December 31, 2012

2012 Annual Summary

Even with an odd injury in November which resulted in less than 25 miles of running in November and December, 2012 was still a great year pounding the road.

Annual total was 1,003 miles in 142 hours (5.9 days) of running time and included competing in 16 sanctioned events. It included a lot of mileage on trails as I got off the pavement and completed three trail races, including finishing in the top 10 of the North Face Endurance half marathon. I also put in 481 miles in the saddle of my bicycle and completed an olympic duathlon.

December 19, 2012

Happily Overdid It

Wife and baby left me alone this morning to go a new mom group, so like a kid who eats candy for breakfast while his parents are away, I gorged myself on a two hour brick of running and cycling. During the run I hit my 1,000th mile of running in 2012. My calf was still tweaked, and I managed to overdo it and tweak my knee as well...but darn that was bliss.

And my performance was surprisingly decent considering my daily four hours of scattered sleep.

But I need to seriously take a few weeks off to fully heal from my overzealous 2012.

December 12, 2012

The Birth of My Biggest Fan

At 7:04pm on 12/12/12, we welcomed our first child, and my future biggest fan and running partner (I hope), at 7 lbs 5 oz and 20" long.


I'll no doubt be taking a bunch of time off and squander my 2012 base mileage, but you know what...totally worth it.

December 9, 2012

Race Report: Jingle All the Way 8k

Have a lot going on getting ready for the arrival of our first child, so this will be a very brief report.

Race Day


Though I continue to be out of race shape due to my calf and taking it easy, I decided I had to run a final race before my impending fatherhood. So it was off to downtown DC this morning for a rainy Jingle All the Way 8k.

I still harbor a bit of dislike for the 8-10k distances. Maybe I need more practice, but in my experience and my race style they're just too long to go all out and too short for me to get in a really good pace groove. This morning I wasn't expecting too much, but found myself with a fast group and stuck with it. I finished ahead of my goal, didn't have too much pain after warming up, so I'll take that result and roll into the Christmas season with a smile.


The Results

8k :   32:24  |  6:31/mile


Awesome picture from Swim Bike Run Photography with the Capitol Dome behind me.

November 18, 2012

Race Report: Backyard Burn: Fountainhead

Very brisk morning for the the Backyard Burner 5-mile trail race at Fountainhead. Arrived to 34 degree weather with a slight breeze with reports of possible mud and water crossings along the course. I really didn't put in any miles since the Marine Corps Marathon, taking a few weeks to recover from a calf tweak that was still hurting this morning. The cold weather didn't help much.

The Course and Race Day


The trail was a new one for me, but the EX2 crew did a great job clearing it for safety and marking. They used a leaf blower the day prior to clear the trail so runners wouldn't get lost in all the leaf cover and most importantly, this exposed any roots or rocks to avoid injuries. This clearance also resulted in a pretty fast course. What didn't help the speed though was the hills. As I wasn't familiar with the Fountainhead trail, I ended up quite surprised and getting beat up a bit on the hills. I was especially hurting in the last couple miles of technical hills and the final mile was a big hill push. That tough final mile and elevation dropped me from 10th to finish 12th overall. Still, not too terrible given my lack of recent training.

As usual, the post-race pizza and free massage was fantastic, and the EX2 spread of food was its usual overwhelming quantity. Even though finishing decently overall, I finished pretty far down my age group (7th) standings; so I sadly had no reason to stick around for the awards ceremony this time.

Finishing Time: 37:52   (7:34/mile)
Overall Placing: 12th


The Results

5 mile :   37:52  |  7:34/mile      (Overall 12th; Age Group 7th)


Purchased from Swim Bike Run Photography; still repping Team USO!

November 13, 2012

Spell Check Much?

Spelling is important. Today saw a FB ad for a tri store that said "Get everything for your holiday stalkings."

Like what? Ski mask and telephoto lens?

October 28, 2012

2012 Marine Corps Marathon: Mission Accomplished!

Between the fatigue, calf muscle, and Superstorm Sandy headwinds, it wasn't a pretty final few miles this morning, but still came in with a marathon time of 3:22:06. Oorah!


Race Day: Live Pre-Race Thoughts

# 5:54am :  Runners getting on Metro; girls exiting in Halloween costumes from the night before. Awesome.

# 6:43am :  After a week of alternating ice and heat on a torn calf muscle, I'm just ready to get it over with, win, lose, whatever. Run until it stops hurting (kinda like drink til you're handsome?).

# 7:12am :  watching Dutch Royal Marine marathon team chain smoking. Crazy Euros.

October 26, 2012

Hurricane Sandy isn't Oorah!

Looks like there's a one in three chance the DC area takes a direct hit from hurricane Sandy, meaning rain is possible starting Saturday night. And forecasts are calling for 10-15mph wind for the first half the race and 15-20mph sustained winds, with 30mph gusts, for the second half.


 Seriously, as if I didn't have enough fun running through severe rain and localized flooding in the Flying Pirate half marathon in April.

October 25, 2012

Micro Tear in Calf

Sitting around alternating ice and heat isn't exactly how I planned on spending my final taper week. After some lingering pain in my calf, including a slight limp while walking, I went to my sports doc and she said it appears to be a micro tear in my calf muscle. Other than a bit of biking, I've been off my feet.

Unfortunately, with 48 hours to go, still in slight pain while walking and not sure how it's going to impact my gait and speed over 26.2 miles.


Inspiration courtesy of Meb.

October 24, 2012

RIP Watch

Rest in peace, cheap $11 KMart watch. You've been good to me through 3 years and 2,409 miles of running.

 Who needs a fancy watch?

Watch. 2008 - 2012.

October 22, 2012

One Week to Go

Greatly looking forward to running past 26 of these next Sunday, injured calf or not.

MCM mile makers being set up.

October 17, 2012

Injury Right Before Marathon? Déjà vu....

The running gods may be cruel again. After finishing the back half of a 22-miler in 7:50 pace a bit ago, thought it was all systems go. Didn't plan on limping around with 10 days to go before Marine Corps due to a freak injury/tweak in a muscle group that has hummed through 900 miles this year. Getting injured just before a marathon is soooo 2011. 

Anybody have a pair of old shoes I can sacrifice?

October 9, 2012

Poise.

Very important message on poise as we approach the fall marathon season.


October 7, 2012

MCM Base Mileage Complete


With this morning's 22 miler negative-split run in the rain, the base mileage is officially built for the Marine Corps Marathon. Let the joy of recovery week, tapering, and eating begin!

Peak week couldn't have come at a better time. With the body's aches and pains this morning, it's clearly rejecting the notion of running 900 miles in seven months.

October 3, 2012

Teddy Wins!

You think you're having a rough week of training? Imagine what it's like to lose 500+ consecutive races. Well thankfully for Teddy, his string of futility is over as he finally claimed victory in the Nationals Presidents Race.

Down goes Frazier! Down goes Frazier! TEDDY WINS!!!

September 30, 2012

Happy Birthday from the Marine Corps!

What a great birthday video from the Marine Corps. Personalized touches like this are always fun to see from race organizers, and it definitely surprised me to see this show up in my inbox.

Be sure to watch past 0:08.

And yes Mister Drill Sergeant, sir, I do want to go to Chuck E. Cheese. Ooooorah!

September 24, 2012

Honey Stinger Organic Energy Gels

Did a previous posting on why Shot Bloks are better than Gatorade for many reasons, at least in my view. And although I'm still happy with Shot Bloks, I've had some issues with them in races when I'm at a fast pace and breathing heavy. Since my usual serving is 3-4 Bloks and it's best to take them with some water, it's been an adventure every time. Since there isn't much warning on upcoming water stations in many races, by the time I see the water station and get the Bloks in my mouth it's been difficult to chew them and get them swallowed before grabbing a cup. It's led to some humorous attempts to chew, swallow, drink, and breathe at the same time, haha.

Developed with Lance? Uh oh, is
this stuff USADA approved?
So to get an equivalent quick dose of carbs and calories, I decided to switch to gels. In my first training run using them, I've found it much easier and quicker to get the gel down and get back to focusing on my breathing and pacing. Since I wanted to stick with an organic option, I picked up a box of Honey Stinger Organic energy gels. Initial results were good, although they're certainly messier to stash the wrapper back in my pocket; honey residue on the wrapper is an issue I didn't have with the cleaner Bloks.

I'm going to keep using the Bloks for cycling and slower runs, but switch to the Stinger gels for fast-paced race efforts.





September 22, 2012

Race Report: Clarendon Day Double (5k & 10K)

One morning. Two races. Three drink tickets.


Another great Pacers event this morning, well run and with a lot of fellow Pacers Ambassadors on hand to celebrate a nice morning with a couple races. The starting line had an incredibly friendly team of volunteers and Ambassadors; check-in was easy, the bag drop was easy, and the portajohns were plentiful and clean. The shirt wasn't really my color, but it's all good because the bib came with three drink tickets. The Clarendon Day festivities included a 5k at 8:20 and a 10k at 9:00, leaving brave runners enough time to race them both; since neither race was a loop course, running both races also required you to jog 1.4 miles back to the 10k starting line and it was almost all uphill.

In a year full of firsts (two races in a weekend, 4 races in 8 days), I figured why not add another first: a double feature with back-to-back races. And since I replaced a marathon pace run last weekend with the Navy-Air Force Half Marathon, I figured I may as well replace a pace run this weekend with the combined mileage of a 5k/10k double. It was good to push it hard today, making tomorrow's 20-miler a real test before a lighter recovery week. Although just like last weekend when I got bored and couldn't stay on marathon pace, I let the feet go a bit again today.


The Course


The 5k course started in Clarendon and headed down Wilson Boulevard, with the first 1.5 miles almost completely downhill into Rosslyn. In Rosslyn the course turned right and headed along Jefferson Davis Highway until the turnaround, coming back and ending in Rosslyn.

The 10k course had the same starting line and same general layout, it just continued an additional couple miles up Jefferson Davis Highway and along Arlington National Cemetery. The 10k turnaround was just past the Pentagon at the I-395 overpass.

The highway was familiar territory from the Army Ten Miler and Marine Corps Marathon courses, and I have to admit I had visions of next month's marathon dancing in my head...imagining how good it's going to be to see the exit sign to the Marine Corps Memorial come October.


Race Day


Even though I told myself to run both races around marathon goal pace, I figured the downhill and the course would dictate a little faster effort. So I decided to run the 5k at10k pace and the 10k at half marathon pace. As expected, the initial downhill carried the 5k away pretty quickly, and the right turn onto the highway was there before we knew it. The highway's concrete slabs were definitely jarring on the bones and muscles, but I settled into a decent pace and knocked it out without much difficulty. As soon as I hit the finish line in Rosslyn, I grabbed a water bottle and turned around to head back up Wilson Boulevard to the start of the 10k. I slowly jogged the 1.4 miles back, maintaining a steady effort and a decent cadence to keep the muscles firing. Managed to get back to the starting line with some time to spare, so I kept jogging around the area to avoid cold muscles.

The 10k went off right on time, and once again I was bombing down the hill with a pack of runners. Once again turning onto the highway and heading towards the Pentagon, I started to take in a bit of the scenery and looked over Arlington Cemetery, always an inspiration when running along the eastern edge. The last few miles clicked off with a nice pace, but I was definitely beginning to feel the 'race-jog-race' schedule of the morning. Crossed the finish line (for a second time), and this time I was able to enjoy the water, food, and coconut water.

Actually, the morning weather was so nice, I walked the 1.4 miles back up Wilson to the starting line to retrieve my bag. Give me the outdoors any day over a packed Metro car.



The Verdict


It was a fun race series and a challenge to run back-to-back races. The Pacers team and logistics continue to be the best in the business; the races were well run, the volunteers were great, and the best benefit of Pacers events continues to be Swim Bike Run photography being on hand to take fantastic pictures. Their photos are available for free on their website, with options to purchase as well for a decent price. Photos of their quality is an amazing amenity to receive and share for free.

Add this one to your schedule. And do the double!

Two fingers in the air for the double!


September 16, 2012

Race Report: Navy-Air Force Half Marathon


After getting bored with just marathon training runs lately, I was in desperate need for a race. So after a 20-miler on Thursday, I rested up a bit and hit the District this morning for the inaugural Navy-Air Force Half Marathon. The half marathon was an add-on race to the Navy 5 Miler, an annual race in the region. The race itself was fun, and I turned in a great time, but I was underwhelmed by the overall experience due to non-running issues (amenities, price, etc).


The Course and Race Day


Other than the five or so miles which follow along DC routes I've run before in the Marine Corps Marathon and Army Ten Miler, I wasn't sure what to expect from the course. The first four miles head out along a point which I've run in the MCM, the water view is always nice. Miles 7-10 or so were up along the Parkway and had some rolling hills and varying terrain, but nothing too difficult.

The overall course was fairly flat and very fast. I went into the race saying to myself that I'd shoot for 7:30 miles to practice marathon pacing, but the course was just running too fast and I got a bit bored. So I decided to push it a little and just run by feel. At about the halfway mark, I was already a couple minutes above my pacing, but it wasn't feeling like a hard effort and I wasn't breathing heavy. So I decided to keep up that pace and see where it went. I purposefully slowed down my pace a bit on a few stretches, and as I hit the 11-mile mark I still felt like I had some reserves left. But I made myself wait until the 12-mile mark to burn through reserve energy; as I hit the '12' banner I opened up and started passing several groups. As I hit the finish line, I had a realization that I may have just set an accidental personal record.

The race built up a lot of confidence for me as I head into the final six weeks of marathon preparation. I didn't put in a hard effort and when I checked later, I had indeed walked away with a PR.


The Results

Half Marathon (13.1 mi) :   1:33:12  |  7:07/mile
Overall Placing :   84th  (top 5%)

Definitely took advantage of the flat, fast course and gorgeous fall weather.

The "Value"



Usually this section is labeled "The Swag" or something like that, but there were so many issues with logistics and amenities that it's really more a question of value. For a civilian, the race price is anywhere from $75 to $105 depending on sign-up date. That alone was a bit of a shock; unless you sign up half a year early, you're paying a marathon price for a relatively simple half marathon (no entertainment, no festival, no runner amenities).

The website was pretty spartan (may have called it "excruciatingly plain" in my design days), which is fine if all the important information is out there; however, even trying several browsers, the course map PDF links were broken until days before. The USTFA certification wasn't even up until the day before. The driving directions section of the website is still blank. Hey, no biggie, I can use Google Maps and would take Metro anyway, but it really set a bad first impression on the operations.

The expo at the Joint Base was easy to navigate and park (DC weekend traffic not their fault), but not much to write home about. Maybe a dozen tables, one or two merchandisers. The long-sleeved shirt wasn't event specific (included the half marathon and five-miler), but was a decent design. The short-sleeved technical shirt was event-specific, but it was $20; a silly amount of up-charge based on the event's inflated price.

Pre-race amenities included the standard bag drop and water, but they committed a big sin by having poorly-stocked portajohns. A half-hour before the race, and an hour before the five milers would start showing up, I went in a stall to blow my nose and there was no toilet paper. There was only a single bare cardboard cylinder starting back at me...I feel bad for those who actually needed the TP for something more important. On-course amenities were the bare minimum: water stations every few miles, but no sports drinks or entertainment - fine with me. Post-race amenities were also the bare essentials: water, banana, cookies, but no other sports/recovery drinks - surprised they couldn't get a sponsor to provide. The finisher's "challenge coin" medal (copied the Army Ten Miler premium idea) was really disappointing; it wasn't event-specific, and there wasn't much imagination in the design. Again, like the sports drinks and course entertainment, a flashy medal wasn't needed at all, I happily run races with no premiums, but at the price point of this race, the runners deserved more (and better) swag.


In conclusion, I wasn't expecting the same level of amenities and premiums as the overly-generous Outer Banks half marathon, but for me it boiled down to an overpriced entry fee. I don't need fluffy race-day amenities and I certainly don't need any more medals, but at $75-105 race ($95-125 if you wanted a tech shirt) you'd expect a functioning website, nice expo, free technical shirt, race-day amenities (toilet paper anyone?), on-course entertainment, food spread, finish line festival, decent finisher's premium, and other event-specific premiums. Runners essentially got a bare-bones trail run atmosphere and amenities for the price of a Rock ‘n’ Roll series event.


The Verdict

If I return to the Navy-Air Force Half Marathon, it'll be to take advantage of the fast, flat course for an expensive PR. Other than the course, there isn't enough value in the price to make this a "must" on my racing schedule, especially with so many other quality events from Richmond to Philadelphia in the same September time frame.

Bitter beer face!

September 8, 2012

Annual Milestone Passed: 1,000 Combined Miles

During today's 18-miler, I hit 1,000 combined miles for the year. That includes about 700 miles of running and 300 miles cycling. Sadly haven't been able to get in much cycling this year, but running about the same monthly miles as last year.

My running miles are split about 500 road and 200 trail miles. There have also been a few running "firsts" including my first trail race, first duathlon, and first back-to-back races. Up to 13 races so far this year; will probably finish out the year with 18 or so, depending on a few late-season options.

September 5, 2012

Is Kip Litton a Marathon Fraud?

Absolutely fantastic read (long, but entertaining) from The New Yorker. It's one thing to cheat, but it's another to cheat on such an epic level that you spend thousands traveling to marathons (to not run them), set up fake websites, and even make up fake races (which you later win). Just an epic story. And equally pathetic.

External link: Article in The New Yorker

August 23, 2012

Jens Voigt, Mr. "Shut Up Legs" for the Win!

Big win today in the US Pro Cycling Challenge by Jens Voigt! Following yesterday's big win by Tommy D. This has been an incredible week of cycling out in Colorado.


August 16, 2012

Mo Farah Runs Away from Things!!

Mo! Running away from things!! This post needs more exclamation points!!!!!

A hilarious website composed entirely of double-gold Olympian Mo Farah running away from things. Absolutely love it.

External link:  http://mofarahrunningawayfromthings.tumblr.com


Click to enlarge.

August 14, 2012

Marathon Training in Full Force

Warm up a Ric Flair "wooooo!" because it's time to kick marathon training in gear as the fall racing season approaches. Last year my body broke down with incredibly bad timing; I picked up a major hip injury six weeks out from the marathon, and didn't run for a few weeks before. My marathon time was decent, but well below my expectations.

This year I'm cutting back training in an effort to hit the fall season as healthy as possible. Last year's marathon training consisted of 20 weeks of training, three weeks over 50 miles, and running the Army Ten Miler two weeks out. This year I'm cutting back to 15 intense weeks, only one week touching 50 miles, and I sadly had to drop the Army Ten Miler from the racing plan.

My mantra for this year's Marine Corps Marathon: Forget 2011.  
(but it's usually yelled more like "F--- 2011!" in the middle of a hill repeat)

Here's how the training plan stacks up for 2012; I'm currently in the middle of week 5. You'll have to click the image to enlarge to an actually legible size:

Click thumbnail for full size.

August 12, 2012

2012 Olympics - Mens Marathon

Good morning in London for a marathon, and what a marathon viewers received. Though the pace wasn't blistering, the tactics and attacks throughout made for a very interesting race, especially when Kiprotich of Uganda took off and left the Kenyans behind. The first three positions weren't even that close.

But the real story for me was in 4th place. After the American runners with faster "paper PRs" pulled out of the race, Meb Keflezighi was keeping things respectable at 37 years old. And then, something started happening in the last 5 miles; Meb moved from the mid-teens in positioning and kept on overtaking runners. Here was the old man of the marathon, using his determination and running his race, slowly picking off the best runners in the world. When the dust settled, Marathon Meb rolled in with a 4th place finish, an amazing accomplishment and a great time for an American.

"When the gun goes off, it’s all about what’s in your heart."  - Meb   

What I loved most was in the final stretch he wasn't bummed about finishing just off the podium. Rather he was looking for an American flag, and after he found one to grab he proudly waved it through the finish line. Rather than showing a bitter face like we've seen from so many non-medal athletes in London, Meb was celebrating like he won. That's pure joy (and a little maturity and perspective as well - teenage gymnasts take note). His interviews were mostly positive as well; he's a fantastic ambassador for America.

His family and father should be proud, raising 11 kids (incl lawyer, doctor, MBA) and being as proud of their country as any born here.

Sad that Meb is so often overlooked in the events he runs. Sure, he will never be the fastest American, and his PR is usually 5+ minutes off the fastest guy on paper, but he shows up when it counts. For all the articles written about "faster" runners, Meb has the hardware to show his cunning and determination; won NYC, won Trials, and medaled in the Olympics. And though no one expected him to medal today, his fourth place was a triumph all the same. His story will be overshadowed by the millionaires playing basketball today, and that's too bad, but Meb will still be smiling.

Long may you run, Meb!

“Everybody works hard to accomplish such a thing and I am very proud of myself
and our country to finish fourth. It’s not where you want to be sometimes, but
fourth place at my last Olympics – I’ll take it anytime.” - Meb


August 7, 2012

Genuine Innovations Cartridge Cross

After I purchased and installed my XLAB rear wing and accessories, I figured it was time to upgrade the wife as well. She doesn't need to be sitting on the side of the road using a mini frame pump for a half hour to inflate a tire, so I got her (or the generous passerby who helps her) an XLAB Nanoflator and an integrated CO2 carrier.

I was originally looking for the XLAB X-Strike, but was too impatient to order online. My local triathlon store didn't have it, but they did have the Genuine Innovations Cartridge Cross, which is literally the same product (Genuine Innovations makes the XLAB CO2 accessories). Install was just two screws in the frame and tossing the Nanoflator in her bike bag.

The Cartridge Cross mounts on the frame's water bottle brackets and holds up to four CO2 cartridges. It has an anti-reverse feature to keep the cartridges secured on the road and also included a reusable rubber sleeve to make holding cold cartridges easier during use.

Just two screws and the wife is now carrying two 16 gram cartridges.

The Cartridge Cross sits out of the way along the frame.

Stock photo courtesy of www.genuineinnovations.com.

August 4, 2012

2012 Olympics - Women's Triathlon

I'd say the battle for triathlon gold medal was a wee bit close this morning.

External Link: Spirig Takes Photo-Finish Triathlon Gold  (Official London 2012 website)

July 28, 2012

2012 Olympics - Cycling Road Race

Vino!!! What a way to cap a career and ride off into retirement. Fantastic road race this morning and fantastic results.

External Link: Vinokurov Claims Road Race Gold  (Official London 2012 website)

July 27, 2012

XLAB Carbon Wing and Rear Cages

After getting tired of stuffing repair tools and extra gear in my back jersey pockets, decided it was time to get a saddle bag. But I wanted one that would not only function for long road rides but also serve a purpose in duathlons and competitive rides. So I settled on the XLAB Carbon Wing with XLAB Tire Bag and XLAB Mini Bag. I also added two XLAB Gorilla cages.

Graphic from xlab-usa.com showing Carbon Wing, Gorilla Cages, Mini Bag,
Tire Bag, and X-Nut for external CO2 carrying (I skipped the X-Nut). 

This set-up will allow me to carry repair gear, extra tube, phone and keys in the XLAB bags while on standard rides. Having two extra bottle cages on the back will let me remove the frame cages for duathlons or carry 4 bottles on long distance road rides.

Installation wasn't hard, but it did take some effort due to the awkward placement of some nuts and the need to use both hands (find a friend). Would've been easier with the seat completely off the post and a proper torque wrench, but no big deal. In the Tire Bag I was able to fit a spare tube, tire levers, three CO2 catridges, Park multi-tool, XLAB Nanoflator air chuck, and some spare contact lenses; could probably fit a second tube without the multi-tool. The Mini Bag will be reserved for phone, keys, cash, etc...it would be a tight fit or not zip all the way if you had a larger smart phone, but between gravity and the velcro strap, it should all be secure.

Carbon Wing installed on seat; about to install
two bags and two bottle cages.

Completed rig on the bike. Tire Bag below, Mini Bag hidden in the
space between the two (empty) Gorilla cages.. 

Picture from xlab-usa.com of Nina Kraft with the full system,
including the X-Nut.


It's such a convenient way of carrying repair gear, I eventually got my wife an integrated CO2 carrier as well.

July 20, 2012

Marine Corps Marathon Countdown

Uh, guess I better figure out my knee issue and start training. Haha.


July 16, 2012

Required "Duathlon Gear" Post

Since a blog reader sent me a funny note that stated "all triathlon people immediately follow their race reports with a listing of all their gear...that way you knew how much they spent to play athlete," I guess I need to make the required "gear post" on here as well to further follow the etiquette of the multisport culture.

....::::  Biking Gear  ::::....
  • Bike: 2011 Specialized Allez Comp (Apex Compact)
  • Accessories:
    • Specialized BG Elite Road Shoe (not tri-specific) with Look Keo pedals
    • Specialized helmet (again, nothing tri-specific or aero)
    • CatEye Strada Cadence on-board computer
    • Garneau Gel Box 2 top tube bar
  • Under the Seat: Ditched a bag and velcro/taped a spare tube, tire levers, CO2, and XLAB Nanoflator air chuck up under the saddle
Specialized Allez Comp, Garneau Gel Box 2 on top tube.
Can barely make out the repair kit attached under seat.

....::::  Running Gear  ::::....

  • Shoes: Brooks Pure Cadence
  • Yankz! elastic laces
Brooks Pure Cadence (pre-Yankz!)

....::::  Apparel  ::::....

  • Primal Wear cycling jersey
  • TYR Competitor Tri Shorts
  • Fuel Belt race number belt
  • Cheap pair of BBB sunglasses (I refuse to overspend on cycling sunglasses, got a cheap set years ago at Nashbar with full sun protection and three colors of shatterproof lenses)
  • Cheapo running watch (seriously, like $10 at Walmart; taken me through 1,500 miles of running, nothing fancy needed)
Who wears short-shorts?...

....::::  Other  ::::....

  • Fuel: Shot Bloks in the bike box and Nuun in one Polar Bottle
  • Garneau Race Day Revo bag
Garneau Race Day Revo bag

July 15, 2012

Race Report: 2Xrip Olympic Duathlon

This morning I competed in my first multisport event, the second annual 2Xrip Olympic Duathlon up in Howard County, Maryland. The format was a 2-mile run, 26-mile bike course, and 4-mile run. It was a great introduction to the multisport world, and I had a great time.

The Course

The first run was one lap on a 2-mile loop that started with a nice downhill but had a couple inclines along the course. The second run was two laps of the same 2-mile loop, but in the opposite direction...so that big downhill became an uphill challenge on both loops.

The bike course was two laps of a 13-mile loop on country roads, and it was described as "moderate to aggressive" hills. In doing some recon on Saturday, I drove the biking course and actually got a bit nervous, there were definitely aggressive climbs along the route.

Race Day


Transition Set-up
After a sweltering July so far, Sunday turned into a great day for a race. There was a slight mist in the morning, and I was on the road by 4:45 in the morning. Arriving on site, I set-up my transition area on my assigned rack. I was the closest rack to the run entrance, which also meant I was the furthest rack from the bicycle exit; sadly this meant I had the longest distance to run with my bike both before and after the bike leg. It was also around this time where I wondered what I got myself into...I definitely had bike envy. My road bike is a great platform, but it was definitely dwarfed by the price tags on some of the machines in the transition area. Lots of triathlon and time trial bikes, lots of aero wheels and bars, and lots of aero helmets.

My transition set-up was easy: my cycling shoes were already strapped on the bike and I laid out my helmet, gloves, and sunglasses on the handlebars. I had two bottles already on the bike, a 20 oz. with water and a 24 oz. mixed with a Nuun electrolyte tab. I also had a few half-servings of Shot Bloks in the bento box for fuel. I wore a cycling jersey on top and TYR triathlon shorts on the bottom, with my race number attached to a Fuel Belt event belt. For the run portions, I wore my Brooks Pure Cadence with Yankz! elastic laces for quicker transitions.

On the first run leg of two miles, I tried to concentrate on not going out too fast. A wave of competitors poured down the first hill, and I was right in the thick of it. As I crept closer to the front of the pack, it was tempting to go out at a 5k pace, but I decided in advance to stay around 7:00, and I was a little nervous about the bike route. So I focused on a sustained effort on the uphills and downhills, trying to hit my splits. Towards the end of the two-mile loop, I took the last 25 meters a bit lighter, catching my breath before the first transition. I crossed into the transition area in 13:38 (6:49 pace).

Bottom-center in Army jersey
My first transition went smooth...to start. The running shoes and hat were off quickly, followed by strapping on my bike helmet and sunglasses. It took a few extra seconds to put on biking gloves, but it was worth it to me. I unracked my bike and started running across the grass to the bike exit. Here's where my transition turned into a comedy of errors. The bouncing somehow disconnected the ties holding my bike shoes upright, so they started dragging and catching on the grass. I turned the corner, got over the mount line, and slipped by right foot easily in my cycling shoe. But somewhere in the dragging my left shoe disengaged from the Look Keo pedal. So I put a full turn in with my right shoe and when I looked down for the left, it was 15 yards back downhill at the mount line. Curse words ensued. So I spun around and coasted back to grab it. As I was getting it on, my right shoe disengaged and I fell forward straddling the top tube. After a few more less-than-graceful motions, I was fully clipped in and off...a disaster indeed, and not the way to start.

Shut up, legs!
The bike course was just as hilly as advertised, but I focused on keeping a sustained cadence through the ups and downs. The first section wasn't too bad, mainly downhill with some bumps thrown in. I got up into a big gear and just started cranking out the cadence, and it was a fun new experience to corner at 20-30 mph. On one of the first big hills I found myself in a gear that wasn't suited to climbing and tried to downshift, but at this point my momentum has slowed to a point where I was in trouble, so I had to get out of the saddle and punish myself for fifty yards to the top of the climb. After that point, I committed to shifting whenever my cadence fell towards 75, whether I felt like I needed to or not. I found myself leap-frogging a few of the same riders on course, overtaking them on the climbs and watching their time trial bikes and aero helmets pass me on the descents. I paced my drinking and eating to make sure I was doing something every 20 minutes or so. At about 10 miles in, I was thankful I'd taped the turn information on my top tube; it was comforting to know my mileage without having to mess with the cycling computer display. As I started the second loop of the cycling course, I turned up the speed as the humidity and temperature upped as well. Sweat was pouring off my face, but it was a great experience and really tested my cycling ability. As I neared the end of the 26-mile cycling leg, I started planning for transition #2, taking off my gloves and tucking them in my bento box. I also tucked my sunglasses into my jersey top (bad idea as I soon found out). I completed the 26-mile course in 1:23:33 - even with my mount and dismount issues, averaging 18.7 mph over the hills, just above my goal speed.

Tracking mileage on top tube
Unfortunately, getting off the bike was just as big of a comedy as getting on. I pulled my right foot out, placing it on top of the shoe, and started on the other when I somehow let up pressure and my right shoe spun down and hit the ground. My shoe immediately disengaged and I again found myself with a shoe 25 yards away, uphill. I coasted back up and a volunteer handed it to me, so I rode the final 40 yards of the bike course with a socked foot on my pedal, shoe in hand. After the dismount line I tried to get my left foot out of the shoe but the closure wasn't cooperating, so that took a bit more time. Then as I ran towards transition, my sunglasses bounced out and hit the deck. So here I am holding a bike in my right hand, my cycling shoes in my left, and trying to pick up my sunglasses...I eventually put them in my teeth and sprinted for my rack...again unfortunately placed furthest away. Once I got in the transition area, T2 was smooth. I racked my bike, slid on my running shoes, grabbed my hat, and ran out of the transition area. In and out in 52 seconds.

The second run leg of four miles was definitely tougher than the earlier run (as expected). It took my legs about a mile to get comfortable again, so I just tried to keep turning over my feet and trying to wake up the running muscles. Even though I felt my pace hurting on the hills, I started passing a lot of people in my age group as they were shuffling along. But ultimately, recent time off due to vacation and injury bit me on the final run hills. I had to walk a few paces at the top of one incline towards the end, and I hit the finish line in 32:07 (8:02 pace); well over my goal time and pretty slow for me, but a good first experience.

Finishing "Army Strong"

The Results

Run 1 (2 mi) :   13:38  |  6:49/mile
T1 (run to bike) :  0:54  
Bike (26 mi) :   1:23:33  |  18.7 mph
T2 (bike to run) :  0:52
Run 2 (4 mi) :   32:07  |  8:02/mile

Final:   2:11:03  |  Age Group 6th place

At the end of the day, I was really happy with how the race ended up. My finish time of 2:11:03 was under my 2:15:00 goal and good enough for 6th in my age group. I was close enough to the age group podium that I wondered "what if" I hadn't dropped a few minutes during my comedic mount/dismount and tough final run. So I'm already looking forward to 2013 with the knowledge that correcting a few errors may improve my finish.



The Verdict

I had a great time at my first multisport event, and I especially enjoyed cycling in a competitive environment for the first time. Sadly, I don't know of any other local duathlon events this year, but I'm definitely headed back to race 2Xrip in 2013.