Monday, November 5, 2018

Tough Day in the office!

Well, IMFL (Haines City) did not turn out the way I would have liked and was certainly a very demanding challenge for me.  This was my 154th triathlon and 15th IM and my first DNF.  Highlights:

-the weather on race day turned out to be a perfect storm for me.  Dew Points reached 76 degrees and I’ve long since lost my heat adaptation.  This was not the day I had prepared for these last 4 months.

-I had a solid swim.  I clocked just over 80 minutes as I chose to be very conservative in the crowded 2 lap swim with 13 turns (9 left and 4 right).  My garmin clocked it at 4536 yards and so I either swam a lot further than necessary (for sure true) and it was probably long.  I’ve heard many clocked it at around 4500 yards as well.  At 4200 yards this is equivalent to a 74 minute IM distance swim...which seems right because I would characterize it as relaxed and an easy effort.

-Transition seemed endless and it took me over 10 minutes and I left for my bike between 91 and 92 minutes in.

-I settled in at around 160 Watts, which was lower than my target at the beginning, just to ease into the ride.  However, very early, by 10 miles, my arms, hands and shoulders began to cramp.  I carried on, hoping it would pass.  I was drinking a lot, trying to eat gel or shot blocks every 15 minutes, and eating 2 Electrolytes every hour.

- my cramping continued and soon, and painfully spread to my quads.  The cramping would persist for the whole ride and became quite debilitating as the miles and time passed.  I went through the first check point at 28 miles averaging around 20mph and low 150 Watts, both way below my expectations.

-despite this low effort, it became apparent to me by 35 miles I was in a for a tough ride.  I was feeling dehydrated, having trouble eating and felt worse then I’ve ever felt at 35 miles.  I continued to slow.

-I passed through 56 miles a bit over 3 hours (vs my plan of 2:45) and told Judy as I rode by: “I can’t eat and I’m dying”

-by 65 miles I was in real trouble.  I had trouble getting either fluids or solids down.  I was really sweating and despite a low power output my HR was over 150 bpm and I was breathing heavily.  I really backed off the pace and was doing about 100 Watts and 15 mph.

-at 90 miles I felt I like I was about to pass out so I stopped and lay down by the side of the road for about 3 minutes, which seemed to help.  I got going again with the sole goal at this point of trying to finish the bike and see if by resting in transition, I might be able to rally.

-things began to go down hill rapidly from here.  On the flats I was doing 70-80 Watts and riding about 12-13 mph, with a HR in the 140s.  I had to stop 4 more times at mile 98, 102, 108 and 110.5.  I could only manage to stay upright for 5-10 minutes without waves of dizziness coming over me.  The last time I stopped for about 10 minutes just 1.5 miles from transition with a cop and medical staff watching me closely.

-I pulled it together and finally managed to roll across the finish line some 7:20+ after starting...my last 56 miles took nearly 4 and a half hours.  I stopped right past the finish line and rested still straddling my bike but soon felt very light headed.

-I managed to get off my bike and sat down a few feet from the dismount line.  I soon needed to lay down.  A race official told me I needed to sit up or go to medical so I sat up.  I just wanted to collect myself so I could walk to T2.  She told me I needed to take a drink of water which I declined but she insisted I do so or go to medical.  So I took a swig and then this precipitated a pretty violent bout of throwing up.

-they told me I was done.  4 people lifted me into a wheel chair and off to medical I went.  I was white and very dehydrated.  My fingers were wrinkled like you get after soaking in the bath for a long time.  My family was very concerned and I felt really bad about that.  As I rolled to the med tent, people were clapping for me and frankly I was pretty embarrassed.

-my blood pressure was 80/40, which is why I was dizzy but my HR was a solid 65 so they basically figured I was low a quart or two and probably low on sodium.  My core temp was 96 and my hands were cold and blue.   I was hooked up to an IV and soon the ordeal was over.  I recovered quickly and  soon walked back to our car with my family and drove back to our place.  Later that evening I had some pizza and even got a whole IPA down.

-disappointing for sure.  I was ready (for sure) to go 13 hours, which easily would have punched my ticket to Kona.  But I’m ok with that.  I literally drove myself all the way to the limit and there was nothing left.  Given how my body reacted it was clearly the heat and humidity.  I probably should have backed off right from the start but even that probably would have been a challenge.  I just don’t race well in those conditions, even when I’m ready for them, which I wasn’t yesterday.

-not sure what the future holds.  I think I still have another good IM in me and it would be nice to be able to finish my IM career on a high note.  But I also need to recognize how selfish this sport is and the toll it takes on my family and especially Judy.  I’ll decide later after I think about it for a while.

Onward and Upward!  Soon it will be time to get ready for mountain climbing in Bolivia with Anders.  After I rest a bit....






Saturday, November 3, 2018

Race Day Weather Update

Here is the hourly forecast for tomorrow for most of the race timeframe:


Observations:

1.  It will be cloudy most of the day which will reduce the stress of the sun.

2.  The wind direction is predominantly from the East and the course (I think) mostly runs North and South so it seems like it will be mostly a cross wind.  This means the wind will have a lesser impact than if it was either North or South.  Good for times, although competitively, anything that makes the bike harder is generally better for me.  It says less than 10mph but my on the ground experience over the last few days tells me that out in the countryside it will feel like a pretty good wind--maybe 15+mph.  Nothing that would impact bike handling though.

3. Rain/T-storms.  When it says it might rain here it does seem to rain so my guess is that we'll start to get some rain on the bike--maybe mostly in the 2nd lap.  This shouldn't be a problem.  This is not a super technical course and I'm fine playing it cautious when I need to (to compensate for the relatively poor breaking surface on my carbon wheels).

4. T-storms/run.  It looks like its going to be a real soaker on the run--which I'm in favor of.  The thunderstorms are a concern--I hope it doesn't impact the race at all (but nothing I can do about it so we'll see what happens).

5.  Heat--bike should feel fine, although I'll need to really focus on drinking more than I might feel like I need to because it will be deceptively warm--especially on the 2nd lap.  The run is going to be oppressive with Dew Points in the low 70s.  The rain will help and the fact that I move so slowly means that the heat should impact me less than faster runners.

-------

My calf is still funky.  I'm going to probably skip my normal day before short run.  I did ride 5 miles this morning and my calf seems to be fine for the bike...I'm guessing it will be a voyage of discovery race morning!


Friday, November 2, 2018

Dew Point forecast for Sunday afternoon: 73 DEGREES


Quick update from Haines City

Judy and I had a great drive down.  we drove 8 hours on Tuesday and stopped in Florence, SC and a nice dinner in the historic part of town.  Early to bed at the Holiday Inn and then another 8 hours the next day down to Championsgate, where we are staying.

I've been doing all the normal get ready stuff.  Drove the two courses and got all my gear ready.  My mom and sister joined us yesterday afternoon.

Course Update:

My guess at this point is that the swim will be wetsuit legal.  It was 69.8 degrees on Thursday morning but jumped up to 75.2 degrees this morning.  It was very hot today but rained quite a bit tonight.  It's supposed to be quite cool from now until the race so I'm guessing (and hoping) wetsuit legal.

The bike course is pretty nice.  Road surface seems very good.  The first half of each loop is a lot easier than the last 28 miles of each of the two loops.  Definitely some hilly areas and a couple of places with steep descents into sharp turns but generally pretty straight forward.

Run is comical--so many turns!  138 in total.  It's the most convoluted course I've ever seen.  Pretty hilly, will be a challenge!

Weather on race day looks to be a challenge.  High of 85 and very humid with Dew Points north of 70 degrees, which is considered "oppressive".  Also, it looks like we will get some significant rainfall during the run at least (which I generally like) and perhaps for part of the bike.

All good though.  I did have some cramping in my left calf today but I think that might be attributable to all of the hydrating I've been doing.  I took some salt and I think that seems to be addressing the problem....

We had breakfast with Julie Moss this morning and she gave me a copy of her new book--lots of fun reliving that famous "Crawl of Fame" from 1982....

Ready to get after it!

Kara arrives tomorrow morning!

Monday, October 29, 2018

Haines City here we come!

Sorry about the extended Radio silence!  There was period of time there post hurricane that we felt the odds were against this race even happening but as you probably know, if you're reading this, that it is in fact on...a day later (11/4) and a few hundred miles away in Haines City, Fla (south of Orlando).

Despite the uncertainty I continued to remain very diligent in my final IM build (and now the first half of my 2+ week taper).  I had a good race in AC in challenging conditions.  Notably I rode a comfortable 2:34 and ran a 2:40 coming in around 6:05, which with all things given, I was pleased with.  I managed to get in 7 100-mile rides and even ran a 10 and 13.1 mile run averaging around 11:15-11:20/mile, which for me is good enough!

For comparison sake, here is how my 2018 build (final three months) compares to the prior five IM builds (these are not exact as I just took the three whole months prior to the month of each IM and since the exact date of each IM differed, in some cases I caught some of the taper):

Year        Race        Swim         Bike         Run         Time
                                 (k yds)      (miles)     (miles)      (hours)
2018       FLA             79            3,129        264           284
2017       ARZ             65            2,895        267           276
2014       Kona           122           2,718        298           239
2013       Tahoe          120           3,069        337           268
2012       Kona           118           3,384        388           291
2011       ARZ            111           3,127        433           285


Commentary:  I feel quite good with my build this year.  My swim volume, while not on a par with 2014 and earlier, is up quite a bit vs. last year and was more consistent and of a much higher quality/intensity.  I think my swim right now is as strong as any of these prior years.

My bike is in very good shape in my view.  I had the second most miles of these race builds and very comparable in volume and in terms of long rides with 2011 and Arizona--which was my best race of this group (by far).

The long-term decline of my run is evident although the last 6 weeks or so was encouraging with the 70.3 and the two 10+ mile runs.

Note the total time is almost identical to 2011, but my volume in the swim and run is less.  This is due to more supplemental training in 2018 (weights, stretching, PT) and the fact that I'm a lot slower--especially on the run.  all in all, I'm pleased with where I am.

The above is through September for 2018 (since October is still not done).  Here is how October has unfolded so far (note the taper impact in the last two weeks):

Week         Swim         Bike         Run         Time

  1               9,730         224             31            22
  2               7,125         266             21            23
  3               5,500         177             21            18
  4               6,600           86               7            11

All in all, I feel good and like I'm reasonably well prepared...I'll provide a bunch of updates as we close in on race day--just 6 days to go!

onward and upward!


Sunday, September 16, 2018

Hardcore IM 4 week build in the books!

Well--I'm not sure its the best strategy, but I just completed 4 weeks (28 days) of pretty hard training (any least from my perspective).  Here is the raw data:

Swim: 31,000 yards
Bike: 1,116 miles
Run(walk): 86 miles
Total time: 101 hours

Needless to say I'm a bit fried.  also, I think my swim and (maybe) my bike are good to go for my upcoming IM.

My run (walk) sucks of course.

Going to try to take it a bit easy over the next week and give at least the S/B portion of IM70.3AC a shot a week from today....maybe go shopping on the Boardwalk during my "run".

Onward (and a little bit optimistically) upward!

Monday, September 3, 2018

The beat goes on....

Another solid IM build week last week:

Swim: 12,110 yards
Bike: 309 miles
Run: 18 miles
Time: 27:41

Well more accurately a very solid week of Swim/Bike IM building!  My run, not so much but that is the way of the world these days...

This week will be truncated a bit with a family wedding on the horizon but I did get my butt kicked by a 100.5 mile ride this morning.  Absolutely brutal heat/humidity....

Onwards and upwards!

Friday, August 31, 2018

August (and everything , er before...)

OK, time to report on August 2018.  Bottom line, a real solid IM Build month.  Here is August 2018 vs. last year:

                   Swim         Bike         Run          Time

2018             35k          1,085        105          105 hours
2017             13               939          41            72

So, obviously I'm doing a lot more in getting ready for my IM this year than last.  I think it might be more instructive to look at my June-August IM build for each of my last three IMs as well as my progress this year:


                    IM         Swim         Bike        Run         Time

2013           IMLT      119            3069        337          268
2014           Kona       128            2988        333         261
2017           IMAZ       24            2864        159          220
2018           IMFL        77            3180        258          287

So swim wise, I'm starting to rebound nicely from the challenges I faced last year with my shoulder bursitis.  For these three months, I didn't put in as much volume in as I did in 2013 and 2014 but at 35k yards this month I'm pretty much back to where I was in those years.  I've been very conservative rebuilding my swim after having to go through 4 months of rehab last year due to my shoulder and I'm very pleased with how far I've progressed.  My recent times on my long OW swims are as good as I've ever been able to produce.  As far as IMFL goes, my swim is battle ready right now!

There is less variation in my biking volume.  I'm pretty consistent through the years.  I just completed my 8th consecutive month of 1,000+ miles this year.  My bike is solid.  Not as good as 2013/2014 but really trending up.  At the end of the day, I'm now slowing down on the bike as I age.  Still, I'm optimistic I can get strong enough to ride a 5:30 at IMFL, which puts me in the game!

My run (i.e. mostly walk) is what it is.  I'm putting the time in but my quality is so much less now--most of my Run(Walk) is walk these days.  I'm trying to get to the point where I can go after the swim/bike and still paste together a 6 hour marathon.  Not awesome of course, but it still might be good enough to punch my ticket to Kona in 2019...so I continue to push on....

At the end of the day I'm really working pretty hard at this.  I enjoy it and believe I have a chance, both to finish IMFL and perhaps to grab my 4th Kona slot.  I could not ask for more from a motivation stand point!  I'm really hammering now and am very motivated to stay on it!

rc             

Monday, August 27, 2018

Moving forward....

I just completed a pretty solid week, training wise.  Here are the totals:

Swim: 7,233 yards
Bike: 250 miles
Run/Walk: 34 miles
Time: 26:53

Most of this was actually recorded on Friday-Saturday as I had bust work schedule M-W and then was traveling on Th.  So, very solid effort.

Highlights included a 100-mile bike ride on Friday and the Cedar Island 5k swim race on Sunday.  The race turned out to be 4,299 yards in length--essentially 100 yards more than an Ironman and I did it in 66:30 which averages out to 1:33/hundred and implies I went through the IM distance in under 65 minutes.  I was 4th out of 11 in my Age Group but missed 2nd by 45 seconds.  it was  good swim for me as I did a bit better than a couple of folks I train with whom I generally consider to be better swimmers than I.


Sunday, August 5, 2018

Back on it--Minnesoty style!

So this post comes from the Northern wilds of my Mom's cabin--in the family since 1934!

First up, let me give the final status on July--kinda a half month of IM build:

Swim: 23,700.  A very good month.  The total for the month is low but most of the volume was packed into the back half of the month.  And as you will see below, my swim is spinning into great shape--especially this far out in front of the IM.

Bike: 1043 miles--my 7th straight month with more than 1,000 miles.  I have very solid endurance.  No problem riding 100 miles.  I just need to begin to up the intensity and the period of time I stay locked in aero position.  I have the power to do a 5:15 split at IMFL.  But I suspect if the race went off tomorrow, I'd need to settle for 5:40 or so--those 25 minutes are important and the hard work here is coming.  I have a very deep base to build on!

Run: 102 miles.  Very slow.  But I'm beginning to climb the endurance hill (at my slow pace).

Time: 97:24.  Hey, I'm on it.  At least that's clear!

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Ok, I flew to to Minnesota to visit my fam.  With the travel, I wanted to focus on 2-3 IM class workouts over the 4 full days here.  I've done pretty well given this objective.  I did a 17.6 mile run/walk on Friday and today I had my longest swim of my life!

Headline stats: Over 6,000 yards (3.4 miles).  I averaged 1:42/100 and went through the IM swim distance in 70 minutes (which would be my second fastest IM swim):


While I'm very encouraged to swim this far--(I'm a long way removed from my bursitis of last year!), I'm even more pleased with the consistency of my 500 yard splits.  I was pretty steady all the way through 4,000+ yards and then began to slow a bit--not a worry because I won't have to swim the far.

Competitively, a 70 minute IMFL swim (in salt water) would be great and seems very doable at this stage!



I also note that my average stroke length was just 1.6 yards.  It was probably 1.65 through the 2.4 mile IM distance.  If I can build this to 1.75 yards/stroke by the time of the race (which is principally a function of endurance power--not fading in stroke pressure as I get beyond 2500 yards) then a 66 minute swim becomes possible.  In 2007 when I last did IMFL, I did a 66 minute swim....


So my bike was a little light (we had some severe storms here) but I hope to get a long ride in tomorrow before i head back East.  Here are the last week stats:

Swim: 11.700 yards
Bike: 195 miles
Run/Walk: 22 miles
Time: 22:25

Onward and upward!




Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Last two weeks--update

Two weeks ago was a very solid IM build week.  I even took one whole day off and still managed the following:

Swim: 8,400 yards (long swim of 4,300 yards)
Bike: 244 miles (85 mile long ride)
Run: 24 miles (10.8 mile long run)
Time: 23:22

This past week, with a lot of family visiting, I decided to have it be more of easy/maintenance week and avoiding any long workouts:

Swim: 4,950 yards
Bike: 206 miles
Run: 25 miles
Time: 21:18

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

It's IM build time!

This Saturday was exactly 16 weeks in front of my IMFL race--so time to start my 14 week build (to be followed by a 2 week taper).  I was out of town on work on M/Tu but began to get after my IM training on Thursday when I did a 71 mile ride with a Normalized Power output of 197 watts, which is a level I'd be happy at for the race itself.  I also had a 3025 yard OW swim which I clocked in at 51 minutes, swimming comfortably and against a pretty significant tide for about 500 yards.  This is roughly equivalent to a 71 minute IM swim--right about where I'd expect to be swim-wise at this point--encouraging given how little I've swam to this point.  My longest run/walk was 9.5 miles as i begin to extend my weakest sport through application of the Galloway method (deliberate alternating run/walk blocks).

This week in aggregate looked like an IM training week:

7,050 yards swimming
249 miles on the bike
24 miles run
22:18 of total training time

My body feels good (although I can feel the training in my legs--especially after the long ride on Thursday).  My goal this week is to continue at about this aggregate level of training volume but to extend my long sessions in each.  Yesterday I swam over 4,000 yards (in 45 minutes!--with a strong tide) and felt very, very strong.  Tomorrow, I'll top out over 80 miles on the bike and at some point this week we'll get into double digits on the run/walk.

Onward and upward!

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

June totals

Just maintaining this month as work was quite busy.  Going to start ramping up for IMFL beginning mid-month in July....

Swim: 17,560 yards
Bike: 1,052 miles
Run : 51 miles
Time: 84 hours

Monday, April 30, 2018

April summary

I'm continuing steadily along building up my base.  I'm looking forward to May and the start of more serious outside training and once again triathlon racing!

In April it was more of the same with really good cycling numbers, lower than desired swimming totals (due to a lot of travel and work stuff) and my continued very limited running.  All good though and hopefully I can move my swim and run up as well as get a race or two in during May.  April totals:

Swim: 17,000 yards
Bike: 1,123 miles
Run: 53.5 miles
Other: 8 hours
Time: 88:48

Sunday, April 15, 2018

1st Quarter Analysis and Update

Its been a bit of time since I last posted and I thought I would provide a more detailed assessment of how the year is unfolding so far.  First up is a summary of the 1st quarter aggregate training volumes for 2018 and compared to last year and to 2012.  I included 2012 as a baseline, as that was my last "normal" triathlon oriented 1st Q.  In 2013, 2014 and 2015, I was in the southern hemisphere at one point in the 1st Quarter climbing mountains.  2016 was my first comeback year after the back and elbow problems that sidelined me beginning in February of 2015.  In any event here is a summary of the training for 2012, 2017 and this year:


Here is chart of the same data showing how my training time distribution (SBR and other) has changed across those three years:


And here is chart that shows how my training distance in each of the SBR disciplines compares to the 2012 baseline:


A number of observations can be made here:

1. I train a lot--I know I'm unusual in my appetite for endurance training and my continuing ability to absorb that training.  I actually trained more in the 1st Q this year than in either 2012 or 2017 averaging nearly 90 hours/month of training--this is about 3 hours per day on average.

2. The time distribution I had in 2012 is what I consider ideal for triathlon training: 12% swim, 57% bike, 27% run, and 5% other (weights, stretching, PT)  The SBR distribution pretty closely mimics a typical race time distribution.

3. In the 1st Q last year, I was focused on getting ready, with Anders, to go to Nepal for our Everest expedition.  As a consequence, you see a lot more focus on the "run".  In my case I group running, climbing, trekking, hiking all together in the run category.  A lot of the run time and mileage you see in 2017 was actually spent climbing, trekking and hiking.  That is one of the reasons you see such a dramatic slow down in my average run pace from 8:42/mile to 14:09/mile.

4. My run totals are suppressed in 2018 due to my knee limitations.  I've mixed a fair amount of hiking in here as well, which is why my average pace is just 12:34.  although, my typical running pace when I train is now unfortunately around 11 min/mile--I've slowed pretty dramatically since 2012!  I'm now beginning to ramp up my running (I even did a 4 mile race in Central Park last weekend) and the nice weather unfolds...

5. Last year I did very little swim training in the first quarter and when I returned from Nepal, I had very bad bursitis in my shoulder and as such, last year was very limited from a swim training perspective.  this year I started slowly as I didn't want to hurt my shoulder again after all the PT work I put into it in the later part of 2017.  I doubled my swim volume to a still modest 20k yards in February and my shoulder felt great (and still does) and I intended to do 30k in March but fell short due to a lot of scheduling conflicts.  As a consequence I've only done about half of my normal swim training at this point and while I'm not overly concerned about it, as I'm swimming well, I do need to ramp up my swim volume this quarter.  I'd like to end this quarter with somewhere in the 80+k yardage range.

6. I've been much more aggressive with my bike training this year compared to prior years.  I have basically about 50% more volume and due to the "miracle" of Zwift, its at a considerably higher intensity as well.  I'm hopeful this will translate into strong biking performance this year when I start racing!

Onward and upward!




Thursday, March 1, 2018

February totals

Here is how February racked up as compared to January:

Total time:  I did 82:41 in Feb as compared to 95:48 in January.  This sounds like a bigger difference than it is due to 31 vs. 28 days.  In January I averaged 3.1 hours/day and in February is was 3.0 hours/day.

Swim:  Nice jump from 10,500 up to 20,610 yards in February.  Just beginning to get back into the groove on swimming.  I would expect this number to climb above 30,000 yards in March.

Bike:  Declined from 1,199 to 934 miles.  On a daily basis this is a decline from 39 miles/day to 33.  while I still have a ways to go, the mileage in February was clearly of a higher average quality.

Run:  Pretty steady: 58.3 in January and 58.8 in February.

Getting the work done so far!

Sunday, February 18, 2018

Last 3 weeks

A little behind in posting training updates, as I was on vacation for nearly two weeks down in Florida.  My training volume was off a bit as a result, although I was able to do a lot of open water swimming down in Florida, which was nice.  Back in the groove this week:

Week           Time           Swim           Bike        Run

1/29             18:40          1500             212         18.0
2/4               18:35          8100             198         16.0
2/11             23:14          5500             275         12.5

I did a comparison between open water (with my wetsuit) and pool swimming by doing one of each for 2,500 yards one week apart.  the first was down in the Gulf on a nice day with 65 degree water.  I swam a comfortable pace (a bit below the effort I generally put into an Ironman swim) and swam 42:45, which is about 1:43/100 yards.  This is the equivalent of a 71:49 Ironman swim so even with the modest amount of swimming, my swim fitness is just fine.  I've thought a 70 minute swim down in IM Florida in November would be just fine, but part of me is now thinking that maybe I work just a bit harder and see if I can't knock off my IM PR, which is 66 minutes.

In any event, I swam 46:21 in the pool.  This is about 8 seconds/100 yards slower or about 7.8% slower.  My guess is I'm about 10% faster with my wetsuit and I probably get a modest offset to that in the pool with the mini rest and push-off at the end of each lap.

Another good piece of news is I did the Zwift Fondo again today--I last did it a month ago.  This is a tough ride of a little over 45 miles with about 4,500 feet of climbing.  A month ago I did it in 3:03 and averaged 149 watts and a HR of 141 bpm.  Today, I was 12 minutes faster on the same course coming in at 2:51.  I averaged 174 watts (about 17% more) and my HR was lower at 136 bpm.  My normalized power was 184 watts.  Although this is only 3 hours of cycling, it is encouraging to be up in the 170/180s in power at this point as tentatively, that is where I've been thinking I need to ride at IMFL.  To do so at just 136 bpm is a very good sign.  I think I can ride at an average HR of somewhere between 145 and 150 bpm in the race.  These are good numbers for the middle of February and the jump in power output over just one month is very rewarding!

My run still sucks however.....

Onward and upward!

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

More stats!

Last week was another week doing what I need to be doing to build towards IMFL in November.  Still a little light in the swim (I wanted to be around 7,000 yds) and the run (which is the way I roll with my knee at this point), but continued very solid bike training--lots of Zwifting going on--good intensity, I can feel the strength building in my cycling legs....

Swim: 3,500 yards
Bike: 241 miles
Run: 18.5 miles
Time: 21:46

For the month, the same general themes are evident:

Swim: 10,500 yards
Bike: 1,199 miles
Run: 58.3 miles
Time: 95:48 (11:40 in non SBR)

One last thing, my blog just went over 200,000 views....hard to believe (well I know probably about half of this traffic really is to read Judy's blog posts or stuff about Anders, but still....)

Onward and upward!

Monday, January 22, 2018

Good bounce back week

I had a pretty solid week after a slow start.  I was coming off a cold last week and away on work early in the week.  Put together a solid cycling week highlighted by the Zwift Fondo ride on sunday, which was quite demanding with 4500 feet of vertical over just 45 miles.  All told, I rode 69.5 miles on Sunday.  I was also able to get back into the pool.  although I kept the volume low, my 100 repeats averaged under 1:30, which is a good sign.  Also, pretty good week run-wise....

Swim: 4,000 yards
Bike: 299 miles
Run: 15.8 miles
Time: 24:17

Monday, January 15, 2018

Week Two: getting past a cold

I had a bit of a curveball in week 2 with a nasty little cold, which impacted me most of last week (I started to feel it at the end of prior week and my resting HR began to spike, so I knew something was up).  I spent most of one day in bed but was still able to get some work in, although below plan.  I also made the call to stay out of the pool last week while I was recovering.  I'm hopeful this week will return to plan and I can especially get some good efforts in the pool under my belt.

Here were last week's totals:

Swim: 0 yards
Bike: 229 miles
Run: 9 Miles
Weights/Stretch: 1:50
Total Time: 16:45

I've also begun to craft my 2018 race plan.  As previously mentioned, I have one "A" race and that is IMFL in November.  I'm currently (and tentatively) planning a schedule of 9 races leading up to that.  I'm still playing around with the schedule but I have selected and entered two additional races for 2018:

-A reverse Super Sprint (1.5 mile run, 4 mile bike, 250 yard swim) down in VA in late March to kick things off--I want to ease myself back into racing.

-Atlantic City 70.3 in September as part of my final 14 week build up ti IMFL.

Can't wait to lace em up!

For now, I have to stay healthy and stay hard at work rebuilding my triathlon fitness!


Monday, January 8, 2018

2018: Back to Triathlon--Here we go!

2018 Goals

As you might recall, 2017 was intended to be a year where two major phases in my athletic career were mostly wrapping up:  1. I planned IM Arizona to be my 14th and last IM; and 2. our family was to wingman with Anders as he completed his Seven Summits Quest.  I did indeed knock off IM Arizona (albeit, painfully slowly) and as documented here, Anders, with our family in tow, did achieve his dream and summited his Seventh Continental highpoint on Christmas Day.

Mission accomplished, right?  On to something else, right?  I had even started to think 2018 might be the year I attempted to solo ride across the country (I did RAAM a few years back as part of a relay). I also thought about a couple of longer trek oriented things with a wild ass dream of the AT still a (small) possibility.

But then a funny thing happened.  I told Anders shortly after IMAZ that it was my last IM and he was a bit surprised saying that he thought we would do another one together, now that his Seven Summits quest is over.  My response: OK, let's go!  IMFL together is now on the agenda.

As you know, I've been struggling physically ever since our climb in Antartica in the beginning of 2015.  My right leg stopped functioning normally and i was beset with excruciating pain, which ultimately turned out to be Degenerative Disc disease femoral nerve root compression) and was addressed through an epidural.  Then, later in 2015, I had cubital tunnel syndrome, which necessitated elbow surgery.  2015 was a complete wash, in fact at that time I figured my Tri career was over.  I was able to ease back into triathlon with 4 sprints in 2016.

After Nepal this year, I returned with debilitating shoulder bursitis and could not really swim from May to late August.  On top of that, my various struggles didn't seem to help my knee, which probably related to all the climbing, continued to deteriorate.  Further, as I was trying to push past all of this in the build to IMAZ, I tore up my feet pretty badly on some rocks in a Sprint triathlon at the beginning of the swim and couldn't run for 6 weeks.

Frankly, my motivation for IM training and racing was very diminished (what's the point?) and as it turns out, not being fit is not a good plan for trying to race IM distance triathlons--at least when you are 60!

Then Anders asked the question and strangely, the experience of suffering through IMAZ AND still getting there with plenty of time to spare (yes 17 hour cut-offs now have to be considered as I think about this sport) has reignited my IM passion.  And so here we go again!

You can see in my goals at the top of this Blog--I'm going to have 2018 be a year to focus on triathlon once again (after 3 years of not), race a bunch of SC triathlons (hopefully nail my 50th AG career win) and maybe, just maybe, qualify for Kona through the XC program.

1st Week Totals

I have a pretty clear training strategy, which I'll elaborate a bit later this week, but I just finished week one.  I struggled with a cold and had to curtail my swimming but did manage to get a lot of work done, especially on the bike (which is my initial emphasis)--all of it indoors on the trainer (Wahoo Kickr and some junk miles on my recumbent):

Swim: 1,500 yards
Bike: 322 miles
Run: 12 miles
Weights/PT: 3 hours 50 minutes
Total time: 24:20

This biggest change is the intensity I'm already starting to hit with the Kickr as I've entered and become addicted to the world of Zwift.  My FTP is about 210-220 watts right now and my race plan for IMFL tells me I need to get this up to 260-270 watts (15-20% increase) by November.  I believe this is doable given my demonstrated levels of historical FTP (was 295 watts in 2007)

I'll detail my annual plan and targets shortly.

2017 Volume Summary

I did actually train a great deal in 2017--most of it was of very modest intensity, since I wasn't really able to get my act together to race (just three races, 1 AG win).  Really, I was mostly exercising for health reasons (mostly mental).  Also, a majority of the "run" distance was actually climbing/trekking.  Nonetheless, here are the totals:

Swim:121,000 yards
Bike: 9,261 miles
Run: 1,387 miles
Weights/PT: 68 hours
Total time: 1014 hours

This represents on average 19.5 hours/week of exercise or about 2 hours and 45 minutes a day.

My time split was: 57% cycling;   run/climb/trek: 32%;   weights/PT: 7%;  Swim: 4%.

I think the "proper" IM distribution, at least for me is about:

Bike: 50%
Run: 33%
Swim: 12%
Other: 5%

I'll detail my 2018 training approach shortly!

Onward and Upward!