A few words about the
race. I can't speak highly enough of the organisation – everything
from a bike check-in that involves electronic tagging of bike and
wristband, as well as photo of you and bike etc... to great briefings
and parties, and the carnival atmosphere throughout. The course was
immaculately prepared too. And the size and range of athletes it
attracts is awesome. For those of us who'll never get to go to Kona
as athletes, I imagine this kind of race is as close as it'll get.
If you don't want to
race Ironman Austria, do yourself a favour and go on holiday to
Klagenfurt or do a training week in Carinthia. It'll blow your socks
off. The city is almost perfect – slightly isolated, it's historic
and still cool, with loads happening. Nobody really seems to work too
much, instead choosing to swim in the lake, ride their bike and have
a beer at any opportunity. It's my kinda town. Plus, the women there
are all beautiful and athletic, heavenly creatures – if that's what
that young Adolf fella had in mind, maybe we were a tad hasty in
judging the chap..? (still too soon..?)
But the people make the
race. They love Ironman and what it brings, and they come out en
masse. The swim is incredible and the Tour de France style climbs on
the bike are sensational but, on this occasion, the people of
Klagenfurt are the only thing that got us through. I'll be forever
grateful for them turning their garden hoses into sprinkler systems,
for lining up with hose pipes ready to dowse us with icy water as we
passed by... this happened all the way along the course. Apparently,
at around the 15 hour mark, a couple of guys pitched up and started
handing out icy cold beers to those still out on the long walk home!
Most of all, I'm grateful for the people of Klagenfurt for realising
that hosing athletes down is a job best performed by the town's
bikini-clad women...
By way of a conclusion,
how do I feel now, a week after the race, other than still being in a
whole world of sunburn itchy discomfort (oh, and lost four toe nails
too!)?
post-race sunburn |
since this pic, i've lost all but four toe nails! |
I guess proud covers it. The thought was always that, if
things went well on a good day, sub-11 was a possibility. To do that
on a day that was far from ideal, makes me proud. If you look at the
scores on the doors, last year 1093 people went sub-11 – this year,
that number was 413. It's hard to read the results on the official
site correctly, but the DNF (did not finish) rate looks to have been
as high as 20%. We chatted to a guy at the presentations who'd gone
9.20 in Austria last year – this year he was back in better shape
than ever ready to smash the 9 hour mark (bit of a beast, it'd
seem!)... he went 9.40. All goes to show how tough a day it was out
there.
During IM Wales, I said
never again; it took me a few weeks and months to change my mind.
During the run on Sunday, I said never again. By the final kilometre,
I already knew that wasn't true and I'm already considering my next
Ironman race.
But it may be a little
while away. Next time out, I want to be able to improve notably
again. I'm still a poor cyclist when it comes to hills – that needs
to change; just a little more run strength, I'm sure, and I could run
sub-4 hours for the IM marathon too. For now, it's back to the short
stuff for a little while, as I try to improve my strength and basic
speed ready for the sprints and Olys of the season ahead; then we'll
try to bring all that to an Ironman in another 12 months' time,
maybe.
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ReplyDeleteCongratulations on an awesome result on an incredible tough day! If you think IM Austria is a great venue, try IM Coeur d'Alene or IM Canada! IM CdA was my first and everything from the organization to the location and fantastic volunteers rocks!
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