Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Catching Up Post #3 of 3: Stone Harbor 5k

 Last catch up post for the day.  On Sunday, May 26th I jumped into the local "Turtle Trot" 5k, which is a pretty competitive, quite large 5k held in Stone Harbor every Memorial Day.  Last year I did my first run of my post knee replacement life where I was able to run the whole 5k, albeit in a very slow 34:19, which over the 3.16 miles I clocked the race at worked out to a 10:54/mile pace.

While I was happy enough to just be able to run 5k with no pain last year, this year I expected to go quite a bit faster.  Specifically, I wanted to beat my PKRPR (post knee replacement PR) of 28:53, which I did at the Ivy 5k four weeks earlier.

I tried to open the run more conservatively then I did at the Ivy 5k and ended up clocking 9:13 with an average HR of just 135bpm (which is a solid Z2 effort--certainly conservative!)

My 2nd mile was in 9:18 and my HR stayed steady at 136bpm.  Mile 3 I picked up a bit and ran 9:08 at an average HR of 137bpm.

I crossed the finish line in 28:45, which works out to about 9:12/mile for the 3.13 miles I clocked it at this year (would be about 9:15/mile if this was the correct distance).

So, I took another 8 seconds off my PKRPR.  I averaged just 136bpm vs. 153bpm at the Ivy race and my max HR was just 141bpm vs. 163 at Ivy.  So not a lot faster but at a much easier effort (obviously, I have the capacity to go faster!).. I was also 5:34 faster than last year--it's been a long time since I've been doing something I have a lot of experience at and finding myself getting faster!  Fun!

Anyways I finished 5th out of 19 in the 60-69 YO Age Group (79th %-tile).  I was 191st out of 425 vs. 325th out of 397 last year.  So I went from 18th %-tile last year to 55th %-tile this year.  For this nearly 67 year old learning how to live with a new knee this is what progress looks like.  I’ll take it.  I’m proud of what I’ve been able to accomplish, PT wise, over the last 5-8 months.  Lots of hard work, but it seems to be working, at least a little bit.


Onwards and upwards!

Catching Up Post # 2 of 3: Delaware Sprint Triathlon State Championship

 Bear Sprint Triathlon/USAT Delaware State Championships: Race Report

 

Date:                                                  5/19/24

Location:                                           Lum’s Pond State Park;  Bear, DE

Format:                                             Sprint: 800 yds/10 miles/3 miles

2024 Triathlon Race #:                  1

Career Triathlon Race #:               170

 

Conditions:  Good. 60s/70s, moderate humidity, low wind, 65-degree water, muddy/slippery on a portion of the run.

 

Background

 

First triathlon of the 2024 season, a season in which I hope to race 4-5 triathlons as well as a number of 5k running races and a few open-water swim races.

 

This also represents the 2nd triathlon of my post knee-replacement athletic life.  I had been training consistently, especially since January and while I was lacking in much intensity in my training, my average daily volume was quite high at 4+ hours.

 

This is a small sprint race held early in the season in Lum’s Pond State Park in Delaware.  I’ve probably raced there 6-7 times through the years including a couple of half-ironman distance races.  I also raced this race in 2022 as one of the first post-CoVid races.

 

Turns out this race is the USAT Delaware State Championship with slots awarded to the National Sprint Championship in Atlantic City later this year.  I didn’t know a lot about my competition, but I decided that it would be a worthy objective to shoot for the State Championship!  Turns out there were 169 competitors overall and 5 in my 65-69 YO Age Group—the oldest age group in the race.

 

Swim

 

The swim was in the murky and 65-degree water of Lum’s Pond—not my favorite place to swim for sure.  They changed the shape of the course this year, which was something I thought they had needed to do.  The Sprint race is supposed to be 750 meters (820 yards).  In 2022, this had turned out to be 1,216 yards but on this 2024 morning I ended clocking it at 815-yards...pretty much spot on.

 

The young guys went first with the 45+ year-old dudes 2 minutes behind them.  I had a drama-free start and kept my starting pace under control to keep my HR from spiking.  I didn’t feel great, but I didn’t think I was swimming particularly poorly.  About 1/3rd of the way through the race I started to feel a bit pukey so I backed-off quite a bit to try to get it back on an even keel.  This seemed to work and as I reflect back on the race, I suspect it may have been more nerves than anything.

 

Anyways I plugged along through a pretty uneventful swim and hit dry land to discover I had swum a very, very poor swim.  My Garmin had me at 17:16 over 815 yards which is a ridiculously slow 2:07/100 yards.  In 2022, at this venue I had averaged 1:53/100 yards and based on my training this year, the really should not have been a problem for me this year.  That means my swim was about 2-minutes (114 seconds) too slow.  

 

I’m at a lost to explain why.  I would have thought a poor swim would have been something like 1:56-1:57/100.  I never swim this slow in practice and I never would have thought this was a possible result.  I did have a brand-new wetsuit and was swimming in the open water for the first time in 8 months, but still, this was really bad.  A quick look at my key swim metrics sheds some light:

 

Stroke Cadence: 2024: 33 strokes/min         2022: 32 strokes/min

Stroke Length:    2024: 1.40 yards/stroke     2022: 1.62 yards/stroke

 

So, there it is.  My stroke length was pathetically short—14% shorter than 2022.  And 2022’s race was not that good.  I’ve had quite a few races where I manage 1.9-2.0 yards/stroke.  I know what I need to work on—I just need to find some time in the open water.

 

As bad as my swim was, it not surprising that it really cost me from an overall race competitiveness perspective.  In 2022 I was 49th out of 178 on the swim—73.0  %-tile.  This year I was 77th out of 169—55.0 %-tile.  No other way to cut this—really poor swim!

 

Meanwhile, in the dinosaur division I was as it turns out the second fastest swimmer as I was down 1:26 to the leader after the swim:

 

1.  Nachman                        --------

2.  RC                                     + 1:26

3.  Littles                               + 2:08

4.  Jarman                             + 3:25

5.  McGrath                          + 9:13

 

Transition One

 

The swim to bike transition involved a longish run through the woods near the pond on a muddy and slippery trail.  After entering the transition area, I soon got to my bike and discovered Nachman sitting directly in front of my transition area looking like he was having a yard-sale.  He muttered something about hating transitions and I had to grab my stuff and pull it a couple of yards away to get at my T1 business.

 

As I was getting into my bike gear up ran Littles, who was the competitor I had judged to be the most serious threat to title hopes.  I had an OK transition I guess and was able to leave T1 in first.  My T1 was 2nd to Littles by 16 seconds.  In 2022 I was 24th/178 (87.1 %-tile).  This year I slipped to 34th/169 (80.5 %-tile).  Here is where we stood after T1:

 

1.  RC                                     --------

2.  Littles                               + 0:26

3.  Nachman                        + 2:03

4.  Jarman                             + 3:26

5.  McGrath                          +10:42

 

The Bike

 

As I headed out on the bike, I had seen enough in T1 to tell me that it was likely down to a two-man race at this point.  Even with the poor swim, I knew I had a bit of a lead on Littles.  I guessed 30-45 seconds, so I had a good sense of where I stood tactically.  I figured I needed to put about 3 minutes or so on Littles on the bike to give me a big enough cushion for my run.

 

I ended up riding what I measured to be 9.91-miles in 27:18, for an average speed of 21.8mph.  I averaged 193 watts, my average HR was 158bpm, and my average cadence was 81rpm. 

 

This feels like a relatively slow ride.  I knew I lacked the intensity in my training to ride, say,  23.0mph but frankly I would have expected my power to be around 210 wats and my speed closer to 22.5mph.  although in 2022 I rode 22.0 mph on the same course.  I was 20th in 2022 (89.4 %-tile) and this year  I was 15th (91.7 %-tile).  I’m not quite sure what to make of this data but overall, I’m reasonably happy with the bike.  One encouraging outcome was that my L/R power balance for the ride was 48%/52%. vs 40/60 or worse before the knee surgery.  With any luck and some good hard outdoor miles, I should be able to add 1-2mph this year.

 

In my AG I was able to put 3:42 on Littles and more on the rest of the field.  I entered T2 in very good shape, competition-wise:

 

1.  RC                                     --------

2.  Littles                               + 4:08

3.  Nachman                        + 7:10

4.  Jarman                             +10:31

5.  McGrath                          +25:23

 

Transition Two

 

I ran into T2 feeling like I had likely done enough on the ride to be able to hole Littles off on the run—especially given the encouraging early season results with the limited running I’ve done on my new knee.  I quickly executed my  transition work and ended up posting the 2ndfastest T2 in my AG (Littles was 40 seconds faster, which is not good—something I should probably work on and way too much time to give up in T2!):

 

1.  RC                                     --------

2.  Littles                               + 3:28

3.  Nachman                        + 7:57

4.  Jarman                             +11:17

5.  McGrath                          +26:33

 

The Run

 

It took a little while after T2 to get my HR and breathing under control.  I wanted to take it easy over the first little bit and be prepared to negative split the run if I saw that I needed to half-way, as this was an out an back run course.  Also, the early (and last part) of the run course was very muddy/uneven/slippery and that definitely slowed down my 1st and 3rd mile.

 

I hit the first mile in 10:45 and decided I need to get a move on.  After rounding the half-way marker, I soon saw Littles and determined I was about 2:45 or so ahead of him, which struck me as enough to get the job done.  It was.  Mile 2 went by in 9:40 and Mile 3 in 9:56 as I cruised home.  I clocked the run at 3.06 miles and ended up doing a 30:57, which was 56 seconds slower than Littles 30:01, but good enough to get me the State title. It was also 1:33 faster than 2022!  My average HR this year was 153bpm vs. 165bpm last year so yet another good sign about where I’m in. 

 

Here are the final standings:

 

1.  RC                                     ---------

2.  Littles                               + 2:31

3.  Nachman                        + 9:03

4.  Jarman                             +23:02

5.  McGrath                          +46:41

 

Not a bad way to start the year!  Nice to be State Champ—even if it’s little ole Delaware.  Obviously, I have a bunch of stuff to work on, which I’m motivated to get after but we’ll have to see how the navigation of the things I need to address in Minnesota goes.  Onwards and Upwards!

Catching Up Post #1 of 3: Training Load

 Let's roll the tape back to the last week of April, which is Week 17 of 2024.  Here is how my training volume has unfolded and I'll provide some background as to what's going on:


Week   Swim   Bike   Run  PT  Time

 17     10,000    260    24  5:50 31:31

 18       6,500    217    27  4:45 33:04

 19       6,500    223    23  3:50 26:13

 20       5,600    110    15  3:55 16:15

 21          0        120    28  0:00 15:13


So week 17, on Sunday 4/28 was my first 5k of the season.  Obviously, too high a training load, both generally and certainly in the week of my first race (albeit, a 5k).  None-the-less, I had a good race (for me), running 28:53 and hitting one of my post knee replacement objectives (sub 30-min 5k).

Week 18 was not intended to be a big week but it ended up the biggest of the year so far and also, its been a long time (if ever) since I last did back-to-back 30+ hour weeks! Week 18 also included a couple of days hiking in Shenandoah, which inflated the time vs the miles....

It finally occurred to me that I needed to cut back and give my body a break after 18 weeks of averaging 4+ hours of training a day.  I honestly tried to do this in week 19 but still piled up 26+ hours of training.

With a Triathlon at the end of week 20 I finally gave myself a stern lecture and dialed way back.  I report on the Race in the next post.

Week 21 saw a relocation to the shore and a lot of house work there.  This, plus sub-60 degree water, led challenges getting into the water.  Further on Wednesday we were thrown a curve-ball when my brother Dave swerved to miss a squirrel and lost control of his car leading to many serious fractures and an uncertain recovery.  So after navigating a number of balls that we had up in the air, I'm now on my way to Minnesota for what will likely be a week or so.  Not-sure what that means swim-wise as its still pretty cold up that far north.  Training will continue to be a bit hit or miss as Dave is in a hospital about 2 hours from the cabin  and I'll also need to help my mom.

Lastly, I ran a second 5k on Sunday 5/26, which I'll also update on in a subsequent post.             




Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Catch up on training status

 Quick catch up:

Week 18 has my biggest volume week (time-wise) and was my second consecutive week above 30 hours, which I would guess, I've never done before....

Swim: 6,500 yards

Bike: 217.4 miles

Run/Walk: 26.6 miles

PT: 4:45

Time: 33:04

Looking at this, it might seem strange that this amount of distance would equate to this much time, but I had two days down in Shenandoah climbing with a friend and that shows up in the Run/Walk, but with a lot more hours.  Of the 33 hours this week, 10 were in SNP (resulting in about 15 of the 26.6 run/walk miles).

Here is the summary by month and my observations:

Swim

Jan: 17,500.  Feb: 21,100.  Mar: 32,050. April: 31,500

My focus so far has been on just getting myself to the point where I can comfortably handle 10k+/week open water swimming by Memorial Day.  Mission accomplished.  Not to say I'm fast and in great racing shape--I'm not.  But I can easily handle this level of volume at this point.  Can't wait to jump back into open water swimming!

Bike

Jan: 1,046.  Feb: 944.  Mar: 1,002. Apr: 1,026

My base is solid.  I've begun to ride outside more and have begun some higher intensity sessions.  My attitude is my bike is my strength and while I'm not in great bike racing shape, I'm ready to move outside and start getting after it!  I havre a Tri this weekend and my expectation is to do OK by getting along with my natural strength here, as opposed to any real bike racing fitness--which I haven't really begun to build yet.

Run/Walk

Jan: 82.6.  Feb: 100.2.  Mar: 111.3.  Apr: 100.3

As you've noted in my prior posts my basic focus has been to transition mostly walk/hike/climb to include running, especially higher intensity running.  I'm very pleased with my progress and have run 2X/week at 3ish miles per session (half of which were intervals/racing) for 3 straight weeks now.  I'm heading towards 3X/week running/10+ miles/week running and with my recent success racing and in my intervals continue to be hungry and excited about where my run might lead (in the context of being a 67-yo dude with an artificial knee).

PT (weights/flexibility)

Jan: 20:30.  Feb: 17:40.  Mar: 16:55.  Apr: 21:20

As noted in prior posts, I feel really, really good about my post surgery rehab and the progress I've made.  Frankly I expected April to be down from March, but my schedule worked out in a way that I continued to make heavy time investments in this.  As I transition to my summer schedule, this will fall off dramatically...essentially shifting to a maintenance mode for the summer--maybe 7-10 hours/month going forward.  I'm very happy with my post surgery recovery--what a positive, life-changing thing for me!

Total Training Time

Jan: 114:44.  Feb: 111:46.  Mar: 125:24.  Apr: 123:27

Welcome to my pro level training investment (lol).  Yes I know, this is an excessive amount of training over the first 18 weeks of the year--basically 4 hours/day for the first 130 days of the year.  but to be honest with you, no problem for me and I'm frankly motivated to do more.

Full stop.  The pattern breaks here.  I'm ramping up my intensity and I'm looking at my first Triathlon of the season this weekend (plus a Board meeting this week) and so I'm taking a real easy/"taper" week this week to get ready for the Delaware State Championships this weekend....I'll post my views on that before the race on Sunday, but I'm super pumped for the race, know I'm not in the best race shape (by design), but thinking I need to bring home the (Age Group) crown (lol)....

onwards and upwards!