Tuesday, December 18, 2012
2012 Run Mileage
Here is my 2012 run mileage chart from Running Ahead:
Wow, I really did not run much distance again in 2012. The 42k
marathon run during Ironman in July jumps out as a significant portion
on the bar chart.
So efforts to gradually increase mileage in 2013 is starting from a low base.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Taiwan
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
BBQ 10k
My triathlon teammates are horrified that I am expending energy on what they deem frivolous events with my "A" race -- the Taiwan Half-Ironman -- coming up this Saturday. I had been concerned about this myself. But then, (1) I don't think the taper matters that much, (2) I didn't expend 100% effort on Sunday, and (3)when I stand back and think about it - the "frivolous" races have been more gratifying than eeking out improvement on my middle-of-the-pack finishes in the big triathlon events. The events I have enjoyed the most this year (the Fussen Fun Run, Dawg Dash, Namban BBQ Run) have all been "frivolous"
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Dawg Dash 10k
Friday, September 21, 2012
Murakami Triathlon 2012
Sunday I competed in the Murakami Olympic Distance Triathlon - the unofficial "gaijin triathlon championship of Japan" and ostensibly one of my key "A" races of the year.
Last year I did my Olympic Distance personal best at Murakami - 2:21:17. Naturally I had a base goal of improving on my PB at this year's event, especially given all the additional training I have done in 2012.
Instead I finished in 2:34:03, almost 13 minutes slower than last year and I place lower in all three components of the triathlon. Pretty bad, but not quite as bad as it sounds.
Swim -- 31:45 (200th of 732)
In contrast to all my other swim races, I got out to a smooth start (13 minutes at the turnaround), then struggled coming in. I seemed to be overtaking other swimmers on the return half of the swim but struggled to get to the outside and around all the blue caps - the slower swimmers from the first wave (meanwhile the yellow-capped faster swimmers started swimming were also trying to do the same thing and swim over the top of us) . I don't recall ever being as exhausted coming off a triathlon swim leg as I was on Sunday. I usually am a bit dazed as I stagger out of the water and switch into a run into T1, but on Sunday I was so tired I walked all the way to my bike. Before the race I had tried to visualize a rapid T1. In the actual race I was simply too tired to move quickly and plopped down and methodically stripped off my wetsuit, then plodded through the incredibly lengthy zone from my bike to the mark where we could mount and ride.
Bike -- 1:17:27 (85th of 732)
I rode OK (even though this year's bike split is 7 minutes slower than my time last year). The time-consuming transitions are included in the official bike split, and there was a stronger headwind on the outbound section. Teammate Chris P blew past me like I was not even moving, but otherwise I was mostly passing people. (I was in the 2nd of 5 waves and it seemed like I hardly saw any teammates on the course).
I was amazingly surprised by my level of dehydration. The amazing part being that in all my previous triathlons, (the majority in warm conditions), I have never struggled with such dehydration. I am usually like a camel. Typically I get half way through the bike ride and realize I haven't taken a single sip from my water bottle – apparently because my body temperature is so cool after the swim. Even at Phuket Triathlon I had to force myself to slug down most of my first bottle right before the bottle exchange. On Sunday I was dying of thirst from the very start of the bike (and there was no bottle exchange, just one bike aid station with tiny cups of water and the bottle on my bike).
Run -- 44:51 (83rd)
At the first run aid station I inhaled 3 full bottles of water. It took me a full 16 minutes just to get to the 3k mark. After that I settled into a roughly 4 minute per kilometer pace (my goal run pace on this day). As usual after the event, my teammates only ask me about my run time. They are shocked and horrified when I told them my relatively abysmal time.
It was a nice weekend trip. Still I am not sure I will sign up for this triathlon next year if it is on the same weekend and we risk facing similar conditions. If I do participate I will certainly have more hydration ready.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Fussen 10k
The accompanying picture provides a sense for the day's frivolity - here we are having a PRE-RACE banana-split loading lunch in Fussan's charming central square.
Fussan is a postcard perfect Bavarian town at the base of the Austrian Alps. The 10k entailed 3-loops each involving dashing through the cobblestone streets of the town followed by opening it up along a long, riverside bicycle path.
My times for the three loops were - 12:25, 12:45, and 12:42, for a total of 37:52 was good for first place in my age group and 11th overall.
We were cheered on by the throngs of people relaxing at the outdoor cafes that line the course. On each loop through the city's main street I got a nice boost to hear the crowd yell when the announcer called out my name and that I was coming all the way from America.
I seemed to be recovering reasonably well from the Ironman two weeks earlier and all the cycling I had been doing in between through the Bavarian countryside and along the Rhine. And the banana split seemed to work.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Ironman Frankfurt
Monday, June 18, 2012
Oshima Triathlon 2012
My time of 2:18:35 for the 5k run / 40k bike / 10k run is a full 11 minutes slower than in 2011. The slower time is due to the big theme of this year's event - a brutal headwind which slowed everyone's bike
times. In fact I seemed to have performed relatively better versus the (larger) field in 2012, an improvement which I would like to attribute to my better training in 2012. But the improvement may be largely due to my not being so ridiculously inept on the transitions this year.
Swim -
In the weeks leading up to Oshima I just presumed the swim section might be cancelled as usual. When our overnight boat pulled into the
island harbor on Saturday morning and the waters were glass calm I was a bit concerned -- "we may actually have to swim" Then, as expected,
the winds start to pick up as race time approached and the waves started getting larger. Still there was no announcement of swim cancellation and the participants all dutifully marched down to shoreline shivering in our wetsuits in the fierce pelting rain, staring at the
dark, angry roiling ocean. Only at the last second did the race officials announce the swim had been replaced by a 5k run.
Run 1 -
So I tried to follow my strategy of trying to pretend the first run is the only race of the day -- be tough and forget about the subsequent bike and 10k run. As you can see from the adjacent picture I did struggle pretty hard on this 5k run... however my time of 19:42 hardly represents a great time for me compared to numerous other 5k runs I have done in the last six months.
Bike -
I found myself struggling into the wind on each of the 4 outbound
loops of the bike course, but then passing other cyclists on the
faster return section. Maybe my silly, waste of good money, aero
helmet helped after all.
Run 2 - Then the start of the 10k run was unusually tough - my first
kilometer took close to 5 minutes. Somehow, thanks to support of
teammates, I managed to settle into a decent pace into the wind and
finish reasonably solid.
Total - 2:18:35 (12th overall out of 346)
Run 1 - 19:42 (13th)
Bike - 1:18:24 (25th)
Run 2 - 40:29 (12th)
Friday, May 11, 2012
Cinco de Mayo Half Marathon
I compete in the Cinco de Mayo Half Marathon near Seattle last week. The course is flat and fast, and remarkably scenic -- winding through farmland at the base of the Cascades near the small town of North Bend.
I had dreams of breaking 80 minutes but I was not able to come close, despite the good conditions and my effort and pacing on race day. I was advised to stay behind a CNW runner, Laura, who ran like a metronome at 6:10 per mile pace. I ran in this pack of six for miles (picture). The pace felt so amazingly easy for the first 4 miles, and I really thought I could run negative splits.
But somewhere around mile 8 the pack split up and my strength faded despite all the bike training. I guess there is no substitute for event-specific training. My finish time was roughly 1:21:30.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Asia Triathlon Championship
The Tateyama Triathlon race officials mercifully cancelled the 1.5k swim sparing us from the 14-degree C ocean water followed by biking in sub-10 degree air temperature.
The swim was replaced with a 3-kilometer run which seemingly should have helped my competitive performance. And I was competitive on the 3k run, leading my wave with a 10:28 sprint. I was pretty competitive on the 40k bike too - I pushed myself through the crowded 6-loop course in 1:07:56, which was another decent bike effort for me. However my final 10k run time of 41:25 was abysmal. Conditions were perfect for running and I felt OK, I just could not find the speed.
Still my overall time of 2:02;25 was good for 21st overall in the Citizens division and 5th in my age group. It was a wonderful weekend with my teammates including a spectacular scenic ride around the tip of the Boso Penninsula.
And I am in the official race photo gallery with this sponsor friendly shot of me totally gassed at the finish line.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Sole Runner T1 Allrounder
Our mission was to see for ourselves whether the T1 Allrounder could actually out-do mother-nature in providing a natural, barefoot running experience. We were all pretty excited when our teammate Cory brought the shipment of T1 Allrounders to our track workout a month ago, and even more excited when we tried the shoes on and saw just how stylish they are (see picture).
In fact the Allrounder is just so fashionable that rather than run in them, I chose to wear them to the big party on my street the following weekend. The other wannabe urban hipsters were struggling to look cool in their heavy combat boots, their ballet flats and their tired old black-and-white check Converse. When I walked in wearing my T1 Allrounders conversations stopped as people looked admiringly at my shoe selection; numerous people asked me what they were and where they could buy them. I continue to wear them when lounging at various coffee shops, Harajuku clothing stores, and trendy bars. They even match my urban hipster bike messenger bag and gives me that random, ironic and eccentric look that we all are working so hard to achieve....
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Vegetable Half-Marathon
This race appears like it will be one of my few pure running events during what has become my "running season" -- the winter months from January to April.
I had fantasized about running 1:18 again, but that was a bit self-delusion given my condition these days (and the fact the course had a dozen 180-degree turns). The start on a track contributed to an over-zealous first 4k. I started to think negative panicky thoughts around the 4k mark and begun wimping out and slowing down. Fortunately I was able to man up and maintain roughly 19 minute per 5k pace for the next two loops. Here are my splits:
5k - 18:32
The run seemed like quite a struggle for me with many surges and slowing down -- relative to most all my other half-marathons in recent years, Chiang Mai, Arizona, Kanagawa, in which I seemed to cruise along straighter courses. Ultimately though I am pleased with the effort and will assume it represents my best possible time now.