Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Fall 2016 is racing past

It's been a couple months since the Ironman, but it seems like just yesterday. By that, I mean time is racing by. A lot of life is go - go - go. Last week I recalled thinking, next week will be here before you know it. And voila!  Here I am. Time is precious. So I'm making the most of it.

I've settled into a very comfortable exercise routine that will keep me fit & healthy but not create much time stress. I am setting my performance goals in triathlon next year to the lower end. For me, the time required on the bike to be good / very good even in sprint distance events is a lot. I can only do so much high intensity before burning out so the flip side of that equation is volume.  Right now I'm riding 40-50 miles a week with some or all on bridle trails. In the spring I'll probably do 60-80 a week with an occasional 100+ to boost the system a little. I was in the 150-200 mile range most of the spring and summer. You have to be on task mentally to put that sort of time in. I am no longer there. :)

I'm enjoying focusing a bit more on strength and run training right now.  Swimming 2x with an occasional 3rd. All told, putting in 8-9 hours a week, which is as much as I want to do for the foreseeable future.

After some time from Ironman Chattanooga, I'm happy I got it done but mildly irritated the weather took such a dump. I had a lot of fitness going into the event but wasn't able to show my better side to the faceless masses of people who analyze splits post-mortem. And that's how it goes. Won't do another one for a few years if ever. I like my bike but not as much as I used to.

Onto fun things. We have been doing lots of family fun stuff. I am making a concerted effort to spend a bit more time with Junior Awesome during the week. This is my slower work period and it's his last year in daycare. I can take him wherever for half a day without a school penalty.

More Junior Awesome racing








Camping and night hiking / day hiking with our buds












Tweetsie Railroad with Gigi (it was cold)







(Bass Lake run/bike afterwards)








Pumpkin patch with SFF!









Another pumpkin patch and corn maze visit








Halloween







NC State vs FSU Football








Durham Life and Science Museum (my birthday morning)













My birthday party at Bond Brothers Brewery (night)









NC State Miami Football tailgating













There are a few other birthday parties and random acts of funness in here but you get the drift. We're having a good time!  I need to update the blog more than once every two months.



Spelling our first word with no help

In other news, my lovely wife landed a job at SAS Institute. SAS has consistently been ranked as one of the top private companies in the US to work for.  They have an objective of giving their employees a good work-life balance.  She has had an overall great experience working for RTI International but it's almost impossible to say no to a spot at SAS.  I'm really happy for her.

Bye for now.




Thursday, November 17, 2016

SWOT analysis for endurance racing goals

I'll get back to the regular blog stuff next week.  Been enjoying exercising 6-8 hours a week and spending more time playing around with our son. All is well. In the meantime, enjoy my latest article. Using something from the business world to analyze your personal training goals.

Ah, your triathlon season is over, or almost. You get to sit down, chill out, and not train hard for a while. Or at least, you have that option. 

But after a couple weeks of laying on the couch and eating your children's Halloween candy, you start to get the itch. The itch to do more. The itch to be more. More than a candy stealing, couch laying, TV watching blob. The inner athlete in you is crying to break out.

And you can't help it. You start looking for events. Exotic events. Local events. Challenging challenges for you to conquer. You encourage your friends to sign up. You goad your frenemies to follow your path. Before you can say, "Honey, I have a surprise for you," half of your 2017 salary is committed to race entry fees and travel expenses.

Next Year is upon you.

Half the fun is signing up and making yourself commit!

As you get ready to launch into another season of endurance madness, take a little time to make a plan of attack. Today, we will create a SWOT (Strength, Weakness, Opportunity, Threats) analysis of your racing plans.

Strengths: 
What are your primary strengths in racing? Ideally, your big/key races will be a play to your strengths. You sell yourself short if you make your most important race a place/situation where you historically underperform. For example - if you are not good on flat courses but excel in the hills, don't waste thousands of dollars signing up for a big, flat event. If you are able to train well in the summer heat, you can find a late summer/early fall race to deliver all the fitness.

Weaknesses:
What are you not good at? Winter and spring is likely a good time for you to get better. If you have a weak core, start a core program. If you sink like a rock, set up some swim technique lessons. If you have motivation issues, find a reliable training partner or two. While you might not be great in flat events right now, you can work on it and change it - and then spend thousands of dollars signing up for a big, flat event.

Opportunities:
What is missing from your endurance athletic resume? What gaps are there in your experience in endurance athletics? You can view these in different fashions. While qualifying for World Championships is often a goal, it is not easy. So, what opportunities do you have or can you create to make this more achievable? Experientially, where would you like to go? You can easily tie in some endurance race with a pleasant vacation to your dream spot. What sort of event have you not done but always thought about? Make 2017 a year to accomplish one of these.

Threats:
In endurance athletics, our greatest threat is typically ourselves. If you have high motivation, you run the risk of overtraining and injury. If you have low motivation, you easily slide into skipping sessions or falling off the good nutrition bandwagon.  What can you do to keep yourself in line?  Your spouse may be very supportive or completely indifferent. Other obvious threats are unsafe riding conditions, bad coaching, negative training partners, improper gear, not recognizing the stress work/life take on you...and failing to plan properly.

This analysis is a nice, top level, general way to approach a season. The reality of picking a key race and working backwards from that event is the easier part. How much time you need to prepare depends on your experience, goals, and lifestyle. In other words, everyone's specific approach is different. 

Read more about SMART goals here;
And more about season planning here.



Coach Marty Gaal, CSCS, is the head coach for One Step Beyond in Cary, North Carolina.  He has worked with endurance athletes since 2002.  You can read all about One Step Beyond coaches and programs at
www.osbmultisport.com

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Ironman Hottanooga (2016): The Devil wears lycra

"Hey, Bobs, I have a great idea!"

"What's your great idea, Bob?"

"Let's run a marathon with at least half of it in direct sunlight in the hottest part of the day!"

"Wow, that's a great idea, Bob!"

"And let's do it on a day with record setting temperatures!"

"Oh, Bob," congratulatory backslap, "you are a genius!"

"And let's get some high humidity in there too!"

"You're such a kidder, Bob!"

"Hey, Bobs!"

"Yes, other Bob?"

"I have an even more greater idea!"

"What's your even more greater idea, Bob?"

"Let's swim 2.4 miles and bike 116 miles before we run that marathon in the hottest part of the day!"

"OH, Bob!  What a much greater idea that is!"

Hearty laughter...

Eerie music begins to play...

Scene fades to black.

Ironman Pukeanooga is another notch in the old Stupid Shit I Have Toughed Out To Prove My Worth utility belt. You have already read the reports, but it was hot. Not just un-seasonally warm.  The average high temp on this day is 80 degrees. We went right past warm, into hot, and blasted into scorching, with an unexpected record high of 97 degrees.

The humidity averaged 57% with a high of 87%.  The heat index of 97 + 87% humidity is over 150 degrees. The heat index of 97 with 57% humidity is 116 degrees.  While we did not have maximum temps or humidity the entire day, any stretch in these conditions was devastating.  There was little to no cloud cover for most of the day.

More than 25% of the starting field dropped out during the race or didn't make the time cutoffs. Simply put, it was awful.

But enough complaining. Everyone had to deal with the same conditions. At least it wasn't windy!

I was as well prepared as I could get. I stayed focused, in the moment, on top of my game, on top of my efforts, my power; my inner demons quieted by the oppressive silence of my robotic like focus on performance and execution. I was a stormtrooper of determination and well rehearsed action. I was a Jedi Master of fluid, nutrition, sodium, and putting ice in my hat like a motherf"cking Yoda.

The Sun laughed and shit down a rain of sunbeams. I melted like a cheap plastic toy under the happy assault of a curious child with a can of aerosol and a lighter. Flame on! Done!

But that was just the last few miles. I held it together well through about mile 15. So let's start at the beginning.

The swim is down river with a mild current. I swung towards the middle to avoid the crowds and gain clear water. I swam at a medium to medium fast effort and won the Roka age group swim split award for men 45-49. Yay!  Exited the swim feeling like I didn't work too hard. Perfect. Robot. Focus. Laser beams. Sunshine.  46:11.

The bike ride is 115.8 miles or so according to most GPS units. My goal was to ease into the first few miles then hold a steady effort at about 70% of my power threshold. I finished just slightly higher than that with a 72% average and 74% normalized power - variability index of 1.03.  My TSS for the ride was 292 which is just a tick on the high side of what I was shooting for.  Effort wise: completely harmless. Didn't push a thing and felt smooth throughout the ride. Had a mostly clear ride after shaking out a few drafters in the first 30 miles. Very mild winds if anything.

Bike nutrition: I took in 4,800 mgs of sodium + 1,500+ potassium and supplemental electrolytes + 2,500 calories via Gatorade endurance, Carbo Pro, 3 Power Gels, 2 bonk breakers,  1 pack of clif bloks,  9 or 10 x 20 ounce bottles of fluid, and thermolyte tablets.

The bike was the best kind of bike - completely uneventful. One slowdown due to a very cautious driver ahead of me. No mechanicals. No issues. Almost no other competitors nearby. Wonderful, steady, boring.

My mind was a computer. Check the power. Internal system check. Drink. Eat. Check the power. Internal system check. Stay aero. Eat. Drink. Repeat. Laser. Robot. Focus. 5:28.

Could feel the heat coming down for the last 12 miles. Big stretch of open highway. Heat sink. Stay focused. Want to take my helmet off. Stay focused. Laserbeams. Robots. Ice in my veins.

Onto the run. I changed into an old OSB running top I had cut short to keep as much skin aerated as possible. In hot/humid conditions I sweat like a pig and excrete a ton of minerals doing so. My achilles heel. I didn't want skintight material soaked with sweat boiling me any more than necessary.

Blah blah blah blah. I ran around 9 minute pace with 1 minute or so walk breaks at each aid station. I loaded up with ice in my hat, 2 cups of fluids, the occasional gel or clif blok. I was taking in 4-5 oz of cola or Gatorade Endurance at each stop + additional water. About 40 ounces an hour. Still not enough. I had a thermolyte salt tab every 20-30 minutes. Still not enough. ~600mg sodium/hr or more. I grabbed some base salt from the course and started to supplement with that. I had a 10 ounce bottle to sip on in between stations. Not enough. I held "steady" through mile 15 with minimal walk breaks.

My logic had been to load up on the bike with everything so that I could avoid stressing my stomach on the run with all this junk.

Not enough. :) Someone forgot to tell me the temperature would break records and the humidity would reach eighty per-bleeping-cent. Gahh!

Let me describe the course for a moment.

The first four miles of each of the two loops are on a large exposed highway.  No shade. Boiling hot. I ran through here around 2pm the first time and 4pm the second time. The second time was hotter than the first. I started to crumble. I could feel my body overheating. It was excruciating. I began to suffer from heat exhaustion. Not the mental "it's sooo hot, waaah" but the rapid pulse, dizzy, beginnings of nausea and twinges of muscle cramps. This is indicative of electrolye depletion, let alone dehydration.

So began the slow rundown to a run-walk, then a walk-run-walk, then a miserable dizzy walk. I continued to attempt to refuel at the aid stations and use the base salt as a supplement. I had run out of my thermolyte tabs. I saw my wife and son at ~mile 19. I wanted to stop and hug them and go home with them. It was still so - bloody - hot. I had six more miles. If I could run-walk I'd be done in an hour 15. I stayed focused. I started to run over the bridge. I started to puke. Loud, awful, painful retching. I threw up everything from the last 2-3 miles.  I caught my breath and started to run again.

We hit the hill. I tried to take some more salt and drink. I walked a little. I had to sit down and throw up again. My legs cramped while vomiting. I stood outside myself for a moment and saw a pathetic creature lying in the dirt, puking and grabbing his legs. I stood up and got over the hill. I sat down to drink some more water and take a short rest break.

I walked again. I threw up again. I tried to run. Total leg cramps. I wanted to cry.

Laser. Robot. Focus.

3 more miles. 20 minutes on a good day. I walked. Aid station. I got a cup of ice water and sat down. 2 miles to go. I sat and drank my ice water and watched the runners go by. I didn't throw up. I sat for 13 minutes and didn't care about my time, or my race, or what other racers might think. I thought about getting some of that fluid in my system so I could keep moving. I asked God to let me drink this one f"cking cup of ice water without throwing it up. Please God, I said, let me drink this one stupid cup of water. So I don't pass out and hit my head on the concrete. So I can go home and play with my son. Just this cup. I felt better. I started walking up the hill.

I threw up. I sat down to recover. I started walking again. Maybe some of that fluid got in me, because I felt slightly better. The sun had stopped beating us up and the temps were coming down. I felt OK again. I made it to mile 25. I sucked on two ice cubes along the pedestrian bridge. I was thinking positive. Home stretch.

I threw up. With 25.5 miles down, I had to stop and puke those two ice cubes out.

Laser. Robot. Focus.

Like many people, I found the reserves to run through the finish line, a smile plastered on my face. I slapped hands. I absorbed the moment. I stopped to kiss my wife, who had tears of concern in her eyes. I wanted her to know I was OK. I was OK. I finished.

It was my slowest marathon time and slowest Ironman, but I finished. 12:07.11.

The world kept turning.

In hindsight, if I had to do it again, I would hammer the swim and bike and sit this marathon out. It was really very difficult. I don't mean to make light of those that finish or the effort involved to get to this point, but there are too many fun things in life to spend time intentionally suffering for vanity and glory.

You. Are. An. Ironman.


What would I do differently if I had to do it again, for real, if I wanted to do another extreme temperature Ironman?

Get an actual metabolic sweat test done to see how much I really lose. It's way to the high side. More electrolytes on the bike and double or triple my electrolyte intake for the run from the get go. I don't know if my stomach could handle either, and I don't intend to run any 100+ degree, 100 mile bike - 15 mile brick workouts to test it out.

Am I happy with the race?

Yes, despite the narrative above sounding like a horror show, I was pretty happy overall. The conditions that we encountered were my absolute worst case scenario. I do not thrive in extreme conditions. I stayed positive and on task. I still finished in the top 15% of race starters!  The nausea and vomiting could be related to electrolytes, but it could also be that my internal body temperature got too high - 104 is where people start to turn into slow moving zombies. Obviously, that's not really healthy.

I signed up for Ironman Chattanooga because it was supposed to be cooler. Race to your strengths!

Addendum: The following day, the high temperature was 88 degrees with overcast skies in the afternoon. Mother Nature, once again showing her wicked sense of humor.

2017: The Year of Short Races I Don't Have to Think Too Much About.

Chattanooga itself: Awesome. Loved it. Great place to hang out, I'm sure it's a nice place to live. We may check out the 70.3 in May sometime. We stayed at a condo on the river and had a blast on the vacation side of things.













Tah!

Monday, September 19, 2016

End of summer fun

While Bri did the Blue Ridge Relay, Junior Awesome and I entertained ourselves with all sort of activities.

5k + 100 yd dash

Beach time


It was a lot of fun.  Playing with a 4+ year old is a lot easier than guard dogging a 1-2 year old.

My summer is ending with a bang this season, with Ironman Chattanooga on September 25. I suppose technically speaking, we're kicking off the Fall season with a baboom.  Or something like that. Anyway, it's over Johnny.

The good news: No more long rides in 100 degree heat!  Holy smokes, this has been a warm summer. I wound up doing five 100+ rides this season, with two of them in scorching conditions. The first was a 109 mile local affair that had me spend the last 30 miles sitting upright on my bike limping home.



The second was a 128 mile ride to the coast with three equally disturbed buddies. On that one myself and another rider had to request a 'sit in the shade' break before we succumbed to heat exhaustion. Both rides got into the 105+ heat index range with massive time in direct sunlight.


For those of you who might be interested in the numbers, I managed to get my power threshold (FTP) to about 270 this season from 245 or so at the start.  More could have been done to work on this but in the grand scheme of life, I had other things to do.  For some fun, here's the complete file from the Washington sprint triathlon done the day after this boiling hot ride above.


You can see the steady effort at just about 257 watts with normalized power at 262. I felt pretty good given the long saddle time the day before.  I hopped off the bike in first and got run down by a couple guys to finish third.  It was also hot/humid at this race.

I could go on about all the power info but I spend six days a week doing that with my athletes so I'll forego it here.

The last few days have been spent tapering down to get to IM Chatt feeling rested and ready to go. I do feel good about my fitness and am looking forward to the race. The range of times I might be coming in at are:

swim: 45 minutes to 55 minutes depending on some or no flow from the river.
bike: 5:15 to 5:40 depending on who knows what
run: 3:50 to 4:30 depending on the FRIGGIN SUN.  Right now the forecast is for a high of 90 with a heat index of about 98 in the afternoon. Join me and all of North America in making a chant for some cool weather.

So at the best, I'll squeak in under 10 hours. The worst could be a stumble to the finish, but barring anything catastrophic, I'll cross the line.  Goal one: Finish, Goal two: 10:30, Goal three: sub-10 (potential Kona area).

In other news, we've been having lots of fun in Junior Awesome land. I broke out our Go Pro, which has been sitting in a box in my closet for three years, to capture some moments at the pool.





This past weekend, we had some more fun cheering on Bri and friends at the Rex Wellness Wakefield triathon.  I volunteered to watch some of our friends' kids while everyone raced as they have done the same for us.  Nobody got lost so it all worked out.





Logan capped the evening off with a 50 yard dash with his buddies and ran across in first place.   I'll add the file when I can figure out how to get files off my phone.

The end.