Tried to take it easy all day. Amanda and I headed to my parent's house at about noon, where I spent about an hour or so double checking all of my gear, and making sure my race wheels were ready to go. We left from canandaigua at about 3:30ish. The drive went pretty well, I could feel my nerves growing as we got closer. I finally settled down into a bit of a zen state when we rolled down the hill into the Glen. Got to the track, begrudgingly paid our $5 per person, and parked. I headed to the registration tent and found Mary and Luc nearby. We chatted, Luc is freakin awesome, and seriously like the most polite 10 year old kid I've ever met. As I chatted with Mary, she told me she was excited to see how I stacked up against Curt, I took this as a hint that I should keep an eye on him. As I went over to register, Amanda stayed with them and quickly became friends with Luc.
I headed back to the car, got my gear all set, and headed over to the track to wait for transition to open. I ended up with a spot right near the timing/announcing tent, so Mary had a front row seat to my transitions, talk about pressure! I took a quick/easy lap of the track, just to check everything out, and get the course in my head. It was a bit windy for the deep wheels I was running, but I found I was okay if I just stayed strong. Got back to transition, and found that my spot had been taken. Someone put their bike right over my shoes and visor, did they not see them? Did they think they were just free shoes? I don't know, but when I got back, some people helped my push the bikes around me down a bit so I could have my spot back. This is a big deal for me, because I have a hard enough time finding my transition area when I know exactly where it is, the last thing I need to do is move it at the last minute. The pre-race announcement consisted of informing us that the run course was different, I didn't care too much I just follow the people in front of me. Maybe someday when I'm Travis Kuhl, I'll need to worry about stuff like that. Not yet though.
I lined up, and found John Liobe near the start. I talked him through a bit of a race plan, as he was pretty nervous. Before I knew it it was 5 minutes to go, then 2 minutes, then time to go! I started off quick, I wanted to find Curt quickly, and stay near him and see where that got me. I'm glad that I did this. I started a bit faster than I really wanted to, but before long we were heading through a tunnel only wide enough for one person at a time. I'm glad I made it there in the front, and didn't get stuck as the main pack came in. I eventually settled in on Curt's shoulder and rolled through the first run strong.
Run 1: 12:41
Transition I tried to go smooth and quick. Visor off, helmet on. Shoes off, bike shoes on. Off I go to the mount line. My bike shoes didn't want to clip in here, so I built up some momentum without them clipped in. Clipped in and rolled off.
T1: 0:43
Felt strong on the bike. I started picking off some of the quicker runners, especially on the first climb. Gained some more ground heading up the long climb of the back straight, and picked off Curt. Rolled on through the descent, and picked off more riders on the other climbs. Rolled through lap one feeling great, not overly pushing, but staying strong. Headed by transition, and headed back out for lap two. Headed up the first climb and..... lost my chain. Yay! Curt rolled by and said something encouraging or compassionate, I can't quite remember. I got it back on, and was on my way again before long, focused on staying calm and not panicking. Got back on and rolling again, with about 30 seconds lost total. Focused on trying to stay calm, but strong, and reel in the guys I lost. I saw Curt up ahead on the back straight and started reeling in the group he was with. Through the back straight, descent, then big climb. Towards the top, I caught and passed Curt, he gave me some encouragement, and I focused on trying to put as much time into him on the bike as I could. I saw how strong he was on the first run, and he had me scared.
Bike 1: 27:54
Headed through transition smoothly again. I loved the shout outs I got from Mary every time she saw me. Got my running shoes and visor on, and headed off. Yelled to Mary as I went "Dropped my damn chain"
T2: 0:41
Through transition, Mary announced Curt was following me by about 30 seconds. I focused on keeping as much of that as I could through this run leg. I think I took in a little too much fluids on the bike. I went for half a bottle per bike leg, but I don't think I had quite enough time to absorb all that much. As such, my stomach did not like this run all that much. I focused on settling into a strong pace, without pushing the limits too much. I tried to find the line and toe it as close as I could, without upsetting the system. I think it worked out okay. I came back into transition a little in front of Curt.
Run 2: 13:23
Again, nice and smoothly through transition. No problems clipping in this time. It was time to fly!
T3: 0:47
I saw on my first bike leg that I had the ability to put some time into my opponents, especially on the climbs. I tried to use this to my advantage, I think it worked out pretty well. My pace was a little slower than the first bike, but I felt strong, gained some time on the guys I recognized were near me heading into the last run. I felt like I put some good time into Curt, and was hoping it was going to be enough to hold him off on the last run, especially how my stomach was feeling on the earlier run.
Bike 2: 28:13
Final transition, had to make it quick, and roll on out for the finish! I knew that at any second I would hear Mary announcing Curt on his way into transition. I ran out praying that I could hold on to what I had so far, and knew that I was going to have to make myself hurt.
T4: 0:32
Make myself hurt is what I did. Unfortunately, it didn't take much to do that. My stomach was in revolt. I never threw up, but I had trouble pushing the pace I wanted. As I rolled out of transition and up a bit of a knoll overlooking the track I thought I saw Curt about to roll into transition. I felt good about the lead I had on him, and was confident I could hold onto it, even if it might be close. I was passed a few times, and tried to hang onto the shoulder of a guy I had battled with a bit on the bike. I couldn't hold onto him though, and had to let him slip. I gave it everything I could to bring it home, and hold off the guys that I knew were coming up not too far behind me. Up over the ramp, and around the tight turn, then down the finishing chute. I felt great about my performance. It wasn't without it's flaws, but how often does everything go the way you plan it? I made do with what I had, and I think I did pretty damn well.
Run 3: 13:36
I headed over to where my family was sitting, which was also next to where Mary was announcing from. She told me she was really happy with my performance, that made me feel better about the mistakes. We waited for Curt to come through. It didn't happen for a while, I started to worry if something had happened to him or something. Turns out that he inadvertently took an extra lap on the bike. We probably coud have figured that out earlier, if we had seen this picture:
Yes that would be Curt coming into transition, as I was coming into the finish chute. I think that Mary was focused on me finishing, and we missed him heading through. I feel bad, last year I very nearly took an extra bike lap as well. I barely caught the turn into pit row at the last second, so I know how easy it is to make that mistake on that track.
It was then time for a bit of a cookout. My parents brought hot dogs and we relaxed some and ate. My stomach was a bit queasy and I didn't eat too much. Had my recovery drink, and some cold water. Also a cupcake. I never feel so bad that I can't go for a cupcake. After a while, I wandered back to the track to check out the results. I thought that I had done pretty well, and the results solidified that. 9th overall. 3rd age group. Then I looked up the list a little bit. The two guys in front of me were also my age. 7 more seconds, and I would had 2nd. 30 more and I would've had 1st. It was then I thought back to that first bike leg, and that damn chain. Oh well. It was still another great performance and result for me. I can't wait to get back out there next week at Keuka. I'm also excited that the lake seems to be warming up. I don't so much like it when my best discipline gets cut because people don't like to swim in the cold! I had enough winter swim practices in high school when the pool heater had broken to handle some chilly water. I swam yesterday morning and today at Kershaw. I felt good in the water. I think I can do well next week! Then it's on to my final training block before IMLP. Things are ramping up.
Also training camp in just a few weeks! That's going to be a good time!
55 days (HOLY CRAP!) to IMLP!
You looked really strong out there!!! Congrats on your awesome performance!!
ReplyDeleteThanks! You did awesome too!
ReplyDeleteNice job! Way to push through!
ReplyDeleteNice job, great report & sweet pix. My favorite line: "I never feel so bad that I can't go for a cupcake." 100% agree!
ReplyDelete