Race Report | IRONMAN 70.3 Maine 2018

Race information

Goals

Goal Description Completed?
A <4:44 Yes
B Top 10% overall Yes
C Top 5% overall Yes

Training

Picking up after my first ever HIM in May, and after my wedding and honeymoon, I restarted Matt Fitzgerald’s 80/20 Half Ironman Plan (Level 8) so that it lined up with this race.

I developed some severe shin splints and after an x-ray, MRI, and several doctor visits, I was able to get custom orthotics and some PT to help rehab. However, I was not running for about 7 weeks for most of May and June. I had to ease back into running, which was difficult coming off of some of the best fitness I had ever experienced. Whereas I hit 32 miles/week before my race in May, I was only able to get to low 20s before Maine.

On the other hand, the running injury let me focus more on biking and swimming, both of which were in really good places leading up to Maine. I tried to incorporate some strength training again, but was inconsistent as volume increased.

Gear

This was my first race on my Trek Speed Concept 2018, and I continued to use my Castelli Free Sanremo trisuit, Hoka One One Clayton 2 shoes, Garmin FR935 watch, and Louis Garneau bike shoes. I also love my Injinji toe socks for blister prevention and Zoot PCH running shorts in training!

Pre-race

I drove up to Old Orchard Beach with my parents and wife on Friday. On the way, I had to say yes to a lobster roll for lunch so we hit up a nice little spot on the coast.

We checked in to our AirBNB in Saco about 10 minutes away at a great house with a small pool. I then headed over to the Ironman Village to see what the whole Ironman thing was about. I was impressed with the vendors, check-in process, and merch tent. I got a short run in that evening with a few strides to get the legs going.

On Saturday, I woke up a bit early to check out the swim course in morning conditions to assess the glare, wind, and waves and got about a mile in. It’s a pretty cool course starting under the shadow of the pier. After that, ate some breakfast and checked my bike in. We then drove most of the bike course, which was a good idea since there are some tight turns, and some stretches of rough surface…and it is 1 lap so you won’t see anything twice. Overall, it is a great layout with no major climbs and the second half is generally flat or downhill. We actually found a farmstand while driving the course and picked up some fresh produce for meals!

With three sherpas, it definitely made prepping for the race easier as well. I was able to get a solid pizza dinner in, and probably my usual ~5 hours of sleep that night.

I got to transition around 5:15am, and it was dark. Consider bringing a headlamp, but they did have spotlights. The transition area is in a parking lot, so there were patches of grass separating rows of bikes that gave people extra space to put stuff rather than under your bike.

Swim: 25:xx

Water temp 64 degrees. It was extreme low tide, so there was a good 100 yards extra beach and shallow water to run through, which is why my time was so low. Water can be colder than 60, so we got lucky there. Winds were down, and only some mild rollers once you got out past the breakers. The course is basically a square, going out, left, and back. I was almost able to catch a wave on the way in, and was very happy with my time as I exited the water ahead of most.

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T1

Wetsuit peelers were at swim exit to help. After getting the arms off and down to your waist, you sit on your butt and they yank the legs. It is a long run on pavement to transition on cold feet, which was a little rough but not damaging. The temperature was high 60s at this point, and no issues with my visor or anything.

Bike: 2:19:xx

This was my first race on my new Trek Speed Concept, and had only ridden it a few time making me feel a little apprehensive. However, I felt good, and knew I was towards the front of the race. I found a guy in front of me, and used him as motivation to keep up (legally). We passed each other a couple times, until we hit a group of 3 other guys. Soon enough, a pack of 4-5 magically showed up at the same time from behind. I believe most of these guys worked together and I saw at least one get flagged to the penalty box. I was unable to stick with this group beyond about mile 35 (I think they were some of the race leaders eventually), but was very happy with my pace so I kept at it – in fact I was by myself for a solid 30-40 minutes. Being a 1 lap course, I did not have to deal with passing slower folks which was nice! The rolling hills allowed for a nice change of effort and gearing to avoid using the same muscles for 2 hours straight. I kept to the same nutrition as with Monticelloman, but had a bottle between my arms, and one behind my seat.

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T2

I wasn’t able to look at my watch, so was unaware how fast I went, but I shaved about 13 minutes off my previous best bike split. I felt pretty good as I quickly slid on my shoes and grabbed my race belt, hat and sunglasses.

Run: 1:37:55

I started out of transition and tried to keep my effort in check as was my usual strategy. There were a decent number of spectators cheering, so that was awesome, but made it harder to go easy. Aid stations were plentiful, and volunteers were great.

Knowing that I was unable to train as much, I was hoping to match my run from Monticelloman. I started out a bit faster, and through the first loop, was probably averaging a little under 7:20. The 2-loop course is pretty fast, mostly shaded (if you’re done by 11am or so), and has a nice chunk on packed gravel trail. There are also two decent, short, hills that keep you honest. I definitely faded a bit, but with 4 miles to go I finally looked at my total time, and saw that I could break 4:30 if I averaged about 7:30/mile. This was a true shock, and gave me a new reason to suffer over the last few miles. As I got closer, I was doing the math and ended up breaking that barrier with seconds to spare. It was a real struggle through the red carpet, but it was cool to experience the IM finish chute for the first time and I managed an arm pump.

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Post-race

I easily spotted my family, and they were super excited for me, and the performance. They put in a lot of effort trying to see me at multiple spots, which was nice to have. The finisher medal, finisher visor, race shirt and race bag were easily the best swag I’ve received at any race to date.

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I probably needed to take in more calories and sodium during the run, as I was hurting badly after finishing. I have never been that tingly, light-headed, and shaky before, but I was fine walking and talking. I was able to take a turn in the Normatec recovery boots, and I felt like a new man after that – seriously helped a lot.

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The post-race food was good, and the lobster bake option is certainly nice (I’d consider skipping that and going to a real lobster pound, but to each his own). What was really cool was the big tent with tables and chairs where athletes and family/friends could hang together as opposed to segregated like some events.

The finish line is a 10-15 minute walk from transition, so logistics after the race are pretty brutal. Old Orchard Beach is a family beach town with lots of people walking everywhere and the central area around the pier gets very congested. Try to plan ahead as best you can, and don’t forget the train tracks that run through town making it tough to get where you need to go in a direct manner.

We then stayed in Southwest Harbor near Acadia National Park for 4 more days eating lobster, drinking good wine, and taking in the amazing scenery until we couldn’t move…great recovery!

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Race Report | Monticelloman Half 2018

Race information

  • What? Monticelloman
  • Where? Palmyra, VA
  • When? May 6th, 2018
  • How far? 70.3 miles
  • Website? Monticelloman

Goals

Goal Description Completed?
A < 5 hours Yes
B < 30 min Swim Yes
C Top 3 Age Group Yes

Background: This is my 1st HIM and 8th tri in total. I did my first sprint in 2015 and was horrible (virtually no running experience, new to road bikes, and swam through high school). I actually trained in 2016 and dropped 12 mins or so and got AG podium, and did another sprint as well. Last year I did 3 Oly/1 Sprint with a couple more AG podiums and a 2nd overall in small-medium races. My plan is to go HIM distance in 2018 to potentially set-up a full IM in 2019.

Training: After last tri season, I decided to do my first HM in November and went about 7:28/mi pace, which I was thrilled with. I have been following training plans and have not had a coach. For this race, I started Matt Fitzgerald’s “Level 8” HIM 20-week plan (12 hours/week average) which has 4 swims, 3 runs, 3 bikes, 1 brick per week. I also followed the first 3 phases of this strength program from a TrainingPeaks blog by Shane Neimeyer. Toward the second half of my plan, I was hard-pressed to find time for strength sessions, so I did what I could.

Gear: This was my first race of the season on my Cervelo R2 2017 with Profile Design T1+ aerobars and the Redshift seatpost, and I continued to use my Castelli Free Sanremo trisuit, Hoka One One Clayton 2 shoes, Garmin FR935 watch, and Louis Garneau bike shoes. I also love my Injinji toe socks for blister prevention and Zoot PCH running shorts in training!

Pre-race: Drove ~4 hours to Charlottesville the day before race, picked up race packet at the venue and scoped out the lake and bike course. The venue is awesome – a gated community – with nice facilities. The swag, shirt, and packet were above average (we got T-blocks with our names/numbers on them too). The weather was a bit iffy with impending rain, but temps and wind were both looking pretty ideal. I did a quick 20 minute ride along some of the run course to just loosen the legs and felt great.

With a later race start at 8:30am, was able to get up at 6am, which was nice. Oatmeal, PB, banana and a bit of berry smoothie. Drove to venue, quick run warm-up with no issues from lingering shin soreness. Got transition set-up (put stuff in plastic bags in case of rain), put wetsuit on and got a brief swim in the lovely 68F water.

Swim: 29:18 – Water temp 68 degrees. Lake water with almost no breeze. Beach start with small field of about 60 men, had to run a bit diagonally across beach to our left, so I stayed on land as long as I could until getting into the water and ultimately co-leading a few guys out. I tried to draft (not much experience there), but the other guy was moving around a bit and took a different line out to the first buoy, which was the long point of the triangular course. At the buoy, I rejoined the other leader and got on his feet most of the way home, which definitely helped save some energy. Got out of the water just behind him feeling good despite swimming just 1-2 seconds slower than my threshold pace.

T1: 1:55 Had to pay attention to getting wetsuit off over my watch and the weird chip timer on my ankle that couldn’t go under the wetsuit at all. Worked that out, washed sand off feet in buckets provided en route to the racks, and got onto the bike in pretty quick fashion. Weather still dry, and a bit cool under 60F.

Bike: 2:32:19 (~21.7mph). I am still riding my Cervelo R2 road bike with clip-on aerobars and forward seatpost, so sacrificing some time to the guys with serious tri bikes. I led the race for about 15 miles of the bike, being led by a motorcycle (pretty cool), and got chased by two dogs, one of which was gaining on me at 21mph so I had to accelerate! 3 guys passed me toward end of first lap, but I was happy with my position. The first lap went well in 22.2mph pace, but the rain started on lap 2, more traffic from vehicles and bikers from shorter distance races, and my legs felt much heavier. So I tried to back off a bit and was able to recover for last 15 mins or so, averaging 21.5mph. Since I was soaking wet, and had to pee…well figure out what happened (never done it before, why not while in my first HIM in the top 4?!). For nutrition, I consumed a large bottle (~32oz) of gatorade with nuun tablet, 1.5 regular bottles of water, 2.5 GU stroopwaffles, 1 GU gel.

T2: 2:45 Rain soaked everything but my shoes and socks, but took me a while to loosen my fingers and get my toe socks on (such a pain, but absolutely love how they prevent blisters). Then spent a few seconds stretching as I know my lower legs can tighten up. High-fived my dad on the way out, feeling good despite some doubts on bike.

Run: 1:37:45 (7:28/mi pace). Course is a roller coaster with lots of rollers and some small loops though the neighborhood. First mile I could not help myself despite trying, and went 7:05, but was able to slow myself on mile 2, when I linked up with the leader of the female race, and we quickly joined forces and ran the whole way together at a good clip. Thanks for the motivation, Katie! I was happy to see my heart rate stabilize in the mid 160s where I was pretty confident I could hold it. For nutrition, I took 2.5 GU gels over the course of the run, and took water/HEED at each station until about mile 8 where I alternated. There were no volunteers giving out water, so we had to stop and pour our own at all but 1 or 2 spots. That cost us at least a minute, but might’ve helped limit myself.

Finish time: 04:44:01

I crushed my time goal, and each leg was as good as I could have hoped for. 4th male, 5th overall, 1st in AG.

Post race: Got some pizza, bananas, and lots of water. Was hoping for some gatorade or coke. There were showers available, which was nice before the awards and long drive home.

Overall, the venue and course were great (albeit a bit short on bike and maybe .1 on the run), however there were a few issues with vehicular traffic, and lack of volunteers/people at aid stations. I would do it again if I lived closer.

What’s next: Getting married, a few sprints and olympics, then IM 70.3 Maine in August. Going to be focusing on muscular endurance and improving my bike time.

Thanks for reading!

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