Day Break in Transition |
As an aging competitive athlete the opportunity to set a Personal Record is becoming rarer and rarer. If someone had asked me before Rev 3 Williamsburg if I thought that I had a shot at 47 years of age of setting a PR and would have a chance to break 4:30 at the Half-Iron distance, I would have told them they were crazy. To say this race was special would be an understatement, but at the same time, it was troubling, but we'll get to that in a minute. First, let me tell you about the course.
2016 was the 4th year for Rev3 in Williamsburg, but this year they made some major changes. I've lived in the area for over 20 years and it has puzzled me that all of the triathlons in the area used the same swim location. Jamestown Beach and the swim in the James River has been used by the Virginia/Maryland Triathlon series since 2008 and was used by Rev 3 for the first three Williamsburg events. It is a challenging swim with chop and unpredictable currents that can turn a routine 1.2 mile swim into a monster. Anyone who swam the 2009 Patriots Half or the Inaugural Rev3 event will testify that it can take your full measure. I don't know if the races were limited by James City County or by a lack of creativity. Kudos to Jay Pelusso, the Rev3 Race director, for thinking outside the box and finding a fantastic new swim venue. It may be the best swim in Virginia.
Where the previous three Rev3 races had a split T1/T2 and a point-to-point bike, the new course offered a traditional single transition area at the Chickahominy River Front Park. The swim was point-to-point downstream in the Chickahominy River on the outgoing tide. The bike was nearly identical to the Patriots Half bike course with an added turn up to Barnnetts Road from Adkins Store at the top of the Patriots course. The last 21 miles is net downhill back to transition. It's mostly flat with some nice rollers on Courthouse Road, and one or two short hard efforts. The total elevation is about 800-ft of climbing, but for every up hill there is a fair and fast downhill. The run comes out of the park and turns onto the Cap-2-Cap bike trail and is two loops, which requires you to run up and over the Chickahominy River bridge 4 times. It is mostly shaded and flat, except for the bridge.
Training
After Raleigh 70.3 I spent the next 4 weeks swimming, riding and running on the Rev 3 course. 30 minute swims followed by 2 hour rides with 20 or 30 minute brick runs on Saturdays and long structured runs on the Cap-2-Cap trail on Sundays. I knew every rough patch, dip, and crack on the bike and run courses. I consider this race my home course and I was going to make the most of my easy access. My training partners and team mates - Jason Bridges, Greg Henderson, Peter Lubrano, Justin Highley, Craig Politte - all joined me at one time or another and it was great to have moral support on some of those long workouts.
Looking back at the build into Rev3 there were a couple of key workouts. The first was a Swim/Bike/Run (SBR), a thirty minute structured swim, followed by a 2 hour bike with an Inverse power split (1 minute at 150% of Threshold, 9 minutes at 125%, 20 minutes at 100%, 1 hour at race pace, and 30 minutes easy), and a thirty minute run at HIM pace. The second key workout was a 1.5 hour run with a 20 minute warm-up and cool-down and 2 x 20 minutes @ 6:50 with 10 minutes easy in-between. Both of these workouts were completed on the Rev3 Course, which allowed me to get a feel for the course and help me mentally set up my pacing. Locking in the feel of race pace in a race simulation helps me on race day.
The Race
The day before the race is a day of rituals. I'm an early riser and that doesn't change the day before a race or on race day. The day before a race I like to three short easy efforts - Swim, Bike, Run. I packed up my gear and headed down to packet pick-up. Once at the Park I headed down to the swim start. I hadn't swam the front half of the course because on most weekends the fishing boats are in and out of the boat ramp all day. Unfortunately, Rev3 wasn't set up to support a swim from the boat ramp. I trudged back to the swim exit where the buoys had been set for the practice swim. They set the buoys out going up-stream with the furthest buoy about 0.25 miles away from the swim exit. I was early and all alone. I pulled on my cap and goggles, started my watch and swam and easy loop of the buoys. As I was coming back into the swim exit I stopped my watch and looked down in disbelief - 13:50 for 0.48 miles swimming super easy. The water was glass, it was flat and fast. I hopped on my bike for a 15 minute ride, then laced my trainers for a 15 minute run. I happened to see Ashley DeBoise on the ride - Congrats Ashley! It was great to see you.
After my SBR, I walked over to race HQ and picked up my packet. I put my numbers on the bike, put my bike in transition, and headed for home. I stopped by the Five Forks diner for my pre-race meal. My big meal is always lunch before a race. The "Big Breakfast" at Five Forks with a large chocolate milk was just right. My wife had planned my daughter's belated birthday party for Saturday afternoon. I planned to sit on the deck, with my feet up, and make it an early night.
Boat Ramp Swim Entrance |
The order of start was young men, old men, young women, old women. With the military, novices, and relays mixed in. I was able to swim an easy 200 m to get the blood moving in my arms and then it was time for the national anthem. I watched the first start and noticed that the racers were being swept downstream and were fighting to stay behind the line prior to the gun, then it was time to wade into the water and wait. I had to work to stay on the right side of the starting line. I couldn't find the two swimmers my scouting report told me that I wanted to chase, so I just picked the middle of the line and hoped I would find a pair of feet a little faster than me.
The Swim:
Stripping off my Xterra Speedsuit |
Vindication and relief. The 37 minute swim at Raleigh 70.3 had been long. My swim fitness wasn't as bad as I had feared and the hard work since Raleigh had paid dividends. A following current helped too!
I stripped my XTERRA speedsuit as I ran. The jog into transition was short and my bike was right next to swim-in. I dropped my speedsuit, goggles and cap into the bin next to my bike. I rolled on my socks, put on my Rudy Project riding glasses, slipped into my aero helmet, put my tic-tac box of salt tabs in my jersey pocket and ran my bike out through transition. T1: 2:18
The Bike:
On Wilcox Neck prior to meeting the draft pack |
I was having the ride of my life. The bike fit by Dave Luscan was paying dividends. At the same power output I was 0.2 to 0.3 MPH faster than the year before. Aerodynamics matter. I came through the rollers on Courthouse to the turn on to Loft Cary Rd with the 8th fastest overall time recorded on Strava. That isn't the 8th fastest of the day, that's the 8th fastest ever!!! I was pushing power smoothly, my average cadence was 95 RPM, and my effort (power) was correlated with speed. I was through the difficult section of the ride and into the back half of the course. I was drinking every 15 minutes and to thirst, eating a quarter bar at the same time, and taking two salt tabs on the hour. It was hot, but the course was shaded up to this point. I had picked up a bottle of cold water at the 1st aid station and I was using it to cool off. I was into my second prepared bottle of EFS Pro, and trying to decide if I needed to take any on-course hydration. I opted not to, but after the fact I wonder if that was a wise decision.
Coming in to transition |
Bike: 2:22:56 (1 AG/20 OA)
I was ecstatic. My watch read 2:55
coming off the bike. If I could run a 1:30 half-marathon, I could break 4:30. I've wanted to break 4:30 for a long time and it was within reach. I racked my bike and helmet, slipped on my shoes, Xterra race belt, SweatVac Visor, and grabbed two packages of chews.
T2: 1:27
The Run:
"You've lost that running feeling, Whooaaa, that running feeling. You've lost that running feeling. Now it's gone, gone, gone, Whoaa-Ohhhh-Ohh!"
Once more into the Bridge |
Final Time: 4:34:08 (2 AG/20 OA) PR HIM Distance
It was a special day. I had a non-wetsuit legal swim PR and nearly broke 30 minutes for the swim. I had a 3 minute PR on the Bike. I beat my HIM PR by 32 seconds. But it was also a missed opportunity and, at my age, those opportunities don't come around as often. It's not enough to race hard, you also have to race smart, and I let my excitement get in the way of my nutrition plan. It nearly cost me.
Thanks to my wife Kelly for supporting me, letting me chase my dreams, and always helping out on the course. You are special and I hope you know that! Thanks to my coach, Adam Otstot, for getting me to the starting line in the best shape ever! The plan was solid but we have some work to do before IM Choo. Thank you to Snapple, XTERRA, Louis Garneu, First Endurance, and SweatVac! As a racer I wouldn't be as successful without your support. Also, kudos to Jay Pelusso, for a fantastic new course and on a well executed event.
Congrats to Todd Burns, Snapple Triathlon Pro, on winning the Half, and to my training partner Jason Bridges on winning the Olympic and completing the Snapple Triathlon sweep at Rev3 Williamsburg. Congrats to Mikal Davis, Bryan Frank, Hilary Cairns, Paige Wooden, Heather Prochnow, Ellen Wexler, Katie Palavecino, Craig Politte, Justin Highley, Peter Lubrano, Anna Parker, and all the other current and former Snapple athletes that were on the podium at Rev3 Williamsburg. It was great seeing all of you on the race course and on the podium!
AWESOME Recap and photos! Great job on the race - can't wait to see how you set more PRs as you get older!
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