Much more fun than a stressful Ironman triathlon - on Sunday I compete in the 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.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Ironman Frankfurt
A week ago Sunday I did my long race of the year, ironman Frankfurt, my second full ironman event.
My start was not auspicious - 8 minutes before the gun went off for the swim, a fellow triathlete tried to zip up my wetsuit and then sheepishly handed me a broken off zipper. It was a disconcerting sight, but I simply did not have time to be too distressed, I just ran to the official tent to see if someone could fix it - pins? tape? but the officials merely suggested that I swim without a wetsuit which I knew with absolute certainty would not work for me. So I plunged back in the water at the last second and begun swimming from the back of the pack with an unzipped wetsuit. Swimming 3.8k in an unzipped wetsuit did not prove to be the end-of-the-world despite the discomfort, friction, drag (and I suppose as usual for me I looked really stupid). The more pressing challenge was the massive wall of swimmers in front of me because I started at the back. I expected to be kicked in the face at the start, but I was battling crowds throughout, and had my goggles knocked off twice, both times in the second lap. Somehow I passed much of field and was pretty happy with my 1:16:02 swim split.
Four years ago, on a sweltering Tokyo July day I read teammate Mika's Ironman Switzerland race report and I felt so baffled and (admittedly) disdainful that she could drop out of a summer bike race because of cold. Last Sunday I felt like I might need to drop out of the bike ride because of cold. The other 2,500 triathletes at Frankfurt however did not seem to be having too much problem with the rain and wind during the first 90k of the ride, but I found myself shaking like a leaf (and i was wearing arm warmers while most guys were just wearing singlets). I kept wishing for uphill sections which allowed me to warm up a bit, and I kept dreading downhills. Finally at around 90k the sun came out and my pace picked up above 30k per hour. The countryside was beautiful, I felt great and i grew confident that I could realize my goal of breaking 6 hours. But then somehow I slowed dramatically on the final 20k of the ride.
After that my run was just a mess. After a weak start I picked it up to 5 minute pace around 5k to 15k, but then I just deteriorated into a death slog.
My overall time was 11:50:28.
I kept trying to keep in mind the advice teammate Chris always told me - "it does not matter how much you actually train, what matters is that you believe in your training". Well, hmmm, self-delusion can only carry you so far - in retrospect it appears that I had done good training for the short, fast running 5k time trial I did 10 days earlier. I always intended to do minimalist training for the Ironman, but then incorporate longer bike and run training in the month or so before Frankfurt, but in the end it seems I repeatedly cut my longer workouts short.
After the race our friend Stephane emphatically said to me "for us guys after doing the Ironman distance, of course we never have desire to go back to a shorter distance like a half-ironman". I just looked at him kind of blankly thinking, "Huh, wtf? All I have been thinking about is how much I would prefer to do a half-ironman."