On August 11, 2013 I raced Sprint Triathlon in North Park. This is only 15 minutes from my home and back in 2011 this was my first ever triathlon race (photos here). I could not wait to see how much have I improved (hopefully) over the past 2 years as the course is exactly the same and represents a perfect way to measure progress. I won in my 40-44 age group (37 participants) and went faster than the first place in 35-39 age group (29 participants), which was a nice bonus. I was 14th overall out of 365 competitors. The official results can be found here: http://www.runhigh.com/2013RESULTS/R081113AA.html.
Comparing 2013 results to my 2011 race, here are the differences:
I am quite happy with the result, however one major thing that needs improvement is the control of pre-race anxiety. We had a fun outdoor party in the backyard of our house the day before the race and the last guest left at about midnight. I went to bed at 30 min past midnight, but unfortunately I could not get any sleep that night. I may have slept for about 30 minutes total, but most of the time I just laid there with my eyes shut in bed and was thinking about the race, etc. This indeed is very annoying as usually I am a very good sleeper and it takes me two minutes to fall asleep on a normal night. The funny thing is that I do not normally get nervous before any of my customer meetings or other big events, except for races. I did not sleep at all before the Half-Ironman race back in June and now this repeated all over again. Must do some research and learn how to control my pre-race nerves - warm milk, boring book, meditation, may be even some mild pills? This has got to be solvable. Right after the gun goes off at the start of the race I am having a lot of fun and am loving it, but those nasty 15 to 20 hours before the race start are the worst part of triathlon - for me anyway...
Speaking of warmup - because I did arrive at about 6am and was almost the first athlete to arrive, I had run easy 1 mile warmup. This was the first time I had ever done any kind of warmup before the race. I think this was well worth it and need to do it more. However I only swam 100 meters warmup in the pool and I do need to increase that part of the warmup.
Comparing 2013 results to my 2011 race, here are the differences:
2011 | 2013 | 2 year improvement | |
Swim (700 yards) | 00:18:21 | 00:13:48 | 25% (4m 33s) |
Bike (12.5 miles) | 00:33:17 | 00:32:59 | 1% (18s) |
Run (3.1 miles) | 00:23:04 | 00:21:42 | 6% (1m 22s) |
Total | 01:14:42 |
01:08:29 | 8% (6m 13s) |
I am quite happy with the result, however one major thing that needs improvement is the control of pre-race anxiety. We had a fun outdoor party in the backyard of our house the day before the race and the last guest left at about midnight. I went to bed at 30 min past midnight, but unfortunately I could not get any sleep that night. I may have slept for about 30 minutes total, but most of the time I just laid there with my eyes shut in bed and was thinking about the race, etc. This indeed is very annoying as usually I am a very good sleeper and it takes me two minutes to fall asleep on a normal night. The funny thing is that I do not normally get nervous before any of my customer meetings or other big events, except for races. I did not sleep at all before the Half-Ironman race back in June and now this repeated all over again. Must do some research and learn how to control my pre-race nerves - warm milk, boring book, meditation, may be even some mild pills? This has got to be solvable. Right after the gun goes off at the start of the race I am having a lot of fun and am loving it, but those nasty 15 to 20 hours before the race start are the worst part of triathlon - for me anyway...
Swim
We swam 700 yards in the outdoor 50 yards swimming pool in North Park. Had two swimmers on each end of the lane going counterclockwise. Total of 4 people in each lane. The faster swimmer goes first and the slower swimmer goes right after him. As time goes by, all 4 people swim in the same direction keeping to the right of the swim lane and passing slower swimmers on the left. I was passed twice by two faster guys, one of whom was Drew Sapp - the overall winner of the previous Sprint race where I was second overall. What are the chances of that happening that we both will be in the same lane on the same end of the pool?? Wow!! The water was cold and the swim was wetsuite legal. I decided to take my wetsuite the last second before I left home and was I glad I did! Not because the water was too cold, but because it helped me be so much faster in the pool. I may have lost only 10 seconds for taking the wetsuit off at the T1 transition, but I am sure it was more than offset by the speed benefit I got from wearing it. Lesson I learned from other folks - ALWAYS take your wetsuite with you no matter the race. I did not push all out on the swim since it gives me very little extra speed, but takes disproportionally more energy, so I swam with moderate pace treating it almost like a warmup. Perhaps when I swim better I can race swim part of the triathlon, for now it is a warmup for me and I do not feel I am racing it.Speaking of warmup - because I did arrive at about 6am and was almost the first athlete to arrive, I had run easy 1 mile warmup. This was the first time I had ever done any kind of warmup before the race. I think this was well worth it and need to do it more. However I only swam 100 meters warmup in the pool and I do need to increase that part of the warmup.