km run (6m45s per km). Everything was stiff.

Monday I ventured for a 4.4km run. This time I managed 6m38s per km, but still stiff.

Tuesday I went for swim. My last swim was at Geelong 70.3 where I posted my best swim time ever, so I entered the pool full of confidence. I nearly drowned. Just making it to the other end of the pool was a matter of life or death. When I first started triathlon I could not swim at all, but even then I don't remember it being this difficult. Determined to claw back my fitness I went for a 6.8km run at lunchtime, this time as a blistering pace of 6m14s per km.

Wednesday was time to drop back to a recovery run. 3km at 6m49s per km - I didn't actually know I could run that slow.

Motivation growing I ran 9.4km on Thursday averaging 6m04s per km. Still not feeling anything like good, but things seem to be heading in the right direction.

Friday, back to the pool. Would I survive? 1600m, felt like I swam the English Channel. Followed up at lunchtime with 3.4km run at 6m50s per km - a new record slowest pace.

Saturday long ride. With a lot of members training for the Cairns Ironman, the club ride was 170km including hill repeats. I managed 72km and got dropped by the girls on my first and only lap (they were doing 3 laps).

Time to get ambitious with the Sunday long run. 13km at 6m24s per km pace. Extremely slow, but happy to get in a long run so soon into my training.

From here it was a slow build. I tried to run 6 times a week (usually managed 5), swam twice and did a long ride on the Saturday.

By the end of the May I had achieved:
- longest ride of 119km to Sorrento
- longest run of 17km (5m59s per km pace)
- biggest weekly run mileage of 48km
- two consecutive training weeks of 11h55m

There was nothing fast, but I was loading up the body with mileage and so far nothing had fallen apart. Only 14 weeks to the 70.3 Worlds in Mooloolaba.

Monday 29 February 2016

All over in February (Geelong 70.3)

After the Two Bays Trail Run in mid January I had been barely able to run at all. I would start off very slowly, but after 1 or 2 kms I'd have to turn about walk back. Not really what you want before a Half Ironman. But like the Two Bays Trail Run I had already entered and paid for Geelong (there was a minor discount for entering two 70.3 races - so I entered Mandurah & Geelong). Elaine and I had also booked accomodation and taken the Monday off work. So it was a long weekend holiday that included a race on Sunday morning.

The original plan was that I would qualify at Mandurah, expecting a soft field and use Geelong as a backup in case my race didn't pan out in Mandurah. With Geelong being a late season race I was hoping a lot of competitors would have already qualified, meaning the slots would roll down further in the age group.

Obviously Mandurah was a mini disaster and with my inability to run, qualifying at Geelong was pretty much an impossibility. However Ironman had introduced club slots and with Bayside having the most entries of any club, we were guaranteed 3 extra slots. So if I finished I was still a chance, but the chances of actually finishing the 21.1 km run leg was very slim.

Anyway, Geelong would definitely be my last race of the season, then a complete break from all training as I let my body recover.

Geelong 70.3

Another advantage of Bayside having the most entries was a special VIP transition rack for all club members doing the race (the same rack as the pros).

The photo to the right shows that we each had our name plate and about 3 times as much space as the other competitors. What you cannot see in the photo is that we also had carpet all the way down our aisle (rather than running on grass). Just another reason why it was worth doing the race.

We specifically chose accommodation with cooking facilities. Not many places serve breakfast at 5am, and I like to have my normal cooked breakfast before a race (following the principal of nothing new on race day). Elaine bakes up frittatas (eggs, vegetables, cheese, etc) and we divide them into small parcels and freeze them. They are perfect to defrost at work after a morning training session, or as a pre-race breakfast when racing away from home.

After quietly creeping down to the kitchen careful not to wake the other guests, we discovered that the microwave was broken - disaster. A continental breakfast was also supplied, but it looked very carb based and I like limit carbs before a race.

Looking out the window we could see a McDonalds across the road. At 5am, not many other establishments are going to be open, so we decided to compromise on a Egg and Bacon McMuffin and take away coffee. Maccas was surprisingly busy for so early in the morning. Some of the customers were race volunteers getting group coffee orders, others were the type you'd probably expect to see - presumably on their home after a big night. Or maybe they were lost having forgotten where they lived.

After a much longer wait than expected, we finally got our order and wandered the kilometre or so to transition, eating the McMuffin and coffee along the way. Luckily Elaine was available to help carry stuff (she was not racing), because it is surprising difficult to carry a transition bag, pump, helmet, bento box, two bidons, McMuffin & coffee while walking.

Due to the unexpected breakfast hassle, I was running a touch late. Not great when I was in one of the early waves. With limited time I decided not to bother taping a spare tubular under my seat and instead decided to rely on a cap of pitstop in my bento box. With my legs unlikely to finish the run, risking a puncture did not seem like a big deal.

Swim

In short, my best swim ever, hitting the sand in exactly 29 minutes for the 1.9km swim. Upon exiting the water I looked at my watch and saw 28:xx and was extremely excited. But it took half a second for me to hit the lap button, so was a little disappointed to see my split start with a 29. Still my swim split was faster than Clint's, and he always makes fun of my swimming inability. The fact that he was recovering from a broken thumb had absolutely no impact on that result.

The first few hundred metres of the swim I was sitting on the feet of what I originally thought was the perfect swimmer to draft off. He was just slightly faster than me, so I was working a little bit to hold his feet, but not so much that I would blow up. Unfortunately as we moved away from the other swimmers I found that he continued to go off course. I've never swam in a better marked course than this, so I could understand why he couldn't swim straight. Then it occurred to me that I'm swimming in the Male 45-49 age group and he probably has bad eyesight. Enlightened by this revelation I left him and swam the rest by myself. Which makes me even happier with my time considering I did most of it without a draft.

Just like in Mandurah my age group was split into two waves, with me in the second one. Of the 60 odd competitors in my wave I was 5th out of the water, and 10th fastest swimmer out of the 124 in my age group across both waves.

T1

Whether just the mental factor alone, having a VIP transition appeared to make a difference and I was 9th fastest in my age group.

I would have been faster, but got caught behind some slow competitors from the wave before. I yelled out passing as we ran with our bikes out of transition, but some people like to just dawdle side by side. One idiot got annoyed at me and actually started to say 'it's not a race you know' until he realised that it actually was and didn't finish the sentence.

Bike

Looking at the bike data from Mandurah, I decided I probably went out too fast. So I took a conservative approach to Geelong and decided to start conservatively and look to build. The fact that I knew a good result was impossible made it easier to hold back.


My bike split was 2h26m, 7th fastest in my age group. Not a fast time, but the Geelong course is not fast. In peak condition I could of shaved off a few minutes, but not on this day. In fact even with the conservative start I still faded a little on the second lap.

T2

As I ran into T2 I saw 5 times World Champion Craig Alexander standing next to his bike. I later discovered he had a bike mechanical. Not such a good thing considering he had just changed bike manufacturers.

Despite my VIP spot, my second transition was quite slow ranking only 36th in my age group. At this point I think I was placed 5th or 6th in my age group but knew it was all about to fall apart on the run. So the motivation to race through transition was not really there.

Run

First kilometre felt great. Being an early wave I had actually ridden past part of the female pro field and was now on the run with some of the pros. It was great to feel like you are at the front of the race, just a pity my legs were not in any condition to make use of this opportunity.

As expected I felt good for the first few kilometres and then things quickly deteriorated.

It was surprisingly hot. Every aid station I walked taking several drinks, throwing cups and buckets of water over my head and ice down my top and shorts. This obviously helped as I whilst I felt it was hot, I never felt affected by the heat. But I suspect the bigger reason was that I was simply running too slow to be greatly affected.

Every lap I felt like pulling out. But it was like I was too lazy to stop and walk off the course and somehow just continued my slow progress.

The final run split was 1h49m47s (5m14s per km), 42nd in my age group. At least I ran under 1h50m.

My overall result was 4h51m47s, 18th out of 124 finishers in my age group and 221st overall out of 1237 finishers in the race. Still under 5 hours which is something I suppose, remembering that my first Half Ironman (on the same course) back in 2009 was 5h12m.

Worlds 70.3 Rolldown Ceremony

9th place at Mandurah did not get me a World's slot (it only went down to 5th), so even though I expected more roll downs, 18th place was no chance. My only chance was a club slot.

Andrew, Ray, Siim and I sat on the lawn for the Ceremony. Ray (8th in M45-49) was a good chance and Andrew (12th M40-44) an outside chance of an age group roll down, but Siim and I could only hope for a club slot (Siim doing his first ever Half also had a slow run).

The Age Group roll downs took forever. Andrew missed out by only a couple and Ray missed out by 1.  During the ceremony, there was a query over the M75-59 results. The winner had passed on the slot, so the second placed competitor (of 2 in the age group) was asking why the slot had not rolled down to him. They finally worked it out in the end, because although he had finished the race and received his medal, he did not finish it within the time cutoff, so was not eligible for a Worlds slot (a little harsh for someone over 75 finishing a Half Ironman). I'm not sure what the cutoff is, but he took just over 7.5 hours. Anyway, this meant there was now one more slot to roll down. Because M40-44 was the biggest age group, they got the roll down. Whether the competitors ahead of Andrew had gone home or just didn't want the slot, it rolled down to Andrew who got the very last age group slot.

Now the Club slots. Important to note that the ceremony didn't start until 4pm. The majority of competitors had already left to drive back to Melbourne. With the age group roll downs taking well over an hour, the crowd was even thinner now. Andrew had left with the slot, but Ray, Siim and I still lay on the grass (with Elaine) in hope.

Bayside were awarded 3 slots. One Male, one Female and one junior. The male slot went to another club member in a higher age group - he was much slower than us, but closer to the time of the winner of his age group. Numerous female names were called out until they came to a delighted Moira who happily snapped up the slot. Then when it came to the juniors, none were there (you have to be present to collect the slot). Ray, Siim and I though it would roll back to the males, but instead they rolled it on the next club. Disappointed Siim left, but with nothing better to do Ray, Elaine and I hung around to see what happened at the end.

It was around another hour before they had gone through all the clubs. There were a lot of names being called out, but not many present to collect. When we thought it was all over, the announcer said "That is all the clubs and we still have 3 slots left. So we will go back to the start - are there any members of Bayside present in the crowd?". Despite being too sore to move for the last 3 hours, Ray and I shot up and raced to the stage. Another club member (who we had never seen before or since) also turned.

Three club members - three slots

70.3 Worlds at Sunshine Coast, Mooloolaba, here I come.

Sunday 31 January 2016

Much the same in January (& Two Bays Trail Run)

I am now 47 years old and around this age your body is suppose to slow down. Are my training results lack lustre because of an underlying injury or is old age simply catching up with me ?

One of my pre-season goals was to post a personal best time at the Olympic Distance triathlon in St Kilda. In fact this has been a goal for the last 3 seasons, but every year my body has let me down.

There was no way my body could handle an Olympic Distance triathlon and the 28km Two Bays Trail Run on consecutive weeks. In my current condition a good Olympic Distance time would not be possible, so I would just be disappointed with the result. A wise man would have probably skipped the Two Bays Run as well, but I'd already paid for the entry (it sells out several months in advance) and Elaine was keen to race. So all focus continued towards Two Bays.

One of many famous features of the Dandenongs is the 1,000 steps. So popular that it is almost impossible to get a park on weekends, even though the carpark is quite big. Far less well known, much closer to home and without any parking issues is the Frankston 1,000 steps.

Rather than one big set of steps like in the Dandenongs, the Franskton steps are spread across about 7 different stair cases. They are all within a few 100 metres of each other on Nepean Hwy just before Olivers Hill. Elaine had discovered a Facebook group that ran the steps every Tuesday night and convinced me to tag along.

The group was very friendly and the majority of people were training for Two Bays. I enjoyed the session, but we only did it once because I don't think my legs (in particular my calf and achilles) could handle too many of these runs.

But of course now we know where all these staircases and hills are, we can do them anytime. Especially handy with them being around 6km from our house.

You can almost see our house from the view above.

On a clearer evening the city skyline would probably be visible (about 35km away).

The photos either side are of a ramp, but most of the hills were stair cases.

I don't usually run with my cap on backwards, but some of the hills were so steep I could not see the steps with my hat the normal way around.

Two Bays Trail Run - 28km

Ready or not the race was upon us.

The first kilometre or so is on the road, but it is pretty steep up hill. Lots of people running way too fast for the start of a long race and I could hear lots of puffing around me. How are these runners going to survive over 2 hours ?

Arthurs Seat is the main hill. What it lacks in height, it makes up for in steepness. The road is a very popular cycling route with classic switchbacks where you can pretend you riding up alpe d'huez. With the switchbacks, the road has an average 8% gradient for 2.5km. The trail we were running on goes pretty much straight up the mountain and I suspect is closer to 20% gradient.

With my conservative start I found myself behind a thousand people walking up the hill. Elaine and I had done several training runs up Arthurs Seat and I knew I could easily run up to the top, but now I was faced with people walking 5 or 6 abreast which made it close to impossible to find a path through. What seemed like stupid pacing from some of the other runners at the start now made a bit of sense. If I was to do this race again, I think I would try to push a little further to the front before the base of Arthurs Seat.

By the time I reached the top of Arthurs Seat I had made my way through most of the walkers and was amongst better runners. Unfortunately the descent the other side of Arthurs Seat is single track and most of the runners ahead of me were not good descenders. This was very frustrating as I was loosing out on free speed. But I placated myself in the knowledge that my legs would fall apart long before the end of the race, so any time lost here was really immaterial.

After about 2km of single track, mostly downhill, the track opens up. But then comes a short, but terribly steep, bone jarring descent down to the reservoir. My descending improved after the Marysville Trail Running Camp, but not when it gets that steep. The next 5km is mostly on roads, some bitumen, some dirt which some short trail sections in between.

By far the best part of the run is the 10km through Greens Bush. Beautiful Rainforest teeming with kangaroos and wallabies (and snakes, but didn't see any of them). Most of the track is two people wide, so no problems getting stuck behind other runners. The terrain is undulating, but not technical. I wore trail runners, but normal runners would be fine on this track. In all my training runs and during the race I found this area just made you happy.

The photo below is me near the beginning of the Greens Bush section


By the end of Greens Bush I was completely spent. Just 7km to go to the lighthouse at Cape Schanck, but I knew this was going to be ugly.

This last 7km is more of a sandy coastal track and has numerous roots sticking out just far enough to trip you over. By this stage, lifting my feet was quite a struggle. How I didn't end up face first on the ground is miracle (plenty of others including our friend Christian did suffer this fate). Maybe it was because I walked a far section of this last 7km that saved me.

A lot of people say how tough this last section is. When we trained here, we ran on fresh legs. Elaine commented that the big staircases you had to climb were easy and couldn't understand what all the fuss was about. No surprises that she very much changed her mind after climbing the stairs with around 25kms in her legs.

I limped across the line in a very slow time of 2h47m. The cut off for the race was 4 hours and you had to qualify by completely an earlier race that indicated you were a chance of meeting this cut off. Elaine qualified for the race (Salomon Trail Run at Silvan) but just missed out on finishing within the cut off. This meant her name did not appear in the results, but she still got her finishers and in general loved the race (despite how much it hurt).

I think we were both much happier once on the bus ready to go home. The T-shirts were supplied by Morgan from Physio+Fitness because we ran as part of that team.


Thursday 31 December 2015

Battling Through December (& Bayside KOM)

I'm starting to learn that my ageing body can handle a single race preparation. Problems begin when I try to extend this for multiple races.

The Duathlon Worlds went well. My body (in particular my knees) could not handle the Bright Training Camp a week later. And two weeks after that my legs in general failed me during the run leg at Mandurah 70.3.

Having kind of survived the Marysville Trail Running Camp, I thought things might be turning around, so I persisted with training in December. Having already entered the Two Bays Trail Run, this became the focus and skipped the local Sprint Triathlons (which also saves a bit of money).

Two Bays Trail goes from Dromana to Cape Schanck, 28kms in total. With Elaine and I having never done a training run even close to 28km, we instead decided to explore the course in sections. Slowly building up to 2 hours. I never felt great on the runs and they were certainly not even close to fast, but the fact that I managed 2 hours running (very rare for me) gave me hope.

Below is a photo near taken near the finish line in Cape Schanck.


For my birthday, Elaine bought me a Salomon Running Vest. It enables me to carry a camelback water bladder, two soft water flasks, gels, phone, keys, space blanket, snake bandages, etc. Despite all this it is still very light and quite comfortable. Even though a lot of the vest is light mesh material, I still found I got quite hot, although we were running in the early afternoon in Summer.


Plenty of wildlife on the Two Bays Trail. Heaps of kangaroos and wallabies, some wombats and the beautiful blue tongue lizard in the photo below. Elaine was very disappointed we didn't see any snakes (personally I was quite happy about that).


Even though the focus was on the Two Bays Trail Run, I didn't ignore Triathlon. Most weeks I was still getting in 3 swims and getting in a long ride on the weekend.

Bayside KOM


As usual the weekend before Christmas saw the running of the Bayside KOM (King of the Mountains). Last year I was equal winner with Andrew. Even though was riding form was no near the level of the year before I still wanted to win outright this year. This was helped by the 40 degree heat, resulting in a very low competitor turnout that did not include Andrew.

In Andrew's absence my main competitors were Adam, young Martin and Clint. With the extreme temperatures, Clint decide to cut one of the climbs, which was unfortunately the one I am best at. So now there were only 3 climbs, and only one of these (the Wall) was suited to me.

Adam, Martin and I managed to clear the field on the first climb, but I could not drop the other two and finished third on the sprint to the finish. Whether or not it was effort used on the first climb, the heat or they just didn't care, Adam and Martin did not really try on the last two climbs and I won the King of the Mountain title easily.

The photo below shows Naomi (Queen of the Mountain) with young Martin, the course profile and some of the riders gathered after the last climb.



Monday 30 November 2015

Looking Back in November

Earlier this year in April I published a blog entry called Plans for Next Season. These plans only covered up to Mandurah 70.3 earlier this month, so this is probably a good time to review how things went.

First we'll look at the Race Calendar:

 3  May - Puffing Billy Run 15.1km (D race)       - SKIPPED RACE 
 21 Jun - Salomon Trail Run, Kew 15km (C race)    - 11th in Category
 19 Jul - Salomon Trail Run, Plenty 17km (C race) - 9th in Category
 16 Aug - Salomon Trail Run, Olinda 21km (C race) - 9th in Category
 13 Sep - Duathlon, Richmond (B race)             - 4th in Category
 20 Sep - Sri Chinmoy Half Marathon (B race)      - SKIPPED RACE
 17 Oct - Duathlon World Champs (A- race)         - 6th in Category
 8  Nov - Mandurah 70.3 (A+ race)                 - 9th in Category

A distinct lack of podium finishes and one result outside the top 10, not quite up to expectations. Although the only result that was really disappointing was Mandurah 70.3. Just sad that this was listed as the most important race.

Now we'll look at my pre-season targets:

  get 5km run time under 18 mins            - No, but close
  Half Marathon under 1h25m                 - Did not race distance
  improve swim speed (move to fast lane)    - Yes :-)
  maintain last season’s bike form          - Yes :-)
  top 10 category finish at Duathlon Worlds - Yes :-)
  age group podium at Mandurah              - No :-(
  qualify for 2016 70.3 Worlds (in QLD)     - No :-(

So really the only failure was Mandurah. Probably worth noting that I failed in the Half Marathon run at the end of the Mandurah race and it was the stand-alone Half Marathon race that Elaine and I skipped.

Elaine was targeting to qualify for the Two Bays Trail Run in Jan. This required a sub 2h15m Half Marathon, but we skipped the planned race at Richmond. Luckily Elaine's effort at the Salomon Trail Run at Silvan was enough to get her a qualification.

Reasons why things didn't pan out as well as expected (or hoped):
- did not get the big running base I was hoping for over winter
- illness in May & June interrupted base training (and Puffing Billy Run)
- special run sessions in Winter caused too much leg soreness preventing build up of run mileage
- slacked off with glute strengthening exercises

If I could do the pre-season again, I would skip the special run sessions with Tim and concentrate on building up my run mileage with lots of easy paced runs. The target was to get over 3 weeks of 70km per week. Instead I managed a single week of just over 50km.

It is easy to say I would do more strength exercises if I had my time again. But there was nothing stopping me from doing them the first time, so what is to say I would do them if I had my time again. Laziness is hard to overcome.

There is only so much you can look back. At some point you need to start looking forward again. So my proposed race calendar for the rest of the Summer:

 10 Jan Gatorade Olympic, St Kilda                   A- race
 17 Jan Two Bays Trail Run                           D race
 31 Jan Challenge Sprint, Brighton (maybe)           C race
  7 Feb Geelong 70.3                                 A+ Race
 21 Feb Gatorade Sprint, Elwood (maybe)              B race
 28 Feb ActiveTri Sprint, Sandringham (Club Champs)  A- race
 13 Mar Gatorade Sprint, Portarlington (maybe)       C race

I really didn't want Geelong 70.3 to be an A race, but the failure at Mandurah means Geelong is now my only chance to qualify for the Worlds. My preference would have been to focus on the St Kilda Olympic and then the Club Champs.

I've listed the Challenge Sprint, but I think this race is probably unlikely. I like the idea of racing a 'long' Sprint Distance on this course, but it is an expensive entry fee for a sprint distance race. Also it breaks my rule of 'any race I'm likely to win overall is not a race worth entering'.

I've also listed Portarlington and Elwood, but again these are probably unlikely. Bad luck has plagued my last 2 attempts at Portarlington. The first time back in 2005 we raced the Mini Distance but the swim was cancelled due to heavy rainfall in the preceding days (actual race day was fine). Second time in 2011 I entered the sprint distance but a back injury kept me out of the race.

Marysville Trail Running Camp

In other news, Elaine and I just completed a Trail Running Camp in Marysville with Wild Plans. Originally it was just Elaine going on the camp because I really wanted to enter the first Gatorade Sprint Triathlon at Elwood. Unfortunately I wasn't fully recovered from Mandurah, so decided joining Elaine on the Camp would be a wiser decision (and it made Elaine happy).

Marysville is beautiful and the town has been completely rebuilt since it was burnt down in bush fires about 5 years ago. Our accomodation was cabins in the Marysville Caravan Park (Elaine and I were lucky to get a cabin to ourselves while most others shared). There were around 24 athletes attending the camp, most of them from the Running in the Burbs group and Lysterfield Trail Runners. We were the odd ones out, but everyone was extremely friendly and we never felt like outsiders.

The course involved several trail runs, class room lectures, yoga, pump class, hill climbing and descending lessons, and lots of barbecues, beer & wine.


The photos above and below were taken from the Lookup half way through our long trail run on the Sunday. Obviously taken after a big climb.


Obviously the photo below is the group doing the Plank. Elaine and I are not shown, but we were definitely doing the plank (trust me). 


Looking Forward

I've already listed my race calendar earlier in this blog entry, with Geelong 70.3 as the main focus. This race is now just over 2 months away, so how am I going to turn things around (ie. qualify for the Ironman 70.3 World Championships).

Part of looking forward is looking back to learn from your mistakes. Below are the 7km splits with average pace and heart rate for each of my last 5 half ironmans:

              Torquay’11         Geelong’13     Chall Melb’14    Mornington’14     Mandurah'15
7km          4:26  155            4:26  153            4:37  161            4:33   158            4:24   159
7km          4:49  156            4:23  158            5:07  158            4:48   160            5:05   156
7km          5:13  153            4:52  157            5:13  161            5:34   151            5:38   149

            1:41:36  154       1:35:47  156       1:44:39  160       1:44:25   156       1:45:49   155

At the time I was disappointed with my Geelong run, but in hindsight it is clearly my best effort.

The Geelong run course was 3 laps. My strategy was to hold back on the first lap with the aim of running the 2nd lap faster, accepting that the last lap was always going to be ugly. Ironically the last 7km at Geelong was easily the least ugly final 7km I've ever managed.

The actual run pace for each split is only half the story. If you compare the average heart rates, it becomes more obvious how much I held back early on (compared to the other races).

The Torquay race had a bad camber on part of the run that played havoc with my ITB. I was very sick in the lead up to Challenge Melbourne and did the race off 3 weeks training with a sore knee. Mornington was a brutal course with lots of very tough hills after a tough bike leg. Mandurah was fairly hot and a little hilly, but the excuses are starting to run a little thin. The stats reveal the same story at every race other than Geelong. Time to face reality.

So the answer is pretty simple. Put away the ego and go easy on the first 7km lap. Sounds easy, but smart pacing is so hard to do in the heat of the race.

Friday 20 November 2015

A Man and his Runners

In 2002 I went to a shop called 'The Athlete's Foot'. They had me walk over a pressure pad and based upon my footprint prescribed neutral, cushioned runners. I selected a pair of Adidas Supernova Cushion and loved them (pictured on the right). Note that this pair is no longer used for running, but I find them good for the occasional game of tennis or volleyball.

We then started running with a Nike running group. When we won a pair of free runners, the sales rep said the Nike Pegasus were the equivalent to the Adidas Supernova, so I was then running in the Pegasus. I didn't like them as much as the Supernova's, but they were still pretty good (have thrown out all my pairs of Pegasus, so no photos)

Then I was advised to go to a new chain of running stores called 'Active Feet'. Established by a group of Podiatrists, they use video analysis, supposedly far better than the simple pressure pad. After watching my video from the treadmill, the 'experts' advised that I should be wearing Asics Kayanos (or the Brooks equivalent). At around $260 a pair, the Kayanos were pretty much the most expensive runners you could buy.

The term 'Ramp' (toe-heel offset or drop)

Shoe weight is an easy concept to understand, but I should probably explain what is meant by 'ramp'. The term refers to the height difference between the ball and heel of the shoe. Sometimes known as heel-toe drop or offset. So a pure minimalist shoe like the Vibram 5 fingers (which is flat) would have a 0mm ramp. A ramp of 8mm is around the mid level. Anything less than 8mm is on the minimalist side, anything above 8mm is considered a control shoe. When you hear the term racing flats, it is because it has a very low ramp (the shoe is flat).

The idea of the high ramp is to release tension on the achilles because having the high heel prevents the calf and achilles from becoming fully extended. Of course this also means that the achilles and calf don't grow extra strength over time. So you do not get more injury proof the more you run.

Another downside to the high ramp shoes is that the heel is now a long way off the ground. This means there is a lot of shoe cushioning between your heel and the ground, which actually promotes heel striking (landing with your heel opposed to your mid foot). The body (and brain) will automatically adjust to whatever feels best. So if you stack a whole heap of cushioning under the heel, landing on your heel now feels good. Try heel striking in bare feet and it feels absolutely terrible, which is a clue to the fact we did not evolve as heel strikers.

I won't go into the whole heel strike vs mid foot strike discussion, as there are zealots on boths sides and it can escalate into a religious argument. All I'll say is that I now prefer my runners on the minimalist side of 8mm, but I doubt I'll ever do much running in a pure 0mm minimalist shoe like the Vibram 5 finders or Altra brand of runners.

Asics Kayanos

Weight: 423 grams
Ramp: around 12 mm (possibly more)

So back to the fact that I was prescribed Asic Kayanos. These runners are very heavy, contain lots of control features designed to correct your running and use a large ramp of around 12 mm.

For the next 2 or 3 years I went through numerous pairs of Kayanos, usually bought on special around $170 a pair. During these 2 or 3 years I was pretty much constantly injured - calf soreness, achilles soreness, plantar fasciitis and even sore through the foot. I was struggling to run 25 to 30 kilometres a week and with the injuries rarely strung many consecutive good running weeks together. As a result, my running saw no progress over this period. In fact I'd say it actually went backwards.

Note that just because the Kayanos did not work for me does not make them a bad shoe. They are one of the best selling runners in the world with a huge loyal following. But they are definitely not for everyone.

I've gone off the Asics brand in general, again just a personal thing. During the height of the minimalist trend while other brands were introducing minimalist models, Asics stood firm declaring control and high ramp were still (and always will be) the way to go. While the minimalist movement has definitely peaked and died down, the general shift has moved towards less control and less ramp. Even the new Kayanos now only have 10mm (I'm not certain, but I think the ramp got as high as 14mm).  But Asics' complete denial throughout (to protect their best selling models) has turned me off the company as a whole.

Newton Runners

We came across the Newton Running stand in the expo at the Vancouver Triathlon World Championships in 2008. They allowed us to test them by going for a short trial run, but at first we didn't like them. Then Danny Abshire (one of the company's founders), took us out for a quick running lesson and suddenly the design of the runners made sense (and felt much better). So we bought 2 pairs each, the Gravity trainers and the Distance Racers.

Newtons are wildly different to the Kayanos. They are lightweight and low ramp. However their main feature are what they call 'lugs' under the fore foot.

If running with a mid-foot (or fore-foot) strike, the lugs will hit the ground first. When the lugs hit you feel them before the weight of the foot hits the ground. It is only a fraction of a second, but it is a fore warning nonetheless. Also having less cushioning between the foot and ground allows you to feel the ground better in general, which is a term called proprioception.

What I found when wearing the Newtons was that I was able to pick up my feet earlier thanks to the lugs. I say 'thanks to the lugs' because I was swapping between the Kayanos and Newtons on my runs and could not duplicate the new running style with the Kayanos. Although some of this may be due to the Kayanos' extra weight.

In general switching from a high ramp (ie, Kayanos) to a low ramp (ie, Newton) runner is very dangerous in regards to achilles and calf muscle injuries. Because the low ramp shoes are suddenly putting all this extra stress through the achilles and calf. Whereas before in the high ramp shoes they were being protected, which also means they were not getting stronger, so are weaker than they should be. As a rule of thumb, you should gradually transition across over a period of 3 to 6 months.

Newton Gravity S (I & II)

Weight: 298 grams
Ramp: 3mm (I think)

I've gone through numerous pairs of these runners. Originally they came in white & red and then the Gravity S II changed to white & blue. The newer model felt pretty similar but I found it lasted a bit better. The upper mesh used to rip on the red pair (you can see some of the strands showing on the red upright shoe in the photo).


Once I had transitioned across to the Newtons and stopped running in the Kayanos, I used Gravity's as my main training runners, also the runners I wore in my one and only Ironman.

Something I started doing with the Kayanos was to buy two different sizes - 11.5 & 12. The smaller 11.5's were used for normal runs and I used the larger 12's for runs longer than 60 minutes. On long runs the foot expands, so the larger size allowed for this without loosing a toenail. But the downside was that they didn't fit as well around the heel, so didn't feel as good.

Newton Distance S

Weight: 281 grams
Ramp: 2 mm (I think)

One of my all time favourite pair of runners and my 2nd (or maybe 3rd) pair of this model.

These are the racing version of the Newtons. Well they were back when I bought them. Now Newton have a much larger range including models that are significantly lighter.

Compared to the Gravity trainers, these are lighter, have slightly less ramp and a much softer heel material. If you look at the photo you'll see a fair bit of wear on the outer edge of the heel.

These are the runners I use for races. However I like to wear in a pair of runners before I promote them for races. Usually 100 to 200 kilometres to loosen them up. This allows them to slip on and off easily and also feel good to run in (important when you are running without socks). Once promoted to race runners they are only used for Triathlons, Duathlons and Brick sessions. As a result they are permanently laced with elastic laces.

A lot of elastic laces are designed to be tightened once you put the shoe on. I prefer to double knot the laces and have them loose enough to slip the shoes on and off without touching the laces, but still firm enough to feel good when running. It takes quite a while to get this tightness just right. So I install the elastic laces just before they get promoted to race runners. Usually takes between 5 and 10 runs to get the laces sorted just right. Once perfect, they are double knotted and will never be adjusted again.

Having clocked up 670km, this pair is due for retirement. Finding a replacement has proved difficult. Especially since they do not produce this model anymore (it has been superseded).

Newton Distance S II


Ramp: 2mm (I think)
Weight: probably around 285 grams

These were purchased about 2 years ago with the intention of replacing the previous Newton Distance S (model I) as race runners.


Unfortunately they never got to the stage where I loved them. They have now done 650km, but never achieved that broken-in feeling. Supposedly the changes were very minor with the biggest change being the new colour scheme. But whatever the change was, no matter how small, it removed the magic. Very disappointing considering I loved the previous two pairs of this runner (i.e the yellow model described above).

So now they are one of two pairs of runners that remain in my work locker. I tend to use this pair for the shorter recovery runs

These were the last pair of Newtons I bought. It was the disappointment of these runners that lead me to switch to the Inov8 brand.

Inov8 TrailRoc 245

Weight: 302g
Ramp: 3mm

When we did the first Salomon Trail Run at Kew in 2013, I wore my favourite Newton Distance S runners. These worked well at Kew, but the next race at Plenty Gorge was going to be far more technical. We decided we needed to purchase trail runners, so we headed down to FootPro in Malvern (our favourite running store).

Our original intention was to buy a pair of Salomon Trail Runners (as they were the naming sponsors of the Trail Running Series), but I just didn't like the feel of them (FootPro have treadmills and video analysis to test out the runners). In general the Salomons felt too stiff and plasticky. They didn't really mould to the shape of my foot.

In stark contrast the Inov8 TrailRocs felt awesome. They have what is called an 'Anatomical' fit. Tighter around the heel, but roomy in the toe box. Perfect for me and eliminates the need to buy two different sizes, because the one size is firm around the heel and still has plenty of room for my toes to expand in the toe box. I loved these runners so much, it started a spending spree on other Inov8 models.

The TrailRocs also gives you a great feel for the ground like the Newtons (proprioception).

The only problem with these runners is that the grip could be better. Inov8 have other models with better grip, but at the time I wasn't sure how many Trail Runs we would do and wanted to get a pair of runners that were more versatile. Whereas Elaine bought a pair a of serious trail runners with lots of grip and never has the same problem slipping in the races that I experience (hers were Salomon runners).

Inov8 have discontinued this model, replaced by TerraClaw. The new TerraClaw appears to have lots of good improvements including superior grip. Unfortunately it does not have the 'anatomical fit' that I love so much in the TrailRocs. In fact for some unknown reason they have discontinued the anatomical fit in all their new models (extremely disappointing), even the last version of the TrailRocs.

The number listed as part of the Inov8 model name is the weight of the runner. However probably refers to something like a size 8, whereas I wear a US 12. So all my runners are noticeably heavier than the advertised weight.

Inov8 Road-X Lite 155

Weight: 205g
Ramp: 3mm

These were the second pair of Inov8 runners I bought. They are a very light weight pair of racing flats and like the TrailRocs, I love them.

Same anatomical fit, same 3mm ramp, same very comfortable feel. However they are also extremely light and therefore feel very fast. With such a thin sole they also have a great feel for the ground (proprioception). However on rougher terrain, you can sometimes feel too much of the ground - risk of bruised under foot if the terrain gets too rocky.

I started using these for all my runs, but then accepted that I probably needed something a bit more substantial. Now these are reserved for speedwork and short fun runs (probably anything 10km and under).

Not only has Inov8 discontinued this model, they have stopped the majority of their road running range. Deciding instead to concentrate on Trail and Obstacle Course running plus a fitness range for Crossfit. Just when I found the running company of my dreams, they go and stop making all the products I love.

I did a search on the Internet and found stores that still sell this model. But it was hard to justify another runner purchase when I have so many pairs of runners in my closet. And this pair has only done 300km, so if I use them sparingly they should last for a long time.





Inov8 Road-X 233

Weight:259 grams
Ramp: 6mm

My love affair with Inov8 continued with this model. Initially I was a touch concerned with the 6mm ramp being less minimalist than what I had been wearing for the last few years, but I was pleasantly surprised. These are the best runners I have ever owned !!!

A thicker sole that the X-Lite 155's. Still a good feel for the ground (proprioception), but with more protection and so more confidence when running over rocky terrain. Although with the flat sole you won't get any grip on muddy terrain.


The purple pair on the left were my first pair (have now done 700km). When I discovered you could not buy them anymore I scoured the Internet and finally found a store in Hong Kong which is where I bought the second red and white pair from (140km so far).

These are my 'go to' runners. I keep the purple ones at work and the red and white ones at home. They are also the runners I would wear for a Half Marathon or a Marathon if I was ever silly enough to enter one.

Inov8 Race Ultra 270

Weight: 333g
Ramp: 4mm

With Inov8 discontinuing their road range, this model seemed the closest to road runners. Considering that I do the majority of my running on non technical, flat trails, these looked to be perfect.

Being designed for Ultra Marathons over varying terrains, I anticipated using these for my long runs. The sole would give grip on the dirt but still be OK on hard surfaces. It also has built in cushioning designed for long distance running. It lacks the proprioception of the other Inov8 runners, but feel more sturdy and protective.

Unfortunately they have what Inov8 calls a 'Standard Fit'. This isn't a bad fit, it is simply not the awesome Anatomical Fit made me fall in love with the other Inov8 runners.

So far I've put just over 100 kilometres into these runners. They are good runners, but I don't love them. If only Inov8 didn't ditch the Anatomical Fit.

There is still time for them to soften up and mould to the shape of my foot. Sometimes this can take up to 200km of running. But I doubt it. I think it is very unlikely that I will buy this model again, or in fact any Inov8 shoe which is such a disappointment.

Inov8 Tri-X-Treme 225

Weight: 283 grams
Ramp: 3mm

In my continuing search for a new race runner, these looked promising. Light weight, drainage holes and they come with elastic laces. They are also based on the Road-X-Treme - the only road runner remaining in Inov8's range. So if this shoe works well, it means I can stay with the Inov8 brand.

So far I've run 130 kilometres in them including a local Sprint Duathlon and the Mandurah 70.3 Half Ironman. After testing them in the local Duathlon I went back to the Newtons for the Duathlon Worlds. They didn't feel bad, but my run in that Duathlon was not very good, so I reverted back to the runners I knew worked well.

Part of the decision to wear them in the Half Ironman was that they matched the colour of the trisuit I was planning to wear. Also I thought the drainage holes could come in handy, plus a newer pair of shoes could prove better in a long distance run (the Newton have clocked up 670 kilometres).

The drainage holes would have probably worked if I wore the right socks. Instead I wore cheap socks from Aldi that had worked well in the Sprint Distance Duathlons where I didn't use the aid stations, but were terrible when being soaked with water during a hot 70.3.

In summary these runners have done nothing wrong. They just haven't made me love them yet. But with only 130 kms in them, there is still a chance.

Saucony Kinvara 6

Weight: 255 grams
Ramp: 4mm

Inov8 look like they are no longer the answer for me, so now I have to look elsewhere. I may end up going back to Newton as their recent models look promising. In the meantime I have decided to test out this model from Saucony.

I've been hearing great things about the Kinvara for quite a while. While other brands and models have come in and out of fashion, the Kinvara has kept its popularity and is now on its 6th iteration.

I've done two short runs for a total of 13 kilometres in them so far. I'm still suffering pretty bad calf soreness from Mandurah only a week ago. But my first impression is that these runners are awesome!!!

They remind me a little of the Adidas Supernovas I bought (and loved) so long ago. However they have less ramp (which is better) and much lighter which is also great.

The feeling of cushioning is much higher than Inov8 or Newton runners but they still feel very light.

With the thicker sole, it does lack the proprioception of the Inov8's and Newton's but I don't think this will be an issue. I needed that feel for the ground when I was initially improving my run technique. Now I believe the new technique is more or less set in, so the proprioception is not as important. However it is something I'll need to monitor, and will mean that is important that I always keep something like Newtons in the runner rotation.






Nike Free

I didn't think my list of runners would be complete without my favourite pair. I don't actually run in these, instead I use them as my favourite pair of casual shoes. Nothing feels as comfortable as my Nike Free's especially after a long training session (bike and/or run).

The pair shown are my 4th or 5th pair. Luckily, other than different material options and colour schemes, they feel exactly the same since they were first introduced nearly 10 years ago.




What's Next

I'll definitely be trying out the Newton Distance S III or the recently released Distance S IV, both of these models have 5 lugs, whereas all the Newtons I have owned up till now have had 4 lugs. Opinions are a little divided about the 5 lug version, but the majority seem to think it is an improvement. I anticipate this could be my new racing runner. With the new model IV just being released, it should mean some nice discounts on the now superseded model III, and I love a bargain.

Other brands that interest me are Hoka Hoka, Under Armour and Zoot. Under Armour and Zoot both have triathlon specific models and both seem to understand the minimalist side of runners. Hoka Hoka (usually referred to as 'Hokas') have a low ramp but a heap of cushioning. They are basically platform runners (not that I need to be taller). I struggle with runs longer than 100 minutes and my thinking is that the extra cushioning of the Hokas may help me run longer. I've run in them on the treadmill at FootPro and they felt OK, but not great. I ran in the Kinvaras on the same day and bought the Kinvaras. Worth noting that the video analysis also showed the Kinvaras suited me better.

If we continue doing the Salomon Trail Runs and similar events, I will probably look for some new trail runners with more grip. Inov8 have the MudClaw 265 and Talon 212, but as mentioned earlier, I've gone off this brand since it changed the fit of its shoes. The other option is the Salomon S-LAB Sense 4 Ultra SG that I wore in the Silvan Trail Run. Being demo shoes they have already been broken in a little, so had lost some of the hard, plasticky feel. They probably didn't feel as good as my current TrailRocs, but the grip on muddy sections, especially downhills was 10 times better. Unfortunately at around $220, they are extremely expensive.

You'll have probably noticed I tend towards the more niche brands rather than your classical Nike, Puma, Adidas, Asics, Brooks, Reebok & New Balance. Saucony probably just classes as a classic brand, but the Kinvara model has been amassing a cult following over the last few years and stealing athletes away from the more niche brands.


Sunday 15 November 2015

Mandurah 70.3

After writing this blog entry, I realise I have rambled on an awful lot. So I’ve added a short version at the start for those that don’t want to fall asleep reading such a long race report. I’ve also added a summary to each section before the far more detailed report.

Short Version:

Fantastic venue and probably the best run race we have ever done. Elaine had a great race, smashing her previous PB by nearly 30 minutes. I was a victim of ambition exceeding ability. Going for the age group win I completely blew up and finished 9th, missing one of the 4 world qualifying slots in my category.

Long Version:


Pre-Race

We booked our Accommodation at Quest Mandurah, about 400m from transition, 1m from the swim start and about 800m from the finish line and expo.



Above is a photo from our favourite cafe in Mandurah called Tea and Coffee. It opens at 6:30am, which is handy when your body clock is still on Eastern Daylight Savings Time (3 hours ahead of WA). Also handy that this cafe is about 40 metres from the race finish line, registration and expo.


Above is a photo of bike after transition checkin on the Saturday. This was the day before the race, so we don't get our other gear (ie. bike shoes, helmet, runners, sunnies etc) ready until the morning of the race.

On the morning of the race Elaine and I went through the usual process of applying the race number tattoos. Every race previously (including the recent Duathlon Worlds), this has been a very easy task. However this time it was a nightmare trying to peel off the backing. After a lot of effort and swearing we managed to peel the backing off 3 of the 4 tattoos. I gave up on the leg marking (that identifies age group) and got Elaine to draw an M on my right calf with a Sharpie pen instead. Not really the experience you want to go through just hours before a race. We overheard lots of people that also had troubles with the tattoos in transition before the race, so it wasn't just us.

The tattoos were probably the only failing of the whole race organisation, so we can’t complain too much.

Swim 1.9km


Summary:

After losing touch with the lead pack early, I sat behind slower swimmers to save energy whilst swimming into a mild current. At 31m37s, a slow swim over 2 minutes slower than hoped, but not a disaster

Detail:

Expectations were high for the swim leg. Coming off my biggest ever block of swim training I believed the new wetsuit (Roka Elite) and drafting should see a sub 29 minute swim. Being a canal swim, it was unlikely to be rough and I’d heard that previous years’ swims were all current assisted.

During transition check-in on Saturday the rumours were circulating that this year’s swim was be against the tide. Opinions ranged from a medium to zero current, however the general consensus was that there would be no assistance - disappointing. But at least I still had the wetsuit and drafting.

I bought my new Roka Elite wetsuit via the Internet (Half price sale, so it only cost $380). Reviews had regularly rated it the best wetsuit available. There is a more expensive one in the Roka lineup called the ‘Pro’. However the extra features on this model are either seen as gimmicky or only relevant for better swimmers. Problem was I had never actually got around to swimming in my new wetsuit yet. I’d tried it on in the lounge room at home and it was a perfect fit, but you never really know how it will go until you swim in it. There had been several planned swims, but something had always come up. So I thought I’d have use my swim recon swim before the race in Mandurah as the wetsuit’s first hitout, but I never got around to this either. The race was going to be the first test of the wetsuit - I was really hoping it was not going to chafe.

Our accommodation (Quest Mandurah) was next to the swim start at Sutton’s Farm. When I say ‘next to’, I’m talking less than 1 metre away. Standing in our accommodation (putting on my wetsuit) I watched the pro starts. When travelling for a race, I like our accommodation to be close enough so that we do not need to use the port-a-loos (I don’t mind using the port-a-loos, just hate the long queues). In this case our room was closer to the start than the port-a-loos.

Each wave was called to enter the water about 5 minutes before their start time. Not really enough time for a swim warmup. More an opportunity to get your head under the water and breathing under control before manoeuvring into position for the start. Waves were separated by 3 minutes, so once the horn went off for the previous wave you moved into position between two large yellow buoys. 

We had a 2 minute, 1 minute and 30 second warning. After I the 30 second warning I slowly counted to 20 and then pressed the Start button on my watch. This would mean I’d record 5 to 10 seconds extra on my swim, but would not have to worry about starting my watch when the horn blew - important when your arms are required for swimming, not pushing buttons on a watch.

In most races I know between 10 to 50% of the competitors in my age group. So I know who to line up next to. Being on the other side of the country, the only other person I knew in the race was Elaine and her wave start had already gone off 20 minutes beforehand. Furthermore with the swim being held in a canal (a little narrow) and 100 athletes entered in my age group, they had split the wave into two. Sorting alphabetically meant I was in the second wave. So I positioned myself at the front and hoped for the best.

The horn blew and I thought I got a reasonable start. Almost immediately I had a swimmer either side of me, both of whom seem to be trying to merge into the exact space I was occupying. Sometimes in these situations I simply stop and let the swimmers fight it out amongst themselves, but I was keen on having a good swim today so persisted in holding my position. They probably held me up a little, especially as they often restricted my arm movement, but I eventually broke clear and sat on the feet of what looked like a reasonable pack.

About 100 metres into the swim we had the first buoy which is also the first turning point. As we approached this buoy, all the swimmers I was drafting off lost all speed. It was although they believed the swim leg was just a 100m sprint to the first buoy. I made my way through the pack and as I turned around the buoy discovered that the lead pack of 7 swimmers had got away and established a gap of around 10 to 15 metres. Having turned around the buoy we were now on one of the the major canals. This meant we were now in the section that would be against the current. Past experience has taught me that trying to bridge a gap of over 10 metres to the fast group is just a good way of tiring yourself out and with the current against me it would be even harder. Seeing no other choice I continued on alone.

After another hundred metres I was keeping the lead pack in sight, but could definitely sense I was swimming into a mild current. Looking around I saw two athletes swimming together around 3 metres to the left behind me. Assuming that they would be similar ability to me, I backed off and jumped onto the feet of the second swimmer. Instantly the pace felt much much easier. It was not going to be a fast swim, but it was going to be very easy, so I accepted this and happily cruised along behind the other two, making it a group of three.

The lead athlete in our group was not the straightest of swimmers. This was very frustrating as he was constantly drifting off into the middle of the canal where I believe the current is the strongest. He was also starting to tire a little and the pace was dropping, but neither myself nor the second swimmer were showing any signs of taking over the lead. The lead swimmer from the female 18-24 wave behind us swam past just over half way through the swim. I tried to jump onto her feet, but predictably she was too fast, so dropped back and resumed my spot behind the other two.

With about 500m to go, the swim turns into smaller dead-end canals. This means the current is really no longer a factor, so I took this opportunity to leave the other 2 behind and venture off by myself. By this stage we were surrounded by other slower swimmers from the earlier waves, so it wasn’t as easy to spot all the swimmers, but I few quick glances back confirmed that I had dropped my previous two companions. A look at the results after the race confirmed that I gained a full minute on the other 2 swimmers and also passed another swimmer who had dropped off the front pack. Unfortunately my swim split was still slow at just over 31 minutes, with most of the lead pack 2 or 3 minutes ahead (exactly where I wanted to be).

Transition One (T1)


Summary:

Went well, much faster than most of my competitors.

Detail:

The swim exit was a temporary stair case that took you out of the water and onto the canal bank. Then it was a reasonably long run to the bikes, which was probably a good thing as this would be the first time I’d had to get out of this wetsuit - good not to have to do it in a rush. The photo below shows an athlete (no idea who) running through the shower setup just before transition.

Being a Half Ironman I was not looking for a lightning quick transition, so went through the motions in a pretty relaxed manner. Luckily the wetsuit came off easily and everything else went according to plan. Like a lot of my recent duathlon transitions, it went so quick I don’t remember much of it.

My T1 split was 2m07s, 2nd fastest in the age group and a minute or more quicker than 5 of the athletes who beat me overall. I thought I was pretty relaxed through transition, so I don’t know what the others were doing.

Bike 90km


Summary:

2 laps, Tail wind out, head wind back. Probably went too hard over first 20km with tail wind. Started to struggle a little on last 15km (saddle sores and sick of head wind). Bike split of 2h20m was pretty much exactly what I predicted pre-race.

Detail:

According to Training Peaks WKO4, my mFTP (modelled Functional Threshold Power) is currently 332 watts. Using the pacing guide from the book ‘Training and Racing with a Power Meter’ in a Half Ironman you ride 80 to 85% of FTP.  An FTP of 332 would mean racing at between 265 and 282 watts. However the mFTP is largely based upon my riding up hills in the Bayside Classic and Bright Training Camp. I’m suited to hill climbing, so I tend to find it easier to hold a high power climbing that riding hard on the flat. So I knew the mFTP was probably a little inflated.


Knowing the bike course was fast and that my swim had been slow, I probably pushed a little hard for the first 20km to the turnaround. I kept my power below 270 watts, but this was probably an ambitious target. My bike training over the last 3 months has gone really well, but still lacked the big volume required to really smash out a Half Ironman bike leg. Hopefully I’ll get a few more long rides (i.e. 140+km) before Geelong 70.3.

Flat courses (like Mandurah) are infamous for big bike packs and lots of drafting. My plan was to catch the group from my age group and sit in a legal pace line on the way back into the headwind. Then I would try to break away with the tailwind on the second lap. Another reason why I started the bike leg on the fast side. However I never saw any packs in the whole race, let alone my age group.

I was constantly passing competitors on the bike, but couldn’t see many from my age group. It didn’t help that most people were not wearing the calf tattoo that identified their category. Obviously had the same problems I did trying to peel off the back, but unlike me did not manually write the letter on with sharpie pen.

Below are the 5km splits from my Bike Leg extracted from Training Peaks:

LapStartEndDurationMoving DurationKilometersTSSIFNPAvg PowerMax PowerAvg SpeedMax SpeedCadElev GainElev LossWorkCalories
Lap #10:00:000:07:320:07:320:07:324.998.00.8324924152039.845.49150107107
Lap #20:07:330:14:300:06:570:06:574.998.80.9027127039143.246.310150112112
Lap #30:14:290:21:130:06:440:06:445.008.00.8826326133644.552.19905105105
Lap #40:21:140:28:480:07:340:07:345.008.10.8324824746839.646.39600112112
Lap #50:28:480:36:450:07:570:07:575.008.70.8425125035137.744.19605119119
Lap #60:36:450:44:540:08:090:08:095.008.00.7923723341136.850.4902122114114
Lap #70:44:540:53:130:08:190:08:194.998.50.8124324235136.150.39550120120
Lap #80:53:131:01:100:07:570:07:575.008.00.8024023934037.742.39605114114
Lap #91:01:101:09:230:08:130:08:135.007.70.7723222464736.544.39150110110
Lap #101:09:231:16:460:07:230:07:234.997.50.8124224053140.644.59400106106
Lap #111:16:461:24:090:07:230:07:235.007.10.7923623344340.643.39400103103
Lap #121:24:091:31:220:07:130:07:134.997.00.7923723633041.647.39405102102
Lap #131:31:221:39:350:08:130:08:134.997.80.7823322842536.544.69100112112
Lap #141:39:351:48:160:08:410:08:414.997.50.7422221931834.646.490115114114
Lap #151:48:161:56:340:08:180:08:185.006.70.7221520943836.148.9871621104104
Lap #161:56:342:05:430:09:090:09:094.997.30.7121421232932.836.69106116116
Lap #172:05:432:14:400:08:570:08:575.006.60.6920620530633.537.58706110110
Lap #182:14:402:19:460:05:060:05:062.723.10.6319017847432.138.882005353
Lap #192:19:452:21:260:01:410:01:410.00----------9.0822.08000----

You can clearly see that the first 60km are pretty strong, but it starts to fade away over the last 30km. Just holding back a fraction over the first 30km could have made a big difference to the whole race.

I was only passed by one rider , a younger competitor with 15km to go. Going by how fast he passed me I was amazed how good a rider he was. But checking the results after the race, it was not that he was going incredibly fast, it was simply that I had slowed down a lot. That brings me to another table (I'm in a data analysis mood). I've cherry picked the intermediate bike splits for 3 competitors:

  • Rob -> Me
  • Luke -> winner of my age group with category's fastest bike split
  • Robin -> winner of 18-24 age group (passed me at 75km mark)

The following table shows how Luke simply had more endurance than me and didn't fall away in the 2nd half, however he did have a relatively slow run of 1h37m. Far more importantly, it shows that Robin rode the first section slower than both Luke and myself, but then posted faster splits for the rest of the bike and still ran a 1h29m half marathon. Highlighting the importance of holding back at the start.
    Rob    41:55  25:55  42:31  30:24  (2:20:46)
    Luke   41:54  25:16  41:26  28:45  (2:17:23)
    Robin  42:18  25:00  40:12  27:57  (2:15:29)

Transition Two (T2)


Summary

Entered T2 in 4th position, started run in 3rd position.

Detail

Having not really enjoyed the last 15km of the bike I was pretty happy to enter transition. Unfortunately my calf muscle cramped very badly as I dismounted the bike, I was lucky not to fall over. While far from ideal and a definite sign I went too hard on the bike, I was not overly concerned as my calf muscles are usually tight after the bike and loosen up on the run.

As I ran down the aisle in transition, I counted 5 other bikes already racked in my row. With 100 competitors entered in my age group, we pretty much took up the entire rack, so I assumed all these bikes were from athletes in my category. Knowing I had ridden fairly hard I was hoping all 5 bikes were from the earlier wave (remembering my age group was split into 2 waves). So I figured there was a good chance I was in a podium position.

In reality, on corrected time I entered T2 in 4th position. My transition split 1m13s saw me leave transition in 3rd. I didn't rush, and took time to put on socks. However there were a couple of things I did to save time - put a big dollop on sunscreen in my hand and applied it as I ran out and also carried my race number belt in my hand until I had finished applying the sunscreen and then buckled it up as I was running. It would be kind of stupid to do these things while standing still, but all the competitors who beat me had slow transition times. Then again, maybe it is better taking advice from the people who beat me.

Run


Summary:

Started well, moved into 2nd position by 6km and was gaining on the leader. Things started to unravel around 8km and then continued to get worse. Limped home in 9th position


Detail:

My target pace for the run was 4m15s pace. However I had been having a lot of leg issues over the last 6 weeks. My legs (especially the calf muscles) had completely locked up during the last Brick Repeats training session (3 x 60 min ride / 25 min run) prevent me from doing the last run and my legs had also locked up on the Bright Training Camp preventing me from climbing Mt Hotham on the last day. With this in mind I had dropped my expectations down to a 4m20s pace.

Once I started running the calf muscle cramping almost instantly went away. It felt like I was moving very slowly, but every time I checked my watch it was around 4m15s pace. I was actually putting in effort to slow down and hold back my pace. At this point I was starting to feel very confident, especially since the other runners (from different age groups) who came out of transition with me had all dropped away.

I could ramble on for a long time describing the run, but the chart below (1km lap splits of the run from Training Peaks) tells the sorry tale:

LapStartEndDurationMoving DurationKilometersrTSSIFNGPAvg PaceMax PaceAvg Heart RateMax Heart RateCadElev GainElev Loss
Lap #10:00:000:04:140:04:140:04:140.996.30.9304:1804:1404:051531589300
Lap #20:04:150:08:260:04:110:04:110.986.10.9304:1804:1104:001601639400
Lap #30:08:260:12:460:04:200:04:200.986.00.9104:2404:2004:001611629400
Lap #40:12:460:17:020:04:160:04:160.996.10.9104:2304:1604:0972729400
Lap #50:17:020:21:310:04:290:04:290.975.90.8804:3204:2904:10----9300
Lap #60:21:300:26:260:04:560:04:560.986.00.8504:4404:5604:20717392110
Lap #70:26:260:30:530:04:270:04:270.995.50.8504:4304:2704:0873769206
Lap #80:30:530:35:430:04:500:04:500.985.90.8404:4404:5004:251231599200
Lap #90:35:430:40:290:04:460:04:460.985.60.8404:4704:4604:351331619250
Lap #100:40:290:45:250:04:560:04:560.985.40.8005:0004:5604:271591618900
Lap #110:45:260:50:300:05:040:05:040.985.20.7805:0805:0404:481561619000
Lap #120:50:300:55:480:05:180:05:180.984.80.7305:2905:1804:571561598900
Lap #130:55:471:01:150:05:280:05:280.985.40.7605:1705:2804:3915716987116
Lap #141:01:161:06:290:05:130:05:130.984.70.7305:3105:1304:561531568805
Lap #151:06:291:12:040:05:350:05:350.984.80.7105:3705:3505:091511548700
Lap #161:12:041:18:070:06:030:06:030.984.80.6905:5006:0305:121501538660
Lap #171:18:071:23:270:05:200:05:200.984.50.7105:4005:2004:591461498805
Lap #181:23:271:29:150:05:480:05:480.984.60.6805:5305:4805:131471508700
Lap #191:29:151:34:460:05:310:05:310.984.80.7105:3605:3105:131501528850
Lap #201:34:471:40:350:05:480:05:480.994.60.6805:5305:4805:191481528700
Lap #211:40:351:46:000:05:250:05:250.984.70.7105:3605:2503:531501568800
Lap #221:46:001:46:310:00:310:00:310.080.50.85--05:0104:541561579000


My heart rate monitor obviously stopped working properly between kilometres 4 and 9, probably due to a large bag of ice shoved down the front of my trisuit. Right from the start I walked through every station drinking lots, pouring lots of water over my head and putting ice down the front of my suit.

After laps of 4:14, 4:11, 4:20, 4:16 & 4:29 the 6th kilometre was the first split slower than 4:30, but this included some hills and an aid station. According to the athlete tracker than had a timing mat at the 6km mark, I had now moved into 2nd position and was gaining on first. The 7th kilometre was back to 4:27 but then the signs started to show in the 8th kilometre that blew out to 4:50.

The next 3 kilometres I tried to go into damage control with splits of 4:46, 4:56 and 5:04. My thinking was if I could keep my pace at or below 5:00 pace per kilometre I could still salvage a reasonable run split, especially with the relatively quick first 7 kilometres. A podium finish was still on the cards, or at least 4th place which will still give me a Worlds qualifier slot.

But then things started to fall apart and 5 min per km pace was no longer possible. The splits of 5:18, 5:28, 5:13, 5:35, 6:03, 5:20, 5:48, 5:31, 5:48 & 5:25 tell the sad story. Funny how running around 4:15 pace in the beginning felt ridiculously slow and then 5:30 pace took all my effort in the second half. The athlete tracker shows that I had fallen back to 3rd place by the 11km mark, 6th place by the 16km mark and 9th by the 20km mark.

I've often seen professional triathletes on TV out in front and looking in control before everything goes to shit. It is not unusual for the leader of the Hawaii Ironman at the half way mark of run end up not even finishing the race. I had one of these days.

The photo on the right is Terrenzo Bozzone who finished 3rd overall. He is looking strong right around the spot where things started going pear shaped for me. They actually have a photo of me looking quite good near this section, but they want $30 to download a digital copy of a single photo (I don't look that good).

Looking at the heart rate values when my strap was working (ie. ignoring between kilometres 4 and 9), it was not a cardiovascular problem. It was simply my leg muscles not being strong enough to go the distance at the pace I wanted. As I write this 10 days later, my legs are still far from recovered. In particular my calf muscles and right glute.

Another photo of Terrenzo in the finish chute. Isn't he photogenic. I sure as hell didn't look that good at the end of the race.

Elaine

Elaine swam 45m38s. Not her fastest half ironman swim, but pretty good when you factor in that over half the swim was into a mild current.

Her bike split was 3h17m59s which is absolutely blisteringly fast for Elaine. This gives her an average speed of over 27kph for 90km. I cannot remember her riding that fast in Sprint Distance race.

The run was a little slow at 2h45m06s, although she really struggled and walked quite a bit (paying the price for going so fast on the bike). A good half ironman run for Elaine would be around 2h30m, so it is not too bad. And when combined with a reasonable swim and blisteringly fast bike it is no wonder she took nearly 30 minutes off her Half Ironman Personal Best time finishing in 6h54m10s

Unfortunately Elaine was not wearing a sleeved trisuit like I was, nor did she apply sunscreen as she ran out of transition. As a result she has some of the worst sunburn I have ever seen.

Overall Elaine absolutely loved the race (and the days spent in Margaret River afterwards). There have been several times over the last week when she has asked me if we are doing Mandurah again next year.