Friday, August 21, 2015

Timberman 70.3 - Big Hero 6 Edition

8/16/2015

Pre-Race:
This race come into the schedule late in the season. I was on deck with Russ while he was in town visiting, and Danny put the idea in our heads. Sure enough, it didn’t take long and we were both registered and ready to head up to Gilford, New Hampshire 3 weeks after Ironman Lake Placid.
I wasn’t worried about the time to recover as I didn’t plan on getting much training in. I planned to recover for 7-10 days, get moving again, and rely on my Placid fitness to carry me through this one and kick off some solid training for Kona.
I returned from Placid Monday night, had to move Tuesday-Thursday and celebrated with friends all weekend. As a result, come Saturday morning, I was feeling terrible...unusually terrible.I tried to relax and nap for a few days and by Tuesday, it was time to go to the doctor. I was diagnosed with an upper respiratory infection, but not prescribed antibiotics, just cold/allergy medicine.
No surprise, Monday of the next week rolls around, and I’m still coughing up some gross stuff, feeling awful and have next to no appetite. I go back to the doctor and finally get some antibiotics to combat most of the symptoms I originally had, on top of my newly acquired ear infection. This puts me at 6 days out from a race, starting a round of antibiotics.
I started to feel better by Thursday and decided to give it a shot at Timberman. It would, at the very least, be an opportunity to shake out the legs from Placid, share the course with tons of friends, and race in a state I have never raced in before.
Russ booked us a cool, little cottage, right on Lake Winnipesaukee which gave us the opportunity to open water swim right out of our front door, something we took advantage of many times throughout the weekend (The Inn at Smith Cove 19 Roberts Road Gilford, New Hampshire 03249).

Race Morning:
Race morning started at 4:00 AM, where I ate more waffles than I ever want to see again in my life. We didn’t realize until it was too late that we had an entire stove and pots and pans. We could have cooked eggs, pancakes, etc but it just didn’t happen. We left by 4:45AM and made it into the parking lot just before it filled up. In the future, we should probably plan on arriving by 4:40-4:45 instead of leaving.

Swim 00:26:01 (11 M25-29/77 OA):
As I was making the final adjustments on my wetsuit, I realized that I forgot to put my speed suit on for the bike. There was just enough time to jog back to the car, put it on, and make it back for the gun but i figured that the course was hilly enough and I’d benefit more from a solid swim warm up than running around stressing myself. I thought to myself, “If this is all that goes wrong, it’ll be a pretty good day.” Later on I’d find out that this was a minor oversight compared to what I had coming.
The gun went off and I found feet immediately. There was one guy charging to my left who looked determined to spend as little time on the swim course as possible and I was happy to let him work all the way around. This was one of my faster 70.3 swims and honestly, it was very easy. Drafting is awesome and allowed me to stay relaxed, warm up, and get ready for a solid ride.run combo.
A few times, heading into the beach, I felt like we weren’t really moving that well and contemplated getting around the guy and pushing into shore but I figured that energy would be better spent on the run course so I bottled it and just continued to ride his wake.

T1 00:01:36:
I had a great spot, all the way through transition, right next to the bike out. I was located on the first rack after the PRO racks, right near the end. Couldn’t have been happier. Made the jog through without consequence and was licking my chops to take my girl, GrAce 2.0, out for her maiden race.

Bike 02:32:49 (3 M25-29/24 OA):
I got out on the bike course and was absolutely in love with how my new ride was handling. I was able to get a lot of controlled power to the pedals and she was absolutely rocketing along the course. I felt like the new cockpit and slight fit tweaks allowed me to tuck into my position better than on my old bike and the numbers were validating those feelings.
I made it through the opening miles and up the major climbs and started to open up into the long, flat, out and back section when I went to shift and didn’t feel any response. I moved to me bullhorn shifters, thinking maybe a cable rattled loose, still nothing. I tried to shift my rear derailleur and that worked. It hit me immediately that in my excitement to race and get the bike rolling that I neglected the fact that batteries do not come fully charged. In my 200 miles of training leading up the the race, I used the majority of the juice that was left in the battery, leaving myself with enough to make it through 10 miles on the course. The beauty of Di2 is that it shuts down the front derailleur and saves the balance of the battery for the rear to allow you to get home. I was still moving along alright despite spinning out at 26 mph on the flats where a big ring could have allowed me to sustain 30+ but I chalked it up to a day to keep the legs fresh and tackle the run course as hard as I could. Keeping tabs on other cyclist that are around my strength, I was realizing that I was out of it. The 20 year old guys started catching me from 4 minutes back and I simply couldn’t get going any faster.
After a very frustrating 24 miles, losing the benefit of the furiously fast road, I started making my way back through the climbing section when a familiar sensation happened. Tried to shift the rear derailleur and no response. 12 miles to go and I was essentially riding a fixie through the major climbs on the course. Consider my legs fried by the time I grinded 300 watts at 50 rpm for a few miles. I really enjoyed the looks I was getting on a brand new, decked out, speed concept having people think I don’t even know how to choose an appropriate gear. Eventually, I made it back to transition and was upset that after a short 56 miles, I was already sick of being on my beloved bike. Don’t worry GrAcie, it wasn’t you, it was me and my newbie move of not even putting juice in your battery. I will make up or it!
And the award for best bike “pacing” goes to…


T2 00:01:36:
With my head hanging low, I hung up my bike in it’s fantastic transition position and grabbed my run gear. I took my time putting on my socks as I tried to talk myself into running hard.

Run 01:49:15 (14 M25-29/128 OA):
Brushed off the ride immediately and decided it was time to at least make up some time and see who I could chase down. I went out hard for the first mile, then my stomach turned on me and I spent a little time in the port-a-potty. I’ve made many important decisions behind this closed door so I figured, why not make another?
In my solidarity, I realized: “Don’t be an idiot. You are 3 weeks removed from a race that drained you to the point where you ended up sick. You have the most important race of your life in 8 weeks. It’s time to shut it down. You have friends on the course, see what you can do to help them.”
I left the bathroom and walked 100 ft up the road to the end of the aid station. I started feasting at the aid station while I looked for a familiar face to run up on me. I knew my friend Aaron was coming or had already passed and my buddy Rusty was expected through at any time as well. I stood around for a minute or two and didn’t see either of them so I turned around, grabbed a few cokes and started walking toward the garbage can when Aaron snuck up on me and went by. He was flying around 7:00/mile and I decided it was time to run and help him through.
I remembered in Raleigh he had trouble with the run but I wasn’t about to hijack his race unless he asked. We exchanged a few hellos and ran shoulder-to-shoulder for about 1-2 miles when he said he wasn’t sure he could hang on to the pace. I took this as an invitation to take over and asked him to let me pace him through he rest of it, to which he agreed. I quickly found out what his goals were and what he has done in the past and told him, :If this is a pace that you’re worried you can’t hold, we need to slow down and run a more realistic pace. You’ve got me here for you, I’ll take care of you and get you through this thing.”
I spend the rest of the run having fun, making volunteers splash him with water to cool him down, dumping ice down his kit, and helping him pull back the damage incurred in the opening miles. I was very impressed with his ability to dial it back, lock into an appropriate pace, bring his emotions into control, work the aid stations, and still close with some hard digging in the last 1.75 miles. He made it through with a 12 minute PR and hopefully a better understanding of how you can use the course to your advantage to get as much out of it, carefully choosing where to spend the energy you have left. Certainly a much better experience for me that slogging around on my own for 13.1 miles.

Overall 04:51:17 (14 M25-29/128 OA):
Bottom line, my head just wasn’t in the game this weekend. I was still riding the high from Placid, on antibiotics, had done very little preparation, and was too caught up in helping out my friends with their races. The only thing I’d do differently if I could go back is charge my bike.
In the grand scheme of things, it was best for me that I didn’t turn myself inside out as I can jump right into a healthy Kona block and not have to worry about as much recovery as if I had raced it. This race was meant as an early shot at qualifying for 70.3 Worlds in Australia but there will be plenty of opportunity for that at the beginning of next season.
Thank you to everybody who tracked all day and I’m sorry for the scare, I was fine out there. I could have ended up far worse like the athlete I saw blow by me and end up in a ditch a few miles down the road. Thanks to QT2 Systems for all you do, Base salt for keeping me out of a dark place on that hot day and salvaging A-A-ron’s race.
Big shout out for Rusty Sullivan for getting back in the game with a big PR performance. On to a big race in Maryland in a few weeks aboard that beautiful new bike (He bought a clone of GrAce 1.0 and she is purty).
Another huge kudos to Danny who qualified for 70.3 Worlds in Australia. Way to get the train rolling, we hope to join you!

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Lucky Number 7

IMLP has been a staple for me since 2010, either as a volunteer (2010. 2013) or athlete (2011, 2012, 2014, 2015). There is something special about this race that keeps bringing me back. Regardless, in each year that I planned on racing I told myself that I would get up to LP to train before the race. It wasn’t until this year that I finally made that happen and I believe it made all the difference in the world. I know this course inside-out, however having a chance to get all the climbs and turns in my head a month out from the race really helped me develop a bomb-proof race pace strategy.

Pre-Race:
The weekend started on Thursday when I piled into the truck with Ed, Sue and Shaun. Ed brought his huge truck, stuffed all of our gear in the bed, and put a mattress in the back of the cab so we could stretch/massage our legs the entire 11 hour trip to the Adirondacks.
We arrived to our hotel, went for a quick jog, and Ed gave us both a quick massage. After that, the trip felt like it was completely out of my legs.
The next morning was one of my favorite Lake Placid traditions, the underwear run!

I really like having the opportunity to let loose a little bit and make the weekend about having fun as opposed to being hyper focused on the race and performing. We had a huge group this year and I’m pretty sure team PAPI gave people a bit more to look at than they bargained for...whoops!
Shaun and I followed up the run with a one loop swim in Mirror Lake. As always, I like to get a non-stop loop in a little below race effort so I can get an idea where I’m going to be come race day and get a gauge on how much of my fitness has showed up with me. A practice swim of 27 low on minimal effort left me confident that I’d be able to hang with any group I wanted and even if I had to swim solo, I had enough easy speed to get through in a time consistent with my goals.
We went right to check in and got everything squared away. After check in, we got our bikes ready and went out for a little ride. Ed was finishing up Willls’ massage when Shaun was ready to ride so I wanted for the other guys and we had a nice 75 minute tune of ride down the bears and back in to the hotel. I used this opportunity to make sure my bike was ready to rock, open up my legs with a few short efforts, and get one final look at the final climbing section into town. By the time we got back to the hotel, my family had arrived so I split and got my gear moved into our hotel.
We took a car ride around the bike course so everybody could get a mental picture of what we were suffering through and why it was taking so long to get back to town once we left. It was great to have my sister and her husband in town to watch their first ever Ironman. We made it back to town and got ready to head over for a really good dinner at Smoke Signals. One of the highlights of the weekend was trying to finish off the pile of meat that my brother-in-law ordered and could not conquer…it was insane.
Saturday morning, Wills and I got our bikes and bags checked in immediately so we could get back and get off our feet. All I really did all day was shave down and get ready to feast! I took ¾ of a large pizza to the face then started to salt load as we watched Breaking Bad and did our final bottle mixing and stretching.


Race Morning:
The 3:30AM alarm always comes sooner than I’d like it to but I got to bed right around 10PM the night before so that was going to be about as good of a night sleep as I could expect. We threw down soooo many pancakes, also referred to as B1, then got ready to head over to transition. We made it through transition nice and easy, getting over to swim start about 40 minutes before race start. Just enough time to stand in the port-a-potty line until 20 minutes before the race started. It’s very hard to get alone time to think through the race with 1000s of people around all weekend but I was able to give myself about 5 minutes with headphones on to go through my race one final time, settle myself down, and mentally prepare for a LOOOOONG but enjoyable day. Wills and I got our wetsuits on with about 15 minutes to race start and put down any final nutrition we needed. I gave everybody a big hug, thanked them for making monumental trips to support me, and promised not to disappoint. The last thing I told myself in the closing minute to swim start was “Everybody made the trip to support you. If there ever was a time to do this, it’s right now. Feed off of your friends and family and go have the day you sacrificed for. Giddy Up!”


Swim 0:52:52 (2 M25-29 / 5 OA): Strava File
After an eternity of a countdown, the gun finally went off and we frantically into the water fighting to get in the correct positions.

The swim settled out very quickly and within the first 5 minutes, I noticed that I was at the back of a group of 4 and this group was moving! I hung with them swimming as easily as I possibly could but to be honest, even being on the back of this group left me working a bit more than I cared to this early in the race. I didn’t do as good of a job keeping feet right in front of my and had to do a few very big efforts to close things back down. Heading into shore for the finish of loop 1, I brought the contact back pretty close but was starting to throw up a little in my mouth and told myself that if I couldn’t easily get on their feet while we ran across the shore that I’d let them go and settle into my own pace, still moving swiftly through the course but without burning any matches.
I checked the clock and saw that we went through in 25:22, a touch slower than last year but with far fewer swimmers working for that swim. I couldn’t easily get on their feet so I forgot about them and swam my own race the rest of the way through loop 2. I didn’t think anybody caught me from behind but it turns out a small group did. Had I noticed them, I would have swam with them but it wouldn’t have changed much +-10 seconds. Made it onto the beach and found my favorite wetsuit stripper, Greg Murnock! If you ever need somebody to rip your clothes off in public in < 3 seconds, this is your man!


T1 (0:03:51):
One of the magical parts of IMLP is the run through town from the lake to the changing tents. This area is absolutely packed with people screaming and throwing hands in the air. I always love swimming my buns off here so I can try to surprise my spectators and get them even more excited than I am! It’s also one of the last chances to see friendly faces before you head out on a long, lonely 2 loop course. My volunteers were awesome and took care of me right away. I was heading out to my girl GrAce even faster than expected, hot on the heels of Michael Hoffman, who had an awesome swim and grabbed the ROKA swim award for our age group.

Bike 5:33:05 (2 M25-29 / 21 OA): Strava File
I have spent years trying to figure out this bike course and I think it’s safe to say this was the first time I’ve really done it well. Not as fast as many of the top shelf bike guys, but certainly the smartest I’ve ever done it, trying to set up for a battle of a run.
Wile visiting Placid for camp, I spent a lot of time making sure I knew exactly how I wanted to ride certain sections of the course. I have also done the course enough times, in varying conditions, to know just how bad some sections could be if the weather was not on our side.
I wanted to get up the first climb and down Keene with as little effort as possible, then carry that effort through the out and back section before I’d inevitably have to work a bit across to Wilmington. Executed perfectly! It was tough, mentally to let guys go by me, especially guys who I knew were strong runners, but I knew how I had to spend my energy in order to get to the finish line as quickly as I possibly could. There was no sense in chasing guys down on the bike to risk blowing up on the run as SOOOO many people do in Lake Placid.
Mentally, I kept telling myself: “Do whatever it takes to be fresh for the final 20 miles. I don’t care what that means, don’t make silly choices out here and throw the race away before the marathon.”
As expected, every now and then, an athlete would roll by me and I would chose not to go with them. I’d stare at my power meter and just focus on where I needed to be. The heart rate was a bit higher than expected but it felt effortless so I decided to let that ride a little and just be careful to pay attention to it. By hour 2 I realized I had made it through a good section of the course and it was time to start working back towards town. I made the turn to head back and noticed that it was going to be a bit slower than I thought. There was a solid headwind for the initial miles. Luckily, it gave way and I was able to get moving a bit more rhythmically but still seeing more of my power ceiling than I would have liked.
Coming up the bears and back into town usually gets me way too excited and pushing more watts than anybody needs to do 56 miles into an Ironman ride. I had to work very hard mentally to make sure the climbs and the crowds didn’t impact my physiological state. I decided to sit up on the climbs, focus on nutrition a bit, and think about how I was going to use my special needs as quickly as possible.
Mental Games: Visor up = Take it easy, Silly.

I made it back into town and rolled up to my special needs bag.
Volunteer: “What would you like out of your bag?”
Me: “I’ll take my two bike bottles, can you swap my frame bottle while I refill my BTA bottle?”
Volunteer: “I’d love to but there aren’t any bike bottles in this bag. You’re 439, right?!”
Me: “Yea, (realizing my morning nerves must have navigated those bottles into my run bag) no big deal, I’ll take the caffeine and flask of UCAN and take the rest off the course. Thanks!”

This was a major issue for me as I typically don’t like the mix on course and really work well off of my custom Infinit mix. Oh, well. It was just another part of the day that i was going to have to deal with and get through. I got rolling again and made my way through town. Said a quick hello and goodbye to everybody who traveled hundreds of miles to see me fly by for 15 seconds and just like that, I was back climbing the hills near the ski jump. I got into my first aid station and grabbed a bottle of Gatorade endurance to slam into my torpedo bottle before I went through my typical aid station routine. I didn’t love the mix but it was good enough and I knew that I had to drink it or risk having a real bad day. Luckily, I could work off of my flask and not have to worry about really loading up on the orange, sugary mix. I think I only used about 1.5 bottles on loop two, where I normally would have put down 2-2.5 bottles of my infinit mix.
Knowing that nutrition was gong to be a factor for the rest of the race and noticing that my HR was still high, I made a decision I never through I’d make. I chose to ride easy from 3-4.75 hours, then bring it home strong for the final kick. I let a few more people roll by until I settled into an athlete or two that I was able to pace back and forth with for the majority of loop 2. The wind was much better on the way back and I was able to save a ton of energy to bring it in hard from mile 95. I passed a few people and was able to ride hard through some sections of the course that have historically stolen TONS of time from me closing out the ride.
All things considered, I rode much easier than last year, a few minutes faster, and most importantly kept the rubber side of my bike down the entire ride.


T2 (0:02:16):
I don’t remember much of this part of the course as I had fallen behind a touch nutritionally and my focus was on getting things ready for the run and trying to think if there was anything I could do to tweak my nutrition to make up for the bit i fell off on the end of loop 2. I do remember asking for sunscreen in the tent, being told I could find it near the exit, asking for it, and never getting any. I really like to load up on it so my system can stay as cool as possible. Sure, it’s only skin but how can you expect your body to react well to the efforts you’re asking of it when the largest organ in your body is being damaged from the sun. Out onto the run course we go.



Run 3:32:47 (3 M25-29 / 18 OA): Strava File
The start of the run course is another classically great spot of IMLP. You emerge from the Olympic speed skating oval, to a seas of cheering spectators and typically, sun! I was very happy to see friends and family again and gave them all a wave as I set out to really go to work. The entire day was set up in order to throw down on this run course, as I knew I’d have to in order to have any chance at a high podium place and hopefully a Kona slot. Heading down to Rich Clark hill, I passed Jessie Kropelnicki who pulled up to me and told me to relax, settle into MY race and get ready. He told me that a lot of guys rode too hard and looked horrible as they started their run. I told myself “Alright, you rode smart, it’s time to hurt for a little while and get this thing done. Whatever you do, don’t throw any of the work you’ve done to set this up by going too hard too soon.” The only problem was that I knew Michael Hoffman rode great and was out ahead of me and can has always put time into me on the run. An even bigger problem was knowing that Kevin Wright was somewhere behind me and capable of running 3:05 as he did in Chattanooga.
Ideally, I would have ran my own race, eased into the opening miles, and let the field bend/break as it might. I didn’t really have that option here. I knew we’d get 2, maybe 3 slots if we were lucky and I’d have to either outlast Kevin or catch Mike. I decided that since I had no idea where Kevin was, I had to go out and catch Mike if I wanted any chance of Kona happening. I got down the hills and settled into some really steady, fast, and smooth miles on River Rd. until I could get some eyes on the field. It looked like Mike had about 2 minutes on me and looked to be running strong. I didn’t let it phase me so I kept pushing on and noticed that I had some good time on the field behind me. I saw Kevin about 4-5 minutes back and he was flying, letting me know that it was only a matter of time. Nothing else looked like a major threat at this point so I started to back off just a touch and not completely bury myself.
I made it back into town and got way too emotional running up Rich Clark hill. I was already starting to hurt really bad from opening up with a hard first 11 miles when I heard somebody yell at the bottom of the hill, “He’s here!” as, what felt like, the entire hill started chanting my hill, carrying me up to the top. As I reached the top, I had tears rolling down my face. I knew I was doing the best I could, my quads were burning, the entire field looked strong, and I knew I was in for a lot more pain to come. The last thing I wanted to do was let this great group of family, friends, and BTC family down and throw in the towel, it was out of my hands. 

I ran solid but smart through the turn around on mirror lake drive, where Kevin had already closed and passed me. Mike was still holding about 2 minutes ahead of me looking great, and I started to doubt what the outcome of this race was going to look like. I noticed that the AG was starting to come together and it was going to be a dog fight. I started pushing down the hill and out of town again. I wanted to get out of town, have a smooth River Rd. then do whatever it took to get home.
About 2 miles into loop 2, I was doing my own thing and happened to look up and see Mike coming back to me. I don’t know what happened with his race but I hate to see a guy I respect so much having such a tough time on the course. Something late in his day turned against him and he was really suffering. I tried to pick him up on the way by and even though he was hurting bad, he was a good enough of a dude to wish me luck as I went past. Suddenly, I was back in the conversation for a slot and needed to get to the turn around on River Rd. ASAP.
The miles weren’t coming easy at all. My quads were fighting me, my hip flexors felt stressed, and my HR was starting to fall. I started ripping as much coke and red bull as I could get my hands on and focusing on form as best as I could. The minutes were crawling by as I weaved my way down River and finally made it to the turn around. Bad news, the other guys in my AG were much closer than they were in town and they looked a hell of a lot better than I felt. In great timing, my coach, Tim Snow, ran by and told me “Dan, you don’t have a lot left to go, you HAVE to get tough here!” I put as much as I could in to the return on River Rd., ignoring my screaming legs and saving just enough to get up the hill, I knew the other guys were coming and I was trying to hold on the best I could despite feeling like my legs were ready to fall off. I was DEFINITELY paying for my efforts early on in the marathon, but I don’t regret the gametime decision I had to make in order to keep myself in the race. I used it when I had it and my tank was running out a little sooner than I wanted.
The goal was to make it back to the hill without anybody going by me but that didn’t quite work out. With a touch over 5K to go, Rooney Castle went by me absolutely flying, just like he did in Syracuse and I knew he was going to cruise it in very strong (he put about 6 minutes on me on the way in, super impressed with his ability to close). That put me into 3rd and I knew another guy was coming. 

The next thing I remember is seeing Ed near the hotel cheering me on and I was in such a hurt locker, I couldn’t even high five him. I hate not being able to work with my supporters but I needed every ounce of energy I had left to bring it home. The miles started getting really ugly and before I knew it, I was back on The hill, clawing my way up to the top. The only thing I remember was seeing my boy Rusty weaving his way through the crowd, yelling at me the whole time up the hill...in sandles...walking. I took a mental note to tell him how much I hated him at that point but I can’t thank him enough for carrying me through the hardest part of my day.
I made it up around the lake, still holding 3rd, suffering more than I ever have before. I reminded myself that this is where the special stuff happens. I could feel 4th breathing down my neck. With 1.5 miles to go, Tim went by saying “You’re going with me right now. Let’s go!” I tried my hardest and couldn’t. My mind couldn’t convince my legs to move any more. I was in luck it could get them to move at all. I made it to the turn around, about 0.9 miles from the finish, and saw that 4th was catching me and only about 45-60 seconds back. It was time to have another conversation with myself. “You’re either into Kona if there are 3 slots or you’re on the bubble looking for a roll. If you let this go now, you have almost no chance. Get tough, and bring it home. If this thing rolls, it’s going to you!” I was able to have my first sub 8:00 mile since mile 18, most of which were around 9:00ish between 18-25 (Like I said, real ugly!). The only time I’ve been happier to see a finish line was IMLP 2014 after the crash and a different kind of suffering all day. I made sure to take it all in, grab a bunch of high fives on the way in and get over to my friends and family as quickly as I could. Food wasn’t happening for a while even though I was starving. The onslaught of coke and red bull left me feeling awful.



Overall 10:04:51 (3 M25-29 / 18 OA)
I finished up in 3rd and we crossed our fingers that it would be enough to get to Kona. We didn’t allow it to drag on, just kind of put it out of our hands and enjoyed the rest of the night the best we could. I was very happy with my race and extremely proud of my efforts and where I chose to spend my budget.

Awards:
We showed up to awards and quickly found the slot allocation sheet. My heart sank as I looked at he paper and saw that there were only two slots in my AG and I couldn’t imagine anybody would be racing this close to Kona if they already had a slot. I went back to the table, thanked everybody for the support and thought “Great, on the bubble again. Which race will I attack now?”


I went to grab some food where I ran into Rooney. I wanted to congratulate him on a strong run and a well deserved 2nd place podium. I’ll never forget what came out of his mouth next “Thanks, I don’t want to do that again for a loooong time. I just want to focus on the short stuff.” Suddenly, there was hope again. If he didn’t take his slot, I was next in line. I grabbed food and went back to our table to spread the news. We had an hour to wait until we would know for sure. At one point, Tim came up to me and said “You were third, right?!” After I verified, he said “Great, pack your bags. You’re going. Rooney isn’t taking his slot”
Awards concluded and we got to the roll down. To my surprise, Kevin didn’t take his slot. He said that he took one in Chattanooga already. As expected Rooney turned his slot down. I claimed the first. For whatever reason, 4th didn’t take his slot, and 5th grabbed the second. That was it, we were going to Kona! We all celebrated, hugged, and started booking hotels, flights etc immediately.


Afterward:
It took a few days to settle in since I had to rush back to Richmond and move into a new house, which is quite possibly the worst activity to do post Ironman. My first feelings about the race were a guilt. I know that I have sacrificed a lot over the past 3 years to get to The Big Island but all I could think of was how much everybody around me sacrificed of themselves to help me get there. From cooking meals for me, helping me with errands when I didn’t have time to take care of them, helping me stay current with the best equipment, or being there for some encouraging words when things didn’t quite go as planned, I cannot thank my team enough! No matter how close I got to a slot in the past, people were quick to say, “It’s only a matter of time. Just keep going.” Without that type of support and belief, this goal can become convoluted and feel out of reach.
Not a bad ride home. Thanks Ed!

The question I find myself answering the most is: “I’m so glad you finally made it, are you going to race it OR take it all in and enjoy it?” I have a simple answer: YES! I do this because I love it. I love to race, I love to suffer, I love to push myself and see how deep I can dig. What better opportunity to do that than toeing up against the best in the world? I will race Kona, and I will enjoy it, and I will take it all in every step of the way. This has been a dream for as long as I can remember and I’m glad to have so many family members and friends willing to put themselves in a tight position just to be able to go with me and enjoy this experience. I could write an entire post thanking people, but it’d be pointless. You already know who you are and how much you mean to me. I’ll be repping some BTC gear on The Big Island, and hopefully as many of my friends as possible can join my family as we take this all it. Aloha!

Huge thanks to Tim Snow and QT2Systems for supporting me and getting me where I am, with more to look forward to.
Quintana Roo for a sweet new PRSix that’ll hopefully be ready to ride in Kona.
Blueseventy for the speediest suit on the planet.
Shimano for the smoothest shifting gears I’ve ever experienced.
Powerbar for the training and racing fuel.
Infinit for the bombproof endurance formulas (Use code INFINIT-B2BLS for $5 off first order and 5% off subsequent orders)

Monday, June 8, 2015

Raleigh 70.3 Race Report

Breakout OR Breakdown
After putting in a very solid pre-season and base, I was ready to use Raleigh as a measuring stick to compare my current fitness to where I was last year. I was also eager to get back out and the bike course and figure out what on earth happened out there. I had pushed more power than I ever had before and nailed my HR goals yet a 2:31 left me scratching my head. I had a little unexpected success at the Kinetic Half distance triathlon in the beginning of May so I was really interested in seeing what I could do on this course. The motto for the weekend was “Breakout OR Breakdown” meaning I was ready to have a huge result or bury myself trying.
Friday afternoon, I got my bags packed as I was waiting for my buddy Wills to arrive from Rochester. We got to bed early and slept in until 8 knowing that Saturday nights sleep was uncertain. We hit the road around 9AM and made it to Raleigh right around 11:45AM.
Once in Raleigh, we took care of chekc in, grabbed some brunch at Big Ed’s Country Kitchen, dropped our bikes off then checked into the hotel to pack and shave before heading to Mellow Mushroom to chow down on pizza.
Saturday night, we crammed a whole mess of people into our hotel room and fell asleep around 10PM
The alarm went off at a very dark 3:50AM and we stuffed our face with pancakes as we made our final bag preps and loaded up to head into the city at 4:30AM. We stayed at the comfort Inn but in the future, we may try to find a hotel right in the city to make race morning that much easier. Nonetheless, parking was easy and the drive was a very short 2 miles from the shuttle.
We made it onto a shuttle slgithly after 5:10AM and hunkered down for along morning of waiting. We got to the beach around 5:50AM and our wave didn’t start until 8:12AM. We took a lot of time to slowly and methodically prepare our gear, snack on banana bites, sip on Infinit, and use the bathroom multiple times.
As soon as we stepped off the bus, we found out that the water was too warm for wetsuits; a swimmers delight! Luckily, I keep my swimsuit packed with my wetsuit so I had a real nice, fast suit to wear over my race kit. unfortunately, the referees were being very particular that no material was covering shoulders during the swim at risk of a 5 minute penalty. I planned on wearing my speedsuit over my race kit on the bike but the shoulder rule gave me issues. As I saw it, I had 3 options:
  1. Roll up the sleeves and hope they didn’t roll down in the water. Dryland tests made me realize that the material was far too tight around my shoulders and I didn’t want to risk that. Option 1 out.
  2. Wear the bottom of the speedsuit and tuck the upper half of the speedsuit into the back of my swimskin. I know that the speedsuit is difficult to get on when dry and I didn’t want to wrestle with in while I was in transition. Option 2 out.
  3. Forget the speedsuit. At the expense of giving some time back on the bike, I opted to forget the speedsuit. This eliminated any time it would have taken me to put it on in transition, the hassle of wrestling with it.
While waiting for our wave, we were able to get in for a nice long warm up. Last year, I swam solo here and knew I’d have to be warmed up enough to put some work in. This wouldn’t play out like an Ironman swim where I cna sit on feet and warm up through the swim. Had to have the engines ready to roar right out of the gate.
Swim (00:27:45 2 M25-29/ 15 OA): Strava File
As the horn souded, there was a bit of thrashing until things settled out pretty quickly. I eyed everybody up in the first 200-300 yards knowing that it would be very difficult to keep track of anybody once we started swimming through the endless waves ahead of us. From what I could tell, there was one swimmer wide-left who looked to be losing pace, one guy directly in front of me setting the pace, and the rest of the field crumbling behind us. A few swimmers were nipping at my feet in the opening yards but they quickly fell off. About 5 minutes into the swim a switch went off in my head telling me, “It’s time to get to work. You’re not going to be happy throwing time away on this guys feet.” I got up on his left hip, relaxed for a second then made a quick surge to pass him and open up a little gap on him. I was able to snap the rubber band pretty easily and he was history. If you had asked me, I came out in fron of that wave without question. To my surprise, it turns out there was somebody else out there that swam by me at some point. I honestly don’t know what happened as I had eyes on everybody off the line and didn’t see anybody go by but it was a bit chaotic out there and I guess it’s possiblehe rolled by me at some point. Either way, I am happy with my swim and know I stood a chance at hanging with the lead pro group. They weren’t that much faster than me, they had calmer, cleaner water to swim, and didn’t have to navigate through hundreds of bodies on course. Maybe someday ;)

T1 (1:38):
Swim to Bike transitions at this race are a breeze. The only way to make T1 shorter would be to include it in the swim course. I was fortunate enough to have a very easy spot to find about halfway through transition. I took an extra second or two to make sur eall my belongings ended up in my bag and I was on my way. It wsa great to see friends at the exit as I knew that I wouldn’t see them until the ride was over.
Starting my assault on the bike course
Bike (02:21:06 3 M25-29/ 23 OA): Strava File
In the past month, I have tweaked my riding just a tad and it has been giving me some pretty major results. I was eager to get outon this course and see how those changes translated. I was also hoping the wind decided to be at our backs instead of in our face, as it was last year. Right out of transition, we climbed for a bit to get out of the park and onto the roads. The bike course was new this year, as evidenced by the addition of an early out and back that allowed us to start rolling right away. I could tell in the first 10 minutes that this was going to be a frustrating bike course. It was absolutely packed with bikes,  a luxury of being one of the last waves to start. I think I blew my lungs out yelling “On your left,” most of the way through the course. One benefit of the congestion was that I had to stay focused at all times and did not fall asleep and becaue of this heightened awareness, the time was flying by. I coudln’t believe how fast the first hour flew by. Lately, I have broken my 70.3 rides down into 5x30 minute sections to help myself mentally and I forgot to lap at the hour because I just wasn’t expecting it to hit that quick. Aside from the bike and vehicle traffic, I loved this course. I felt as though I was gaining momentum the entire ride and my average speeds reflected that until the last 10 miles where we started to climb back into the city. One huge benefit of my placement in the waves was that I came out of the water with a lot of 30-40 year old guys that were trying to chase down the swimmers form their group. I was able to work with them a ton and a group of about 4-6 of us stuck together and paced each other through the majority of the ride. I was extremely pleased that when a new member came into the group and tried to ride off the front of it, I was able to go with them and not spike my HR or power. I ended up dropping the majority of these guys on the final run into town and was very pleased to get off the bike in a new 70.3 bike PR. I rode 2:22 a few weeks back but it was on a short course. Riding 2:21 on a verified course was a huge motivator.
I was very good about my nutrition, having two bottles of Infinit mixed to 315 calories, one lara bar halfway through the ride, a few salt capsulses as needed and a flask of UCAN with 10 miles to go. The flask of UCAN was new for me as I was looking to feel more stable and alert through the run. I’m typicaly running hard enough that taking care of nutrition on the run course is not really an option. It’s more a game of taking care of it on the bike and keeping the system happy on the run. The UCAN worked well as far as hunger was concerned. I wasn’t starving the last 30 minutes of the run per usual.
T2 (2:00):
I was lucky again with my T2 placement as my bike was in the second row as we entered transition. Nothing to report here. Got in and out smooth taking just enough time to make sure my socks were on well. I knew I was going to be soaked from dumping water on myself on the hot course and wanted to try to mimimize any chance of blisters. Wool socks are clutch btw.
Run (01:29:57 2 M25-29/ 26 OA): Strava File


It gave me a huge surge to come flying out of T1 and see friends again. I noticed that I had been on the course for 2:52 and knew that the race was mine to mess up. Another year of heat acclimation and experience on this course allowed my run plan from last year to actually work this year. Really focus on running the uphill sections steady and strong and try not to beat the crap out of the quads on the downhills while letting the HR drop a few beats. I made it up the first 3 mile climb running faster than anticipated, roughly 6:45 miles and man were they turning over easy. At the top of the hill, I told myself “Just be smart and get here again, then let it rip home.” Running the downhill portion of theh course was killing me. I tried my best to focus on run form and allowing the HR to drop from 170s to as close to 165 as I could get. This turned out to be about 168 but I was still holding onto the pace very well. I came through town and tried to check my emotions. My support crew was very excited for me and I knew that things were going great. I made it through the first half of the run course in 45 min and still had some gas in the tank. If I lost focus anywhere in this race, it was on the second climb. I was paying attention to run form and staying as easy as I could. I unintentionally let the HR drop a little and had some of my slowest miles of the day by a considerable margin. The good news, I made it to the top of the hill feelings great and it was time to put in my last 20ish minutes of work. I turned the screws a little bit on the way down the hill and was happy to see some miles coming back under 7 minutes for me. With 1.5-2 miles to go I knew I had enough gas in the tank to let it rip a little bit. It was highly uncomfortable but I kept taking deep breaths and finding comfort in my discomfort. I started pretending people were chasing me down in the last mile, for all I knew they might have been on the wave-clock, and was able to close out the race in a mile around 6 flat. Looking back, I probably ran a little scared and could take some more chances and dig deeper into the pain cave earlier in the run.

Overall (04:22:26 2 M25-29/ 26 OA):
The finishing stretch takes an eternity to run but I turned the corner as 4:20 ticked off on my watch and I told myself there was no chance I was going to see the 23rd minute of the 5th hour of the race. I buckled down, dug deep, and finished off the day with an exclamation point. My friends were waiting for me at the finish and it was great to give everybody a hug and smile elthoguh I was far too spent to show my true excitement. They know how appreciative I am of them and how much it means to me that they were there. Their presence certainly allowed me to put it all out on the line today. I spent the rest of my day cheering on friends and bringing my boys on course home. Although the temperature may not have reflected it, it was a hot day out on that course and it was a tough one to fight through.
I’d like to extend a huge thank you to my friends that made the trip to support us, my friends and family that could not attend but sent positive words of encouragement and congratulations, my BTC family who I always keep close to my heart as I race, QT2 Systems for keeping my fitness tuned up and ever-improving, and Peluso Open Water for whipping me into perhaps the best swim shape I’ve been in since I was a college swimmer.
Spent soooo much time with this crew over the weekend.
I look forward to putting some work in between now and Syracuse at the end of the month. I’ll be heading to NY for that race then sticking around to train and get ready for Placid camp at the end of June. Lots of tough work ahead of my but it will all be worth it at the end of July. I’m hungry for Placid! Until next time, get after it!

Danny Boy