Pre Race:
It will never forget how demanding and awful Ironman Muskoka was. That being said I would totally do this race again. When it was announced WTC would be holding a full in Muskoka, my triathlon partner in crime Dave Smith and I were ready to sign up. The course was closer to home, hilly, slim chance of being scorching hot, as well as a Kona qualifier for the following year. This time around we were also adding a third person to the mix, my college cross country buddy, Erik “Da Bear Wrestler” Johnson, who would be doing his first Ironman.
Training leading up to this one was a bit more complicated
and shall we say “fast tracked.” Anyone that trains for an Ironman has to
juggle and prioritize the challenges of work, life, training, etc. As usual I
had a few too many irons in the fire between house remodeling in the winter,
operating both Hill Valley Farm and B-Nuts Trail Mix in the spring and summer,
in addition to the fact that we will be hosting our wedding reception at my
house in mid September. Despite the fact I’ve displayed the full gamut of my
moodiness and slightly eccentric nature Ms. Brittany says she’s still a go. I like her a
lot.
With all of those things happening, in addition to the extra
limited budget factor, I did very little racing this summer. Dave and I did the
Bayshore Marathon this spring (a PR of 2:52) the 4th of July 10K
(another PR of 35:18) and we raced in the local Mark Mellon Tri (2nd
to Dave). This left me hungry to race Muskoka. The main goal was to qualify for
Kona. Secondarily I was hoping to be in the running for the overall podium
spots, with tentative goal splits of sub 60, 5:15 and 3:05.
We arrived in Huntsville,
ON for your typical pre-race
duties. After scoping out the course, the hilly nature was confirmed, which
reinforced sticking to the pacing plan on race day. Between the three racers
and their families we managed to squeeze 14 adults and five children under five
into a condo that “sleeps 8-10.” We prize thriftiness more than comfort.
Swim:
I awoke from my sleeping pad in the basement at 4:30AM and
began my usual pre race routine. Dave’s dad drove us to transition and we got
ourselves ready to rock, before retreating from the hoards to the unoccupied
downstairs locker room. Come to think of it I never had to enter a porta pottie
the whole time I was in Muskoka. Score.
The water was calm and cool for the warm up swim as all
three of us wished each other luck and self seeded in the “under 1 hr” front
corral. General hype up ensued from the announcer and soon we were entering the
water. The plan was to find a good draft and stay relaxed. I managed to
identify Dave in the light scrum and tagged his feet for a while, before
identifying a much larger guy with a better draft. Despite the frustrating fact
he couldn’t swim very straight I just tagged him and felt pretty relaxed. After
the turn I switched to another guy that could actually swim straight and
followed him all the way to the swim finish. I was enticed by the services of
the wetsuit strippers and began the run up to T1. I hit the split on my watch
and noticed it was mid 56 and was absolutely shocked at a five minute PR. The
swim must have been short. I had been swimming with a bit more frequency, but
not putting what I would call a lot of time in. I guess the effect of a good
draft as well as my new 2XU Vortex suit played into it more than I was
expecting.
Bike:
My transition was methodical and as I exited my dad yelled
that he thought I was 2nd in my AG. On the bike I focused on keeping
the ego in check and riding conservatively for the first lap. The goal was 210w
average for the first lap and trying to keep it no higher than 230 on climbs if
I could help it. I was holding to my plan and then got caught by a group of
three riders around 50km. They were not riding a very even pace which was very
annoying so I decided to let them go as I took some time to relieve myself on a
downhill stretch. One guy in my AG passed me and I let him go.
My 90km split was 2:35 on 212w and I was feeling solid. The
second lap a breeze picked up, the sun came out and I faded a bit. The final 20km is pretty hilly and I could
feel the fatigue in my legs. In particular my hip adductors and calves cramped
a bit going up the second to last hill. Not a good sign. I felt I was pretty on
top of my nutrition, having consumed approximately 1900 calories between my
maltodextrin/cherry concentrate mix, two Roctane gels and one bottle of
Gatorade. I hoped it would work itself out once I got running.
Run:
I dismounted at T2, having split a 2:16 on 208w avg and
headed inside to gear up for the run. Given the twinge in my calves I decided
it safer to put on my calf sleeves. I also had previously chosen to go with my
trainers rather than my racing flats for shoes. I exited past the crowds, and
focused on running controlled and relaxed for the beginning of the out and back,
two loop course. I saw my Dad and he said I was in 2nd in my AG and
5min down to the leader. I curse America for having their unique
measurement system. I had previously done the km:mile pace conversions, but
higher level thinking is hard when racing and I couldn’t remember the
equivalent paces. Effort wise I felt really good as my km splits were clicking
around 4:15 (ambitious 3:00 marathon pace), the cramps in my quads had
dissipated and I felt tired, but solid.
The course follows some steeper rolling hills, and then
heads out onto the highway where there are some 2-3% grade longer rollers. I
passed several runners and eventually found myself in no man’s land; unable to
see anyone ahead of me but determined to track them down. There is a short out
and back around 8km, when I got my first split to the leaders and there were
five or six guys all within a few minutes and I estimated I was still 5min back
to the front guy. That’s a fair amount of time to make up, but I was determined
to risk it. I got to see the guys chasing me and was looking for Dave. I
finally saw him and he said he got a flat, which really sucked. I made it back
through town and onto the highway holding steady. Then the wheels began to fall
off.
There were no aid stations for a good 3-4km on the highway
section. The sun had come out and a day of hills was taking its toll. After
17km (10.5 miles) I dropped to 4:40-4:50/km pace (7:40 miles) and knew I was
going to be in really bad shape. I popped a few caffeine pills and tried to
grab as many calories as I could at each aid station. I didn’t have any other
options. I had no idea how I was going to run another 14 miles. Part of Ironman
racing is managing the constant ups and downs and I was desperately trying to
find the reset button.
I had stashed a Red Bull in my special needs bag and fast
walked as I chugged the entire thing. Hoping the sugar and caffeine would offer
some assistance as I just tried to keep running at a decent pace. At 23km my
hamstrings and calves seized and I had to “old man hobble” down a section of
hill. I pleaded with my legs to work and they managed to get moving again.
At this point running down anyone ahead of me was a fleeting
thought. I tried to find reassurance that if I was blowing up, someone else was
blowing up. Someone with less experience was going to call it quits. At the
same time I feared someone behind me that paced a bit better was going to go by
me at any moment. Eleven miles to go and I felt like I was barely moving.
As I approached town I focused on making it to each Aid
Station of Hope to cool myself and guzzle any of their calorie laden options. I
was counting on massive doses of caffeine and sugar to save me from my worst
death march to date. It was then that the mental battle, smoldering for some
time, finally erupted in full force.
I was (expletives) done with this. I convinced myself that I
was going to pull the plug. This was too hard. I’d blown up worse than ever
before. Every shady tree looked like a good spot to lie down under. I was
trying to hold it together but to be completely honest I would about cry one
minute, then curse at myself the next. I had my plan figured out. I was going
to run until I saw my family downtown, then pull off to the side and tell Brittany I love her very
much but I can’t do it this time. Then at least they would all know what
happened to me rather than me lying down under a tree on the side of the
course.
But then I thought about the fact I’ve never DNF’d a race. I
would regret it for ever. It would be the one race that I’d wish I could go
back and change. Then I realized, no one had caught me yet. I was giving up
loads of time and was still 2nd in my AG. Maybe if I could just keep
moving I could manage to pull this out. Maybe somehow, even when I inevitably got
passed by the guy hunting me down, I would still make it to the finish line in
3rd. Maybe all those guys behind me had blown up. Maybe there’s
still a shot. The two sides went back and forth…
I entered downtown, the streets lined with rambunctious spectators.
I saw my family, fought off negative thoughts and pressed on. Cramps seized my
legs and again I pleaded with them to restart. I stopped at an aid station and
chugged another entire can of Redbull. I popped another caffeine pill and a GU.
I was still moving. 10km to go. I’ve done that lots of times. But this will be
the worst 10km ever. Now heading back through town for the final return leg, I
was down double digits to Team Negative. My dad said something to me and I just
said “I can’t do this. I can’t do it.” Of course my family encouraged me, but I
was in complete doubt. Dad said I had a three minute split to play with. I
already felt like I was losing three minutes every mile.
I stopped looking at my watch. I would love to experience
the opposite side as an aid station worker as these sugar thirsty zombies grasp
at them as they stagger by. As if each cup they offer holds a small elixir and
if the zombies could just get enough of them they would transform back into
normal humans. 8km to go. 5 miles. College Cross Country. Piece of cake. Really
terrible cake.
As I neared the turn onto highway 60 my legs were cramping
again. I was instinctively swearing at myself to just man up, like that angry
and abusive football coach. One lady that passed me must have thought I was
crazy. A few guys caught me and I looked at each calf expecting to see a 25-29
mark. But to my relief none did.
Back out on the aid stationless highway I was still on the
loosing end of the mental battle. At any second I thought guys in my age group
would come flying past. Just keep moving. 5km to go. Remember when I ran a 5km
PR a few weeks ago? Time to be a man! 4km. 3km. I am going to get passed any
time. This is the last steep hill as my hamstrings seize up and I have to walk.
I feel so close as I keep chugging up the hill. 2km to go. That’s basically
like running a 1500m in college. No problem. I glance over my shoulder, fearing
someone is there. I see no one coming. More cursing and primal grunts up the
last hill. I am going to make it. I can’t believe I pushed through that train
wreck.
The Speed Stache returned for Muskoka. |
Of all the races I have completed this is the most elation I
have felt. Maybe it is because of how far beyond empty I was forced to go.
Maybe it is also because I’m getting married in less than three weeks and
that’s a lot of emotions to cram into a short period of time. I embraced Brittany and earned
enough PDA points to last several years. I crossed the line in 9:38, 2nd
in my age group and once again getting the opportunity to shell out way to much
money to go to Kona. Hard drugs are a hard habit to break.
Post Race:
Dave finished 9th in his AG in 10:07. The last Kona slot in 30-34 went to a guy that went 9:30 and 5th OA. Talk about some pretty stiff competition in my AG next year. Erik completed his first Ironman and crossed the line in 13:15. I want to give a big thanks to these guys for the encouragement and support for this go round. Dave especially challenges and pushes me me bring my A game on race day.
I obviously need to thank my family for enduring another
Ironman adventure. Mom, Pop, Reebnut, Weez,
Brittany and Jason I don’t know
how I’d manage without you all. I obviously can’t take care of myself after a
race, let alone before! Thanks to the staff at Groom Lake
training center for the wonderful facilities as well as the hook up with the
new wetsuit. Everyone else that checks in on me or follows on race day I really
appreciate it. Thank you.