I found the race report I wrote for my experience at the Timberman 70.3 way back in 2012 that actually predates this blog. Without further ado, here's what I wrote about that then...
It’s been a long uncomfortable summer in New England. When it wasn’t 90 degrees with 80% humidity it was 75 degrees with 100% humidity. Training for my 5th 70.3 was an exercise in drowning in sweat 10 times a week. Even the swims had me sweating as my body worked to shed the built up heat long after the swim had ended. I chose a pretty aggressive training program for this race – 3 workouts a week in each discipline, plus a weekly bike/run brick, all at longer distances than I’d previously done in training. The reason for all this sweat? I was signed up for a race that has more than twice the elevation gain of the Pumpkinman (my previous best race), and a reputation as one of the hardest courses on the Ironman 70.3 docket. I figured to show anything like a respectable time I needed to put in a lot of work. So 119 days after the New Orleans 65.1(inside joke) and several demoralizing days spent riding mountains (oh so slowly…) it was finally time to put my work to the test and pit myself against the hills of Timberman.
It’s been a long uncomfortable summer in New England. When it wasn’t 90 degrees with 80% humidity it was 75 degrees with 100% humidity. Training for my 5th 70.3 was an exercise in drowning in sweat 10 times a week. Even the swims had me sweating as my body worked to shed the built up heat long after the swim had ended. I chose a pretty aggressive training program for this race – 3 workouts a week in each discipline, plus a weekly bike/run brick, all at longer distances than I’d previously done in training. The reason for all this sweat? I was signed up for a race that has more than twice the elevation gain of the Pumpkinman (my previous best race), and a reputation as one of the hardest courses on the Ironman 70.3 docket. I figured to show anything like a respectable time I needed to put in a lot of work. So 119 days after the New Orleans 65.1(inside joke) and several demoralizing days spent riding mountains (oh so slowly…) it was finally time to put my work to the test and pit myself against the hills of Timberman.
My first hurdle came on
Saturday. As I was preparing my
nutrition for the bike ride I discovered that I’d let myself get below my
minimum required allowance of Perpetuem.
I only had 2 hours’ worth, and I was planning on at least 3 hours of
riding. After the blue streak got done
leaving my mouth I decided I’d make do with what I had and make up the missing
calories with some Chomps I had lying around.
I made sure to put them in my transition bag, stuck the bottles of
Perpetuem in the fridge and went to bed.
As do most triathlon race days, Sunday morning came in at 3:30 AM. It was an hour’s drive to the venue, and with
transition closing at 6:45 I wanted to get there in plenty of time to get in my
warm up run and swim. It was dark as I rocketed
up the deserted highways to Lake Winnipesaukee, and it was still dark as I sat
in the (apparently infamous) line for parking at Ellacoya Park, but by the time
I’d been directed to my spot (right by the swim start, about 4/10ths mile from
transition) the sun was coming and showing a beautiful tranquil scene out on
the water.
The swim was a point to
point course, laid out in 3 roughly equal legs - .4 miles out, .4 miles
parallel to shore, then .4 miles back to transition. Standing on the shore and looking at the
yellow buoys marching out to the red turn buoy in the distance I was thinking
“You mean you’re going to swim all the way out there, and then you’ll only be a
third done? What are you, nuts?” The answer of course is yes, I am. I must be or I wouldn’t be doing this for
fun, right?
With my transition area all set up I took a 10
minute run down the start of the run course.
I was running at a pretty relaxed pace and was a bit surprised to see
that I’d been hitting just about an 8:30 mile.
I wrote it off to adrenaline and the effects of the taper and more or
less forgot about it. I got back to my
wetsuit just in time to hear the announcer point out that transition was going
to close in 15 minutes and that all swimmers needed to be on shore within the
next 25 minutes, so I pulled on the rubber suit and walked about half way down
the beach towards the swim start. I
figured I’d strike out from there to the first of the marker buoys, but turned
for shore after about 5 minutes and ended up with an uninspiring 10 minute warm
up that only served to highlight my sore shoulder.
After my last minute
panic pee I stood around on the beach as the first 5 waves went off. I chatted with a couple of my fellow age
groupers, agreed that 140.6 is something only crazy people do (each of the
three of us had a different discipline that made it seem ridiculous), and then
it was finally time for the swim start.
I had a hard time going
straight in Winnipesaukee – I got pushed around by the waves, couldn’t see out
of my goggles, and couldn’t tell where anyone else was going. It turns out a lake that big gets some nice
rollers like the ocean, but with shorter choppier waves, so I spent a fair
amount of time trying to sight only to be tossed head first into the next
trough. Add to that the fact that I
couldn’t seem to get away from one of my fellow age groupers who kept tossing
water into my mouth as I was trying to breathe and it was not a stellar day for
me in the water. I was hoping to do
better than my previous HIM PR of 42 minutes (in my mind I even whispered a
sub-40 minute swim to myself), but instead I got out of the water at
44:30. The good news is I beat 35 of my
fellow age groupers. The bad news is
that I was in 140th place in my division at that point.
T1 is always a mess for
me, so I guess I’m not surprised it took 4:39.
Still, that didn’t include my usual post swim trip to the port-o-let, so
it wasn’t as “fast” as it seemed.
I decided that I wasn’t
going to let a poor swim leg spook me into trying too hard on the bike. I figured that if I could get around the
course in under 3 hours I was going to count myself fast and be happy with
it. My strategy was to maintain as close
to a 90 RPM cadence as I could while not letting my heart rate get out of the
130s if at all possible. The warm-up
section of the ride went pretty well. I
was passing my usual complement of strong swimmers who can’t ride fast,
watching some of the fast guys from later waves come by, and generally having a
nice ride. Of course both packages of
Chomps that I’d brought slipped out of my shorts, and suddenly I was low on
calories again. Rather than stop and go
back I decided to just take a gel from each aid station on the bike course. That worked out fine. I might work that into my nutrition plan for
future races.
I had one bad moment
where I passed a guy heading into a corner, only to find out it was a MUCH
shaper corner than I expected. I jammed
on my breaks and had the outstanding sensation of my front wheel slowing faster
than my rear (yes, I got a bit sideways).
Happily the other guy was both paying attention (he didn’t hit me as he
very easily could have) and very forgiving (he didn’t call me any of the nasty
names that had to have been going through his head). I spent the rest of the day being very
courteous about corners. About a mile
later I heard everyone’s favorite warning on the bike “that bad hill is coming
up.”
The Marsh Road hill on
the Timberman course is also sometimes knows as the Marsh Road wall. It’s steep.
Really steep. And kind of
long. But the good news is that it’s
early in the ride, and the hardest part is not miles long (I’m pretty sure it’s
less than half a mile really). So it
takes some hard work, but wasn’t nearly the crippling effort that I’d feared it
would be. Of course that guy who was off
the bike and walking up the hill would probably disagree, but I guess I’d put
in enough time in the hills to make it doable.
The fun part about that kind of uphill is that there’s usually a nice
downhill to go with it. Unfortunately
there were a lot of people on the downhill ahead of me, so I had to ride with
one hand on the brake and was only able to get up to about 37 mph (I suspect
I’d have been over 45 on that hill on my own).
Getting over that hill
put us in the next valley over. From
there it was about 16 miles of going 25 mph downhill, and that was
awesome. At just about the turn-around
point I started looking for the next aid station because the port-a-potty stop
I’d skipped in T1 was making itself increasingly apparent. I put in a 2 minute biological breakdown,
grabbed some additional clear water for my bottle and got back underway. I lost
track of the turns, so for a while I was trying to figure out when we were
going to join the stream of cyclists on the other side of the road. It finally occurred to me that I must be on
the return leg, and that the others were folks still outbound. I was mostly surprised because I was
expecting the trip back up to the lake to be a long uphill grind (after all
that downhill), but really it didn’t seem bad at all. Sort of a false flat, but not really a
punishing slope. Getting back over the
hills was unpleasant, but there wasn’t the one really big hill. Of course there was that one hill that made
me say bad things when I saw it, but it wasn’t as bad as it looked. The back side of that one had me hitting 46.3
mph and yelling "left" as I scooted by a couple of really fast
guys. They caught me on the next uphill,
and I never saw them again, but that was fun.
The final run into T2 included about a mile of
downhill in a “no passing” zone (where one guy just HAD to pass me). Then it was a turn into the park and a
straight shot into transition. I looked
at the clock and couldn’t believe it, so I checked the Garmin – bike split was
2:54:40, a 19.25 mph average. With
almost no trying. I was completely
flabbergasted and extremely happy with that effort.
T2 was another mess,
and this is not usually the case. I may
have to do that ridiculous workout where I do transitions 8 times in 3 hours
again before my next race. Bike to run
transition 3:15
My goal in all my
training and race strategy was to run a sub-2 hour half marathon off the
bike. I felt like my energy level was
great, my legs felt fresh, and I was able to settle into a nice relaxed effort
almost immediately after starting the run.
I know I only checked my speed on the downhills (or something), but each
time I looked the Garmin was reporting right around an 8 minute mile. Probably the best part of the run was the
crowd support. The course goes through a
nice neighborhood, and there were lots of neighborhood kids to high five. If the first rule of endurance sports is to never
pass up an aid station, then the second is to high five all the kids (so I
did). There was even a local hockey club
doling out a snow drift they’d been stockpiling. Yes, I ran about 3 miles with snow under my
hat in August. The miles beeped by at a steady 8:30-8:40 pace for the first
loop, and then started to slow on the second.
By the time I’d hit the far point of the course on the second loop I was
getting pretty tired. I popped the last
of my electrolyte caps and started hoping I could hold on to a decent pace
without cramping for the last 5K. I
could feel a couple of muscles thinking about seizing up, so I took the
cautious route and walked up the last bit of the last big hill, and then just
flowed down the rest of the course with only one small calf cramp right before
the finishing chute. The total time for
the run, 1:56:38. This annihilated my
previous best by nearly 15 minutes.
Overall I have to say
I’m delighted. It was a great race, on a
perfect day, and I beat my previous best at the distance by nearly 7
minutes. This on a course where I was
going to feel really good if I missed a PR by “only” 10 minutes. After my lousy start I managed to catch 60
men in my division and ended up 79th of 175 and in the top third of men
overall. I’m disappointed in my swim and
also in my transitions, so I’ll have to work on that, but I definitely have to
say that I raced the best race I could on the day in question. Total time 5:43:42


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