I’ll start with my most recent race, the Heart of Ghent 10K….
After countless 5ks, half marathons and even a full marathon, I must
admit, I’ve never done a 10K (that’s 6.2 miles to my non-runner friends). My
plan was to get a feel for the distance since I plan to move up to the Olympic
distance triathlon (.9 mile swim/40K bike/10k run) in the near future. I
decided to use the race as a hard workout – train through the week/not kill
myself during the actual race aka not push so hard that I collapse upon
crossing the finish line and swear off racing for life. I thought 7-minute
miles were reasonable and if I felt good at the half way point I would pick it
up from there.
At the sound of the horn we were off, all 636 runners. The top men
sprinted off into the distance and a couple of women ran a few steps ahead of
me. I decided not to zero in on them like I typically do because my goal wasn’t
to race, I had a specific plan I wanted to follow. As we quickly approached the
first mile marker I glanced at my watch: 6 min 40 sec mile! Noooooo! That was not the plan. Too
fast!! I began to panic and even dropped a few F-bombs.
I decided to back off of the pace a little, but I must admit I was
feeling good, really good. I went through mile 2 in 6:51. Better, but still
faster than I had planned. Ok so at this point I’m thinking “I’m either in much
better shape than I thought or I’m royally screwed and the pain will start
setting in soon, I’ll want to stop mid-race, sit on the sidewalk and sulk, and
vow to never race again. Miles 3 and 4 came and went, each around 6:40, still
feeling good. From what I remember, the race started to stretch out around the
fourth mile marker and that’s when I realized I was the first female. Thoughts:
cool, keep going, only 2.2 miles left. The last two miles came and went and
there it was, the finish line. Time: 42:22, Place: 1st Female/361
Women.
Although my time wasn’t super fast, I’m proud of this win. I did it on tired legs (trained all week, including a 10-miler two days before the race), I hit pretty much even splits, the course was a little long (my gps watch has it at 6.37 miles), and even though it was a flat course there were a ton of turns (see map below). My conclusion: I’m getting fitter, faster, and more confident thanks to my triathlon training, consistent weight training, extra rest (going to bed before 10 pm), and all the delicious healthy meals I’ve been cooking lately.
Patriots Sprint…my second
triathlon
I had a pretty lofty goal for my second Tri. I wanted to break 1 hour
and 20 minutes and hopefully come in the top ten. From last year’s results, I
thought this was a possibility. Little did I know how competitive this race was
going to be: last year’s winning time – 1:16:06 and 6 women under 1 hour and 20
minutes, this year’s winning time – 1:05:47 plus 46 women under 1 hour and 20
minutes.
The day before the race I decided to make the drive up to Williamsburg to collect my packet and check out the course. While I heard it was a relatively easy course, the distance between the swim and transition/bike made me nervous. It was easily a quarter mile, probably longer.
Other than that, the bike course was flat with a few small rolling hills,
the run was an easy out and back, pancake flat course, and the swim was in the
James River (no waves, just the current to deal with).
Race Day:
Swim – this did not go well. The swim course was a 750 meter
rectangular course. Simple but I STRUGGLED. I had a lot of difficulty spotting
the buoys. The first half of the swim was pretty much me taking a few strokes
and then stopping, treading water and looking for the buoy to confirm I was on
course. You would think it would be easy enough to follow the other swimmers,
but that’s really not how it is in open water swimming. It’s very chaotic. With
so many bodies all around you, it’s inevitable that you get kicked and punched
at least once. Plus you have to deal with a current – you may think you’re
heading straight but the current pushes you away or too far in so that you’re
not swimming in a straight line. By the time I got out of the water, I was in
112th place (female division) and felt slightly defeated. But the
great thing about the triathlon is that you still have two more events to make
up ground and my best event was yet to come.
On to the bike – this was my first time riding a road bike in a race
and boy does it make a hell of a difference. I did the 12.5 mile course in 43
minutes (versus the 44 minutes I did in the 10-mile ride of my last triathlon).
Still not the fastest ride but I made up quite a bit of ground on the other
women.
My love, the run – I ran the 5K course in 21 minutes and 29 seconds and
crossed the finish line in 1:22:07 (58th Female/205 Women). Not the
sub-1:20 I was looking for, but I’ll take it. Besides, every race is a learning
experience. It exposes your strengths and weaknesses and acts as a barometer for
fitness. From this race I was able to take away quite a few things. First, the
swim might turn out to be my weakest link – I must put in more time at the
pool, do more spotting drills, and find ways to practice open water swimming if
I want to stay in the race. Second, I see pretty dramatic improvements in my
bike time, the more time I spend on the bike. And lastly, doing brick workouts (specifically
bike-to-run) really does help. Bike a few miles then get off and try to run.
You’ll see what I’m talking about. It is WEIRD. Your legs don’t feel normal and
it takes awhile to get in a rhythm. But the more you practice it the quicker
your body adapts.
Next up:
·
Oct 6th, Crawlin Crab Half Marathon
·
Oct 19th, 5K (TBD)· Nov 9th, Trenton Half Marathon
Thanks for reading J
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