What Went Wrong?

Not the title I wanted for my race report, but this time it’s the one I’ve ended up with. If things had gone to plan then I would have got the Hawaii slot, but they don’t give those out for planning a race. I was optimistic in the weeks leading up to this race, but still on the day the outcome wasn’t what I anticipated. I realise it can seem odd to be complaining about a sub-10 hour Ironman, but at this point I expect more.

The week leading up to the race really didn’t go to plan. My training was off. I felt lethargic and my motivation was low. Early in the week I had a day or two of stomach issues which didn’t help either. The end result is I didn’t train too much in the build up. Whilst there’s good in extra rest in this case I think there wasn’t enough training. On the other hand on the couple of occasions I went for a run I had serious tightness and discomfort in my left calf and leg. I can’t say why these came on yet, but suddenly running was an issue. None of these things were encouraging prior to the race, but I decided not to dwell on the issues.

My time in Port Macquarie has been great. I got to catch up with a few friends from training and racing around Oz. I’ve done another photo shoot with Jaggad in my new kit. Again great fun to do, never thought I’d add modelling to the resume! The kit looks great, very bright and gets you a lot of attention. Also confuses the Aussies when you’re wearing Aussie colours with a kangaroo on, but your helmet has Union Jacks plastered on it! I helped out at the expo too which is great too and you get to meet lots of different athletes. Other than this I spent my time relaxing as much as I could. I carbo loaded the day before, going the route of eating a lot of energy bars in addition to normal meals. However I think I didn’t really consume enough food in the run up and relied too much on the bars.

I slept pretty well both the night prior to and the night of the race. Despite this I felt pretty tired both days and I woke on race day wishing for a few more hours in bed! I found eating difficult, far more than usual and probably consumed less calories for breakfast than in past events. Whether there were sufficient calories in it my diet prior to and during the race caused no stomach problems for a change. I’d been very efficient in setting up my kit so getting ready was simple and I had a short lie down before heading to transition.

I was in the water about 5 minutes before we were due to start. The exact start time seemed a little unclear as the announcers were clearly hurrying us to be ready for the start. I placed my self towards the outside edge of the swim and right at the front. Or at least the front with a couple of minutes to go. Slowly people started drifting forward until the cannon went. Foolishly I didn’t so when the gun went I was swamped and blocked in. Also I should note I chose my position poorly. The first half of the swim was spent trying to find any kind of space. I was blocked on all sides and could only go with the flow. It was obvious that swim technique was out the window.

I had no idea of pace other than the fact I was stuck with the white caps all round me rather than my own blue caps. By the start of the second lap I started to find clear water as people slowed. With clear water I could finally find some kind of rhythm and at least attempt better technique. The second lap progressed comfortably, but I don’t feel I pushed enough when I could. Getting out of the water I was disappointed, but not entirely surprised to see a time of 1:05 on the clock. Whilst some aspects of this were out of my control my choice of position at the swim start and a lack of open water practice of late probably contributed to the poor result.

I didn’t panic just reminded myself there was a long day ahead. I will admit I was less optimistic than normal. I squelched through the muddy transition. Severe rains on the East coast have caused some major flooding though in Port Macquarie the worst they’d done was create a lot of mud.

Onto the bike and things felt fine at first, nothing to worry about. The course starts with a few sharp hills and I definitely took these too hard. Once out on the flat I started to move past the groups that were ahead of me. I had a lot of people to work through after such a poor swim. Conditions were windier than I expected and there was a good dash of rain in there too. Not ideal for fast times, but I worked to my heart rate goals. As I’ve come to expect in most races there was a fair amount of drafting going on amongst age groupers. I spent some of the second lap with a small bunch persistently overtaking me then slowing. Eventually I let them go and took on some gels.

Towards the end of the second lap I finally started to feel good. For the first time in the race I didn’t feel too bad. Sure things were sore, but I started to move up the bike field a little more efficiently. I think adding a couple of bars to my bike nutrition certainly helped and gave me a few more calories. This is certainly one area that I got right on the day. The third lap, whilst actually slower than previous ones went quite well. I reeled the irritating bunch back in and left them behind without having to dig too deep. I was glad for some confirmation that sticking to my own race plan rather than racing a bunch paid off.

When I came in from the bike I was pretty much on my 5:15 goal. That meant that the closer I could come to 3 hours on the run the closer to my overall goal. I was feeling a bit better and perhaps even a little optimistic. Not having compression socks to deal with I was a bit quicker through transition. The muddy, wet conditions made it impossible to avoid leaving with wet shoes and socks.

Almost immediately I felt bad on the run. I was clicking off the kilometres at a pace for a sub-3:10 marathon, but my legs were sore. It didn’t really relate to pace, they just ached. This was definitely new, usually I feel great for the first 5 to 10km and need to hold back. I was not in a good place and was mentally quite withdrawn not really taking in my surroundings much. Despite this I kept good pace till around 30km. I was carrying my own nutrition for the run for the first time and it had worked well so far. At about 90 minutes into the run my first bottle ran out. The flavour in the second bottle turned out to be vile! I’ve used it before, but right then I couldn’t stand it. From that point on my energy intake was a bit low. Having my own calories however works very well as long as I have enough for the run!

Those last 12km were agony, I can only think of one other time I’ve hurt like that in a run. At World Long Course last year where I gambled on not needing much nutrition. Whilst running out of palatable gels certainly impacted the run, the soreness had been present in my legs from the start. I’m a little concerned as usually the run is my strength, but I was struggling. My pace was all over the place in the final stretch and most concerning was my normal strong finish was gone. I had nothing and practically limped home. I can’t honestly even remember the finish chute properly!

So that’s it. Not what I wanted or expected. Despite this I’m still feeling pretty positive. I know I can race better than that. I’m sure it was a bad day rather than my best performance. I admit I had moments where I’ve questioned that, but I have to keep moving forward and trusting in what I’m doing. I take some encouragement that my position in this race was much lower than in my recent major races. To me that’s a strong indicator that I wasn’t on form. I have no definite answers as to what went wrong, but I have a lot of ideas. With seven weeks till Ironman Lanzarote my priority is to recover and to deal with my run issues. I will have a few weeks to focus on some quality training and hopefully get myself back on track. Next time I want to finish with a more positive post.

Personal Worst!

Ugh!

This is going to be quick… I have no idea what happened today. Let’s just say nothing really felt right all day. I had a terrible, terrible swim getting boxed in early on (because unlike most of the front group I didn’t drift beyond the start line) and losing a lot of time in the first lap to this. Whilst things improved in the second lap, it wasn’t enough.

I didn’t feel good on the bike until the third lap and having started further back than usual that didn’t help. Though I did hit my target here it just didn’t feel like a good bike I was uncomfortable, my legs were stiff and my back sore.

Then on the run I started out at a good pace and whilst I never had stomach issues or an energy low. Kilometre by kilometre my legs ached more and more and my pace started to slow. I haven’t raced with that much pain that I can recall.

Positives? My gel strategy seems to work, I possibly still need more and may have started the day low on calories. However a fuel belt on the run seems to work well. I learnt that it’s the coke at aid stations that particularly unsettles my stomach. I also learnt it’s easy to pee on the run. I was also going to claim it was the first race without any chaffing, but the shower I just had has changed my mind. Probably if I peed on myself less it wouldn’t be so bad. My bad day was still sub-10 – 9:53:31 according to the athlete tracker.

Negatives? Well that brought me in 111th overall and 21st in age which pretty much guarantees no kona slot. So I really need to hit my goals and be spot on in Lanza. Also I have no idea what was wrong with me today, I felt sore and lethargic to be honest and motivation wasn’t running that high. I can’t say why… I hope I can put this race down to a bad day and look to other recent results as better indicators of actual form.

Time to crash out and hope there’s a crappy movie on TV… Tomorrow I’ll start to think this over more.

The Plan

With only a few hours left before I turn in for an early night pre-race I’d better get the plan up. Good news is daylight saving is coming to an end so the clocks change and we get an extra hours sleep! Best as you can sleep the night before a race anyway. Everything is checked in now, I’ve not yet laid out my kit for tomorrow, I’ll do that when I’m done here. Then it’s just a little race to do tomorrow.

So starting with the swim my plan is pretty simple here. Place myself towards the front to the far side of the course. I have no idea how I’m going in open water, I have a fair idea of how I’m doing in long course pools though. In most of my races I think I tend to feel rushed and tense through the swim and the result is poorer stroke technique. So one aim is to keep calm, not to bolt too hard and to focus on keeping good technique. With that in mind I want to get on a good set of feet to help pull me round under the hour. We’ll see how this goes!

I’m going to be happier once out of the water, that’s always the case. The bike is three 60km laps with a hilly section leaving the town, a long exposed flat and then some undulations at the far end. I’ve experienced most of the course in the half so have a fair idea what to expect. Current weather report has relatively low winds so they shouldn’t be a major factor. My objective is to go under 5:15 on the bike, that may not seem ambitious, but I’m really not sure of the course. I did a 2:38 for the half in strong winds and with my training set-up. So I’m betting on improved fitness to allow me to perform better on this course. As with WA I will be watching and controlling my pacing according to heart rate.

Two big changes for the run – no compression socks and a fuel belt! Firstly I’ve decided to save a minute in transition by not having to struggle with socks. Also whilst they certainly help the legs feel good in the marathon I’ve managed lots of runs without them before. The fuel belt is so I can carry my own gels with me and regulate my energy intake. I’ve mentioned before how nutrition was an issue in Busselton so this time I’m trying to tackle it head on (I also have a couple of bars with me or the bike). It’s three laps again hilly at one end otherwise mostly flat. My experience of the half is that the run is surprisingly fast. My aim is to hit around 3:10 here, this really should be within my reach.

Adding it all up, allow for transitions and the aim is to break 9:30 here. I believe the way my training has gone this is quite plausible if I put together the day I’m capable of. Guess we’ll see tomorrow. Thanks to anyone who’s wished me luck, sorry if I’ve not got round to replying yet. It’s been a busy few days with packing up and travelling south. Then there’s another photo shoot to talk about, working the expo, catching up with a lot of people and I got to spend the Carbo party in the VIP area! It’s been fun so I’d better back it up with a good race.

Oh, and of course I’d like a Hawaii slot too!