Monday, August 18, 2008
Moving to a new home
Needless to say, three weeks response is terrible customer service, and I've moved to a new provider. So, if anyone is still coming to this site and you want to follow my triathlon escapades from here on out, go here:
http://thewoowilltri.wordpress.com
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
In "Lighter" News
Slow 8 mile run
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Long, Tough Ride
Today was a long ride. It turned out to be a great, tough workout. Lots of climbing, some rough road to navigate, and steady rain for about 20 minutes in the middle.
I struggled a bit toward the end - not having a long ride for a while set me back, and my back was getting sore. It felt good to get off. I averaged about 17.5 mph again and came in a bit under 2 hours. I thought about swinging back around for a couple extra miles to get to 2 hours, but it just didn't seem worth it with the way I was feeling.
One thing I've really enjoyed about riding is all the great scenery there is to see. I rode over to Abbeville, up to Hodges, and then back down and around the Northwest side of Greenwood.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Two more entries
- Greenville Triathlon on August 17 - A sprint triathlon with a 400m swim, 15 mile bike, and 5k run.
- Hickory Knob International Triathlon on October 11 - International distance triathlon with a 1500m swim, 28 mile bike, and 10k run.
Monday, July 21, 2008
Race Report – Asheville Triathlon Summary
I’m going to post my complete race report below in several parts. It’s quite lengthy, so if you have something better to do with your day, like wash your hair or clean your ears, just read the quick summary and feel free to tend to your ear wax. If you like being bored and want to read about my race, then start at the bottom with the preface and read each part in order!
Summary:
Awesome day, awesome time, awesome friends.
OVERALL OFFICIAL RESULTS:
1:19:30
Male Novice Rank: 2/13
Overall Male Rank: 65/123
Race Report – TrySports Asheville Triathlon – Part 5 – Run and Epilogue
After leaving transition, there is a short but steep climb around the parking lot, then down and across the bridge. I felt okay, though I was a little worried after I’d worked a little harder in the bike than planned. My legs were heavy, though I wasn’t hurting at all.
As I was plodding along, I knew I was only running about a 10:00 pace. I wanted to pick that up, as sub 9:00 was my “outstanding day” goal, but no matter how much I willed my legs to move faster, they just didn’t.
I was smiling, having a great time, not winded, heart rate was reasonable in the mid-160s, and I knew I’d have absolutely no problem finishing. I was talking to people who were coming back in. I got passed by a couple fast dudes. No problem there, I was expecting it. Then I got passed by a kid with an 11 on his calf. Yep, he was 11 years old. Damn. And this wasn’t like he crept by me. He blew my doors off.
I saw HilWoo about 1.25 miles into my run coming in on the bike. She looked great! And I was relieved as well. She’s strong on the bike, but was riding her mountain bike and on those hills I just didn’t know how she’d fare. Needless to say, she was awesome, and had a great bike split. It was fun to see her and get to yell encouraging things!
I hit the turnaround point, and headed for home. If I was going to turn it up in the run it needed to happen now, in the last 1.5 miles. It didn’t. I just couldn’t move these massive legs any faster.
Shortly after the turnaround, I got chicked (triathlon term for when a man gets passed by a woman) for the 2nd time of the day. The first was in the pool, but it sure stung the ego more on the run. That said, I was running SO SLOW that I wasn’t surprised.
This was also the point where a lanky guy running quite fast passed me. He had an “N” on his calf. Argh! He was a novice, and had started behind me in the swim, so I knew now that I was no longer leading the novice group. I still wanted to finish strong, but up to that point I thought I might have a chance of winning the novice category. Oh well.
As I neared the bridge, I picked up the pace every so slightly, and wanted to finish looking strong, even if it was slow. The finish was back up the hill in the parking lot, then down the other side of the pool. The announcer read our names and hometown, and plugged Greenwood as the triathlon mecca of the Southeast, which it is.
I finished with a smile on my face and completely upright – it was an AWESOME feeling.
Official Run Results:
30:41
Male Novice Rank: 11/13
Overall Male Rank: 93/123
Clydesdale Rank: 7/10
End Result: The run was WAY too slow. I’d hoped to run it in around 27:00, and even that is a slow time. I know what I have to work on – getting that run down under 25:00 is the key for future races.
OVERALL OFFICIAL RESULTS:
1:19:30
Male Novice Rank: 2/13
Overall Male Rank: 65/123
Clydesdale Rank: 4/10
EPILOGUE:
It was an incredible day. I can’t describe how much fun I had. The race went well. I had set out some goals before heading to Asheville. My “the race couldn’t go better and there were no hiccups and I surprised myself” time was 1:15:00. My “good effort, nothing crazy special, but solid all the way through” time was 1:25:00. And finally, my “drowned in the pool, hit the wall in mile 1 of the bike, and limped through the 5k” time was 1:35:00.
Considering I hadn’t seen the bike course, and likely would have revised those times upwards some, 1:19:30 was an excellent day. I can shave 30 seconds to a minute off of my total transition time, and I think I could have shaved another :45 to a minute off the bike if it weren’t for the “car in the way” problems.
Finding a way to run faster will definitely improve my overall performance. But, my ultimate goal at this point is running a half-ironman distance race next year, and slow is okay when running a half marathon at the end of a race rather than a 5k.
I’m planning on racing in the Greenville Sprint Traithlon in August, so hopefully I can bring that 5k time down quite a bit by then.
In the end, it was an awesome, awesome day, and I’m so happy I was able to do it – and be there with HilWoo as well. She was incredible, running her race in 1:32:22 and absolutely killing people in the bike while smiling all the way through. She’s awesome that way.
So, I’ll leave a few pictures at the end here just to sum up the day, and if they put up official race photos I’ll link to those later. There is a photo-spread in the Asheville paper here that has some photos, though we're not in any of them. Thanks for reading to the end!
Race Report – TrySports Asheville Triathlon – Part 4 – Bike and T2
Wow, was this a doozy. As I said before, when I drove the bike course it seemed fairly tough. And it was. The first 1.5-2 miles all being up a pretty decent grade is a tough way to start any bike race, but I settled in right away, tried to get some speed on the small amount of level grade before starting up the hill and then just told myself to be smooth and fast, and to try to avoid “pedal mashing” as much as possible. Unfortunately, on these hills, some pedal mashing was going to be necessary.
I started passing people right away – always with an encouraging word like “looking strong” or “way to go”, or a “good morning.” Triathlons are fun that way. Everyone seems in it together, and there was lots of encouragement.
As I turned up the big incline, I got out of my saddle and decided to push it fairly hard to the top. I passed about 15 bikers in that first 1.5 miles, and felt good about that. At the top of the hill I got some speed, and then tried to go easy for the next mile to get my heart rate back down (it was in the 170s – way too high on the bike!) and let my legs rest for a bit. Then I started flying. I was passing people left and right, riding hard, enjoying the cool air, and feeling really, really strong.
The only problems I had in the first half of the bike involved traffic. Twice I got behind a car that was following a biker going quite a bit slower than me, but wouldn’t pass without 8 miles of clear road ahead. Both times this happened I came up on the car toward the bottom of a hill, when I had a lot of speed I wanted to carry into the next climb, only to have to get on my brakes and wait for the car to pass the slower bikers, then power my way up the hill. Argh.
It probably didn’t cost me more than 30 seconds total, but it did cost me in terms of energy. Nothing to do about it, though, and I tried not to let it get to me.
Then, in the most beautiful section of the course, came the Hill of the Damned. I still get out of breath thinking about it. As I started around the corner and up the hill, it was carnage. There were at least a dozen people on this ¼ mile hill when I started up, and all but one of them were off their bikes, pushing. I geared way down, and about a quarter of the way up was out of my saddle pedaling hard. As I passed people on cruisers, mountain bikes, and quite a few road bikes, I tried to say something encouraging just to keep myself going. I passed a guy wearing bike shoes, click-clacking his way up the hill, and just thought, “I don’t want to have to walk up this in my bike shoes. NOT COOL.”
Anyway, I made it to the top, and caught the one other person who rode the whole way just over the apex.
It was pretty much all downhill for the last 5 miles at that point, with just a few small climbs that I carried a lot of speed into. I was cruising at 35+mph quite a bit of the time, hoping I saw the corners in time. The last 2.5 miles were flatter, down in a valley, and I also came upon runners at this point.
This was the only other time I had trouble with a car – with runners on one side of the road, and some slow bikers, combined with this driver’s not knowing where she wanted to go, I got caught sucking exhaust and did get a bit flustered. I was slowed WAY down waiting for her to pass or turn off. Finally she did and I busted past the next couple bikers, and saw the bridge back to the transition area.
The bike course was definitely a strong part of my race. I have no idea how many people I passed, other than it was definitely more than 30, and I WASN’T PASSED ONCE. Nobody even threatened to pass me.
I got in behind two other bikers coming into transition rather slowly, so took time to loosen my shoes and take one foot out as I came to the dismount area. Unfortunately, my other foot didn’t slip out, so I unclipped and headed into transition with one bare foot and one click-clacking shoe!
Official Bike Results:
37:47
Male Novice Rank: 1/13
Overall Male Rank: 39/123
Clydesdale Rank: 2/10
End Result: Awesome. I think I could have been sub-37:00 without the car issues, but otherwise the bike course was incredible. Looking at overall results, I was fairly competitive with the field, other than the rocket-ship-riding open category professionals that were down around 30-32 minutes.
TRANSITION 2:
After re-racking my bike and slipping off my other bike shoe, I took off my helmet and bandana, threw on my hat and shoes, grabbed my race belt, and headed for the stairs out the other side of the transition area. This was a fairly easy transition, but I wasn’t real fast.
Official T2 Results:
1:15
Male Novice Rank: 10/13
Overall Male Rank: ?
Clydesdale Rank: 5/10
End Result: 10/13 isn’t good, but I can easily shave 20-30 seconds off what I did, and in a race that’s well over an hour long, 20 seconds is hard to get too worked up about. I just need to practice a bit more.
Race Report – TrySports Asheville Triathlon – Part 3 – Swim and T1
I didn’t know what to expect from the swim. The only training I’ve done has been at our complex pool, which is all of 17 meters long, and this was a 50 meter pool, 8 lengths for 400m total swim. I had no doubt at all that the 400m wouldn’t be a problem normally, but with people swimming over each other in lanes, no idea how fast everyone else would be, and the race-start adrenaline that sometimes causes me to go out to fast in the runs I’ve done, I just wasn’t 100% confident.
My plan was simple: be smooth the entire time. When I try to swim fast, I end up getting choppy and don’t really go any faster. So, off I went at 7:30:30…and within 10 yards I was clear of my starting partner, and by the time I reached the first wall at 50 meters I’d passed one of the two who started in the group in front of me.
I felt strong, and actually pretty fast. I was breathing on each full rotation, as I wanted to make sure I got enough oxygen and wasn’t out of breath for times I needed to pass and hold it for an extra rotation or two. That strategy really paid off, as on the second length I passed right between two people (one doing the backstroke) and broke free for a minute.
By 200m, I’d passed in front of all but one of the novice group (6 people had started in front of me). Our new friend Carolyn was a very strong swimmer and had started at the front of the wave and she was out in front – I may have been gaining a bit, but not much. At that point I eased up just a bit as I was starting to feel like I was pushing too hard, and I passed a few stragglers from the wave in front of us. The strange part of that was that they had started a full 3:00 ahead of the first of the novice wave, so they were REALLY slow.
At that point it was pretty smooth sailing and I was able to look behind me and see that our other new friend, Carrie, who also was a strong swimmer, was coming up behind me. She passed me with about 75m to go, and I tried to draft off her. She was very fast.
I finished strong, pushed myself out of the pool, and was off to the transition area.
Official Swim Results:
8:17
Male Novice Rank: 1/13
Overall Male Rank: 38/123
Clydesdale Rank: 3/10*
*I’m including where I would have finished in the Clydesdale group, which is what I would race if I were not in the Novice category. This group is all men over 200 lbs. (and under 39 years old – there is a Masters Clydesdale group for those 40+). The women have a similar group called the Athenas for those over 150 lbs.
End result: Excellent swim. I couldn’t have asked for anything better.
TRANSITION 1:
From the swim to the transition area was VERY short – just outside the pool gate. I took my goggles off and jogged over to my bike, stepping on the towel to dry my feet while I put on my sunglasses, Headsweat bandana, and helmet (always put on your helmet and fasten the strap before doing anything else, as you will be DQ’d if you move your bike without fastening your helmet).
Then I quickly (it felt quickly, but I doubt it was) stepped into my bike shoes, pulling the Velcro tight. I have ridden and run both with and without socks, and decided to go without today. I grabbed my bike and jogged it to the mounting area – the first novice out of transition.
Official T1 Results:
1:31
Male Novice Rank: 2nd
Overall Male Rank: ?
Clydesdale Rank: 3rd – though the 2nd and 3rd place men didn’t get their transition time ranking, so it may have been lower
End result: Good for my first ever transition, though definitely a place I can shave 30 seconds or so.
Race Report – TrySports Asheville Triathlon – Part 2 – Pre-Race
The first thing we did before setting up our transition areas was head to body-marking. I didn’t want to wait in line. The funny thing about triathlons is how many places you wear your number. Obviously we have the race bib number, the helmet sticky number, and the bike number. But that’s not enough, because there’s the swim, so we also got our numbers written on both arms and both thighs. I guess that’s good in case we get lost in the pool they can tell who we are and why we’re stupid.
HilWoo showing her guns:
Also, we both got a giant “N” on one of our calves to let everyone know we were novices. I think this is to make sure someone stops to help us if we’re stopped on the side of the road – everyone should understand our idiocy at this point.
We then set up our transition areas.
My transition towel is the black-and-white striped towel I got at an officiating camp. Perfect for identifying my spot!
If you don’t know about the transition area, it’s the place where you come after the swim to get your bike and everything you need for the bike race. Then, it’s also the place you return with your bike, take off your bike stuff and grab your run stuff and run from.
Mine had:
-My bike, obviously
-My helmet was on my aerobars on my bike. It had my sunglasses and my Headsweats bandana in it. It was the first thing I put on – glasses, headsweat, helmet.
-The towel, which marked my spot and provided me something to wipe my feet with after the swim.
-My bike shoes
-My race belt
-My running hat
-My running shoes
-Bottle of “just in case” Gatorade
-Pair of “just in case” socks
After getting set up, we visited with some people around us. We met some really great people including Carrie, a student at Clemson who was next to me in the rack, and Tracey and Carolyn who both work at Clemson. The five of us formed a formidable friend group. We were ready to dominate the novices. We all also felt a little out of our element, I think!
At that point it was just time to attempt to relax, use the restroom (twice!), and get ready. At about 5 minutes until 7:00, we took our sweats off and grabbed our goggles and headed for the pool deck to wait for our starting time. My start was at 7:30:30, while HilWoo started at 7:31:20.
Race Report – TrySports Asheville Triathlon – Part 1 – Preface
First, HilWoo wanted a picture of our racing outfits. We both wore tri shorts and tri tops. It makes things quite easy, as you swim, bike and run in them and avoid the hassle of trying to put on/take off any clothing other than shoes and headwear. Here they are, mine is the left outfit, if you couldn’t tell:
HilWoo at some point during this exercise came to the realization that Orca, the well-known triathlon, running, and wetsuit gear company, is also the name of a whale. So she’s now concerned about running in a bright pink, form-fitting top that screams “WHALE.” Hehehe.
Also an important note about something done before leaving for Asheville…I decided that if I were going to REALLY experience this thing, and dive headfirst into triathlon racing, then I needed to go all the way. And that meant:
Yes, that’s right, I am now smoooooth. My chest, my back, and my legs – in addition to my already bald head – are now hair-free. What an experience. It’s really quite spiritual. Okay, maybe that’s taking it too far, but I do actually kind of like the feeling.
The rationale for shaving amongst triathletes is two-fold. The first makes no difference to me: the argument that shaved skin is faster than hairy skin in the pool, and to a much lesser extent more aerodynamic on the bike. I’m slow and not extremely hairy to begin with, so no amount of shaving is going to make me faster. The second I totally buy: if you bike a lot, the inevitable road rash you will someday experience is much easier to clean and treat if you don’t have to get the hair out of it first.
In the end, I just wanted to experience the whole thing, so off came the hair. HilWoo helped by running the balding clippers I have used on my head from time to time on my back and chest, and I took care of the legs. Then it was into the shower, where I carefully shaved my chest and legs with a brand new Mach 3. Only one nick and it was a tiny one. I do that on my head most days.
Wow. I had no idea it was this nice. The sensation of putting on pants, or getting in between the sheets in bed, is something else after you have shaved. I now highly recommend all men try this at some point.
Moving on.
We packed up and headed for Asheville. The drive is quite enjoyable and beautiful. We live just below the Appalachian foothills, so we get to experience driving into them for the last half of the two-hour trip. HilWoo was working the camera on the way:
In honor of The Dark Knight which released in the theaters this weekend: “To the Bat Cave, Robin!”
And this is what a car full of triathlon stuff looks like:
We arrived in Asheville and drove right into the area of town where the race was to be held. The first thing we did was drive the 11.8 mile bike course.
Holy &*%$.
The description did no justice to what we were going to face. I’d looked at the elevation map a couple times on MapMyRun, and determined there were a couple decent hills, but you just don’t know until you’re there.
The first mile and a half was up, up, up hill with a monster incline of about a ¼ mile at the end of that gradual climb. Then it was up and down and around corners. Absolutely beautiful, but a bit intimidating when 30 mph feels fast in the Durango, and that’s what I’d be doing on my bike. We got out of town in a hurry, and the course felt very rural as it wound through the valley below a mountain range. Just gorgeous. I just wasn’t sure I’d be able to enjoy it on the bike.
Then we came to the monster of all hills. I had to stop and put the Durango in 4-wheel drive to get up it. Okay, not actually, but the engine definitely had to work to pull us up. HilWoo looked worried, I lied and told her it would be fine.
Then it was pretty much downhill, with a few pretty technical turns, all the way back to the transition area.
Whew.
At this point we headed to check into the motel and rest for a bit before heading to pick up our packets and go to the pre-race meeting.
We stayed at an awesome Days Inn.
Then we headed for check in and the meeting:
Because this is a TrySports Development Series race, it’s geared toward first-timers and everyone is very helpful. It was exciting to pick up our packets and we got filled in at the meeting on all the little things like how the swim start would work, etiquette for passing in the pool and how to pass on the bike, how the transition area worked in the morning, etc.
A lot of this was pretty obvious, but I’ve done a lot of research and I’m sure for some people this was all new. I’m really glad we went as there was some pretty good information on traffic on the bike route, how the mount/dismount area was laid out, and where we queued for the swim that I would have had to figure out on the fly if I hadn’t been there.
After the meeting, the Woos grabbed a good dinner and headed back to the motel to get ready.
We had some cool stuff and some necessary stuff in our bags:
As you can see, there was quite a bit in our bags, though the important things were the numbers at the right. There’s the square one that’s just like any race number you’d get at a running race that you would pin to your shirt. Most triathletes use a race belt, which is just an elastic belt that you pin your number to that’s easy to get on for the run portion of the race. We both had a race belt.
The placard with two numbers folds over and is fastened to your bike.
The little tiny number goes on the front of our bike helmet.
So we got all of that set up for the next day and packed our backpacks that we’d take to the transition area.
Oh, the shirt wasn’t too bad, either. It’s made of technical fabric and the logo is kinda cool:
I tried to touch up my shaving, but with the disposable razor I had to work with, all I managed to do was irritate my chest. You can tell the middle of my chest here isn’t very happy:
We fell asleep somewhere between 11:00 and midnight, and were up a bit before 5:00 to head for the race site.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Race Week - Asheville Triathlon
Training this week is going to be fairly light. I'm traveling for the next couple days, so that is contributing to it, plus it's a recovery week in my overall plan, and with the race on Sunday now is the time to rest, with just a few nice and easy workouts to keep things working.
HilWoo and I are excited, and I've started planning all we'll need for the trip, to have at our transition areas, and how I'd like the weekend to progress. It's really a pretty straightforward and simple process, but I want the day to go well for our first triathlon experience. Can't wait!
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Officiating Camp
It was a really good week - and a really good workout - but a reminder that I've done basically zero speed work this summer. My hammys are especially tight. I've never been a sprinter, and it is making itself apparent in the way I feel.
That said, I survived just fine, and actually had a really solid week of officiating. In fact, I was fortunate to be observed by a supervisor for one of the D-II conferences around here, and it looks like I'll have an opportunity to call some games for him this upcoming season. I'm completely and totally pumped about that. Best case scenario for me coming out of this camp is to get hired to work some D-II games in this conference, and build from there.
Woohoo!
The fact that my crew tossed a coach on quick back-to-back technicals didn't even have an impact! That guy was a bit crazy...