Ironman Wisconsin - My race results and analysis.
The Stats:
Division - M25-29
Overall Place - 284
Division Place - 38/156
Total Time - 11:12:37
Swim Time - 01:12:00, Swim Overall Place - 704
Bike Time - 06:13:30, Bike Overall Place - 769
Run Time - 03:35:14, Run Overall Place - 107
Stats taken from my IMMOO results at TriResults.com
Swim Analysis: I was very pleased when I got out of the water and saw that I swam in the 1:12 range. I had anticipated a time between 1:10 and 1:15, but my intuition had me closer to 1:15 than to 1:10. The frustrating part about the swim is that it took a lot time during the swim before I felt like I was actually swimming and making progress. The major issue was sighting efficiently. I ended up using small breast strokes in order to sight, because either I was swimming zig-zags or those around me were - or we all were to start.
This can be improved upon by doing more open water swims during the summer, but it will help to just become an overall better swimmer too. This is the first year in my entire life that I have swam the entire year (not a lot a couple months, but still swam some). That consistency for 2008 will be essential again. I would love to be a sub 1:05 swimmer, since Nikki swam 1:05 at her first Ironman.... maybe she'll motivate me to actually swim some workouts with her this year?
I will also seek swim technique analysis.
Bike Analysis: I wrote a lot of information prior to the race about my race simulation rides. (Tags and links to articles) The interesting thing about my expectations for Ironman Wisconsin and those rides are that the two didn't quite run parallel. What do I mean by that? Well - During the simulation rides my common riding time for riding 36.2 miles was between 2:01 and 2:15. If you take that distance and time and derive an estimated Ironman bike split it would be around 6:15 to 6:30.
My expectation going into Wisconsin was that I could ride at or just under 6:00. Why did I think that? Because I wanted to be able to ride 6 hours. That expectation was based upon a hope and dream, not on the reality of my current riding fitness.
There are a couple things that saved my bike leg from completely blowing me up:
1. I understood that riding too hard would blow me up and I knew what type of effort I could comfortably maintain for 112 miles. While I didn't get a logical bike split expectation from the race simulation rides, they did teach me about my effort levels. Luckily I had spent a lot of time mentally preparing for the race and was able to ride at my proper effort levels and didn't chase the 6 hour idea... luckily.
2. A period of contemplating reality and pain. I've been asked before, "What do you think about all that time." During the bike, I had a long period of time (around an hour) where I thought about two people, John Reier and my aunt Connie. Both of those individuals have meant a lot to me and both are currently dealing with cancer. I spent a lot of time talking to John and it allowed me to quit feeling sorry for myself and the bloating I couldn't get rid of. I thought a lot about how it was difficult for John to eat after his chemo treatments. It made me realize the joy that I was experiencing by completing an Ironman. Praise God for the day he granted me!
3. Ale8 and a Honey Bun. The bloating that I had and all the peeing I needed to do made it very difficult to take in Gatorade or eGel's. (I wasn't trying both at the same time!) Even taking all the salt tablets didn't help. What did help was the honey bun in my special needs bag and the bike bottle I had that contained Ale8. If it wasn't for the approx 700kcals I took in by eating and drinking those two items, I would have headed directly for bonksville. The Ale8 also calmed my stomach down quite a bit (it might have been the ginger?) and I was able to resume taking in my gels.
So coming in 13 minutes slower on the bike was a little bit of a bummer, but I knew I had ridden smart (besides the two times up Devil's Hill) which meant I was ready to run.
Run Analysis: I made it through the transition pretty quick and tried to get into a "quick feet" running pattern right away. My legs actually felt sluggish to begin, but in the first mile I felt like I passed a hundred people. It also was nice to hear some of the encouragement from the spectators:
"Gary, you've got a nice cadence!" "Gary, you're making it look easy" "Gary, your pace is excellent!"
I didn't necessarily feel that way, but it was nice to get that feedback. When I hit the first aid station I contemplated to run through it and not walk through. But true to my training strategy since last November, I hit the split button on my watch and walked through the aid station grabbing water and gatorade. At 20 seconds, I took off again. "Quick feet, light feet," I kept telling myself.
I used this pattern for the entire marathon, but around mile 16 I decided to walk for 30 seconds instead of 20. That may seem like a "break down," but I was happy to be increasing the walk by 10 seconds and not several minutes or miles!
There were a few things during the run that motivated me and helped me push on: I was passing lots of other runners, I saw all the others with me several times and got encouragement (Eric, Beth, Jeff and Nikki), I ran with a guy (Jonathan Cross) that I met on the run and he was encouraging and during the last four miles I thought I was on pace to go under 3:30.
It turns out that I wasn't on pace for a sub 3:30, but did run a 3:35. That was the 107th best run of the day. That made me happy.
Final Analysis: The one thing that makes me happy about the Ironman Wisconsin race is that I had a race plan and executed it almost to perfection. The times are a little bit off (re:bike analysis) but that was due to improper expectations not poor execution. As a first Ironman attempt, I'm not sure I could have been happier with that level of committment to a goal. I beleive all the years of reading others' race reports talking about going too hard too early has really driven home the message that execution is a major factor in Ironman events.
Feeling very happy about the experience and what I was able to accomplish I have to admit that I was a little down yesterday. Looking at a time of 11:12 and then looking at where the front of pack guys race, I realized that it is going to take a lot to make it up there. "How can I get my bike that much faster?" I have asked myself that question several times the past few days.
It could have been that I turned 29 years old yesterday, which made me think about the "what next" question a lot, but I walked around the early part of my birthday thinking that maybe Ironman should become a thing of my past. Even though I enjoyed the event, I thought maybe I need to move on. Return to "the checklist". The list that says I have to accomplish "x,y,z" in order to feel successful and happy. A list that would be difficult to fulfill if even more of my time was dedicated to "going faster."
Sitting at my computer I turned on - The Samples. It kind of brought me back to a place in my life where I once lived. A place where "conquering the world" wasn't so high on my list. A time where the romance of spending a year learning to surf or running away with a loved one seemed pretty important.
Then I came full circle. Ironman is about a lifestyle I want to embrace. I want to be active, I want to enjoy the outdoors. I want to share the joy of movement. So what if I drive a wrecked '95 Saturn SL2.... I may or may not "conquer" Ironman, but I'm going to embrace it! So I'm signing up for IMMOO '08, maybe another full-distance race too if I can find one in May or June.
[Sidenote: Interesting that Nikki gave me the book Stumbling on Happiness
Labels: ale8, egel, Ironman, Ironman Wisconsin, positive self talk, race report, Wisconsin





1 Comments:
Gary,
Congrats on a great race!
I totally blew up my run... I'm still trying to figure out what it was. I don't think it was going too hard on the bike, I really felt like I was going hard but within my comfort zone. But the run was a total disaster...
In retrospect I think the problem was "longer distance training volume"... which is to say this year, I didn't do any long bricks... say something over 7 hours. And really I didn't do nearly enough workouts in the 5 hour range. I did the same total volume as last year, but not as many individual long sessions.
The good news is I improved my swim time by 7 minutes...
Anyway, despite my disappointment, I am still in love with Ironman, and I will be back for more!
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