Showing posts with label ironman austria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ironman austria. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 July 2012

Some cool stuff from Ironman Austria

I just wanted to share some great stuff from Ironman Austria. Seriously, I can't recommend this race highly enough and, right from the sign up through to all this stuff now, the whole experience has been utterly fantastic.

First up is the official video which they showed at the presentation party the next day and, I think, does a good job of capturing the awesome atmosphere, festival spirit, insane support and even a little of the heat!

Secondly is this super cool and nifty thing called My Page by Marathon Photos. Basically, click on PLAY and you can follow my race and see the pace I was doing compared to (in this case) the winners, Faris Al Sultan and Lindsey Corbin, and the last finishing athlete. However, if your friends raced, you can actually tag a handful of them and see how you did at each point. 

Better still, at the relevant places on the course, it stops to show you any photographs or videos you appeared in. Nice!

Let's face it, an Ironman is an expensive event to take part in but these little added-value extras help to justify the cost and are also great reminders of fantastic days.

Sunday, 15 July 2012

Ironman Austria - Race report: Part 4 - thanks



Ironman may be an individual sport, but it is always a team effort – the day itself is just one of hundreds that get you to that finish line. Which means there are a lot of people to thank.

First and foremost, I have the most supportive family (especially my folks) in the world who are always my biggest fans – for that, and many, many other things, I love them all dearly. 

My friends – both the ones who have to listen to me make weekly excuses as to why I can't come out for drinks again and yet keep inviting me anyway (please do keep inviting!), and the ones who offer tonnes of encouragement and praise by phone, email, Facebook etc – aren't far behind my family in general awesomeness levels.

My finishing time in Austria would have been unimaginable eight months ago, before joining Tri2Aspire and our coach, Jason, deserves a healthy dose of praise and thanks for that. I set him a tough couple of goals - to improve me at both sprint distance and Ironman distance simultaneously - and we achieved both and then some.

Perhaps the biggest portion should be distributed evenly among all my fellow Tri2Aspire team mates – at some point, I'm certain I've swum, ridden or run with everyone in T2A, or chatted to them about triathlon, strategies and Ironman. It seems cruel to pick out anyone in particular, but I feel I have to: Both coach and Ed have accompanied me for countless metres in the pool (and a word here for Seth and Dubai Masters – we're really lucky to have such a good and committed masters swim program in Dubai, such things are rare). 

There were a couple of killer long rides that Messrs Attenhofer, Hawkins and Marshall carried my slow-ass through. Those shadowy short-course characters known only as Flanners and The Silver Fox played just as much of a role in keeping me honest over the quick stuff too, and for that I owe a debt of gratitude that I hope to repay in the next couple of months. A doff of the cap to all you gents. 

King of the Mountains I may not be, but any improvement I've made in the hills over the past few months are due mainly to the organisational skills of Senor National and the total selflessness of support drivers par excellence Sarah and Claire. Chapeau, mes amis, chapeau.

I tend to do much of my running solo but there are times I venture out with company. It feels like Miss Q and I have put the world to rights on far too many sweat-laden long runs and occasional Safa Park beastings over the past few months since I joined the team – appreciate the company and the shared pain. Also, amongst all the horror that is the Coach Dirt runs, one in particular sticks in mind, when Piers was kind enough to pace me to a new 5k PB. That felt like a real turning point for me in considering myself to at least be 'someone who runs' even if I'm still some way short of being 'a runner'. Thanks mate. Hope to keep pushing all of you guys in the way that you've all pushed me.

Finally, the guys at Sport In Life in Dubai, provided me with the Gus, the Roctane drink and the electrolyte powder that got me through a hot and tough race - if you can stomach it, I highly recommend Gu's Roctane drink as it was a pretty easy way of getting 2-300 calories into the body fast on a day when calories were hard to keep down due to the heat. They also let me test run the brand new Polar RCX5 which I'll provide a more complete review of soon, but let's just say for now that it performed splendidly on a difficult day.

Then there are the guys at Aerofit who gave someone who had no previous knowledge or understanding of training zones or fat/carb metabolism some valuable information and tools that were employed in both training and racing.

Ironman Austria - race report: Part 3 - post-race thoughts



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.

Ironman Austria - race report: Part 2 - race day



Sleep was, of course, fitful and fleeting – they don't believe in aircon in central Europe, it seems. Breakfast was sparse – my stomach still felt sore but was better than I'd dared to hope. I was happy to get a carton of Ensure Plus down – so I knew there were at least 300 calories in my system. Along with a bit of fruit at breakfast and a Gu before the start, this would guarantee my glycogen stores were pretty full pre-race.

The hotel laid on a shuttle bus which taxied us down to the race start. The atmosphere down at transition and the race village was already phenomenal. 





I visited my bike to make sure the tyres were pumped, liquids were topped up and it was all ready to go. I walked through transition once or twice more, just to make sure I knew where my bike and run bags were, then I walked back down towards the race start, stopping only for a quick loo break en route. It was already pretty warm and sunny out.





Before I knew it, I was lined up on the beach and ready for action. The swim start in Austria is split – there are three piers with the outer two forming the barriers and the inner one splitting the right from the left – the pros actually dive off one of the peers giving them a 100m or so headstart, which didn't seem fair! I opted for the left but near the centre purely as it was least crowded and allowed me to push to the very front while taking the shortest line. The local priest performed the traditional blessing of the water, and then the Austrian national anthem started blazing out, competing with the hot air balloons, helicopters circling above and boats blowing in their sirens out in the lake. My skin tingled. Not for the last time that day.

The swim: 55mins

The start was expertly done. With one minute to go, the tape was lifted and we were told to get into the water but not go past the start flags – suspended above the water some 25m out. As we were slowly swimming out, the cannon went off...

I put my head down and concentrated on working hard, breathing every four strokes for 20 breaths, until I was well beyond the end of the pier and leading the way for all the swimmers on the left side. I got into a rhythm, feeling strong, and continued towards the first buoy. 

Around 700m out, I looked right to see a group some 20m away and decided to head right and join them. It turned out it was a load of female pros, strong age groupers, and a few male pros who'd missed the front pack. I slotted in, found feet and battled away all the way out to the first buoy, which felt a long way out. There was a short section left (any time you find yourself sighting off a white castle on an island, you know you're in for a stunning race) then we turned back for the shore near where we started. By this point, we'd dropped a lot of the pack and there were maybe 12 age groupers and a couple of male pros in the pack. This section was slow and difficult as it was straight into the sun and – my only criticism of the whole day from an organisational point of view – not well marked. We were heading for the entrance to the canal but, from the lake, that's just a small gap in a tree-lined shoreline. It'd be difficult to spot from a boat with binoculars – with the sun in your eyes while swimming, it was like trying to play Operation while on a bouncy castle. At one point, all of us stopped at once, skulled and looked up – having a hilarious anglo-franco-german conversation. I didn't understand every word that was said but imagine it translated as exactly what I said to them: WHERE THE FUCK IS THIS FUCKING CANAL? The pros were led in by kayak – I can't help but feel that the kayak that stayed alongside us to make sure we were all safe would have been better pointing the way.

The pack slowed then, uncertain of the direction. “Bugger this,” I thought, as one other swimmer and I took the initiative. I thought I could see some crowds, and that was good enough to go on. I'd swim until I hit something, I decided. We'd been told how fast the narrow canal would feel. That we'd be almost dragged down by the tide of swimmers. Just one problem: only the male pros had been through and they were a long way up the canal, but I could sense that everyone was hanging back, looking to be dragged up. Oddly, I was cramping quite badly in my left quad by this point but relaxing it and not kicking whatsoever had helped. Otherwise, I felt good and had plenty in the arms. Screw it, I thought. I pretty much knew by now that we must have been the second group up here and the first age groupers – I may only get a chance like this once in my life, I decided, and so I was going to lead it in.

Then we were in it – in the canal – and it was deafening. And colourful. And, as someone who comes from a swimming background, by far and away the single greatest sporting moment of my life. The crowds were five deep on each side, with face paints and flags waving, kids dipping their toes in the water, fancy-dressed madmen trying to run alongside. People waved and cheered from the bridges. It's quite hard to breathe while smiling and laughing, but it's something I had to learn to do pretty quickly. I'd love to see my splits for that final kilometre because I absolutely hooned it; to the point where the pack of 12 who'd entered were now 5 – and you have to be going some to drop swimmers when drafting one after one in a narrow canal. The guy on my feet cut the corner slightly and just beat me out of the water on our way into T1 but I really didn't care by then – for 12 minutes or so, I'd felt like a rock star.

I was a little surprised at the time getting out of the water – 55 minutes – but I guess you'd expect a drop-off of around 5 minutes due to the non-wetsuit swim. Everyone also talks about it being a 'long' swim – I reckon it's dead-on 3,800m but that's assuming a straight line into the canal. In reality, I think that added a couple of minutes on. Long and short, I knew I'd swam well – I could 'feel' it.

Compared to the change of clothing, snack, chat, nap and after-swim drinks I must have indulged in during my transition in Wales, my T1 here was simple, quick and efficient. I put some extra bike shorts on for comfort, the helper shoved the swim stuff into my bag while telling me it could be 40C on the bike and lathering me with total sun block, to the point that I must have looked like Phil Graves' albino cousin from Ireland. Fortunately, I had total game face on otherwise the fact that the transition girl was smoking hot and rubbing me down might have led to an uncomfortable moment when I had to shuffle out with my aero helmet strategically placed.

The bike: 5:41

Helmet and race number went on during the long run to the bike, then I was straight out, feet into the shoes as I made the u-turn to head out to the football stadium.

In spite of the bike being the longest section, it's probably the hardest to write about in detail. There's basically three sections: first 30km is lovely rolling terrain along the lake, the next 30 goes inland and is pretty hilly, the final 30 is a mix between tough, steep hills and long, super-fast sections.

I'd heard Austria was a pretty fast bike course but nobody out on the course that day really agreed. Sure, conditions played their part but, apparently, the extra loop down to the soccer stadium that we did at the beginning was new for this year, adding an extra few kilometres so the record-breaking times of the past were unlikely to be repeated... In terms of total climbing, Austria is on a par with IM UK, which is actually considered a pretty hilly course.

What I would say is that there are some very fast sections. And there are no kilometres-long hills that take 15 or 20 minutes to scale. But there are lots of short steep hills – two long and very steep hills – that tax the legs. If you're a great rider, as a lot of guys were, you can probably mash up these very quickly indeed. For the rest of us, they were energy-sapping and it was disheartening to see the average speed plummet as you fought up a steep incline at 9kph. Of course, it's not meant to be easy – I'd just say that Ironman Austria is a good, honest bike course, but if you expect it to be easy, then you're in for a hell of a surprise.

What I'm most proud of from this race was my ability to think on my feet and make changes accordingly. Realistic, actionable changes too. I zipped through the first loop of the course quickly, and allowed my heart rate to go above the limit I'd set. This was for one simple reason – making hay while the sun didn't shine (quite so much). I also knew that my tummy tends to shut down in the heat; I therefore concentrated on getting around 1100 calories down me (a Snickers after 20 minutes, and 600ml Ensure Plus) – way more than half my total calories – by the halfway point.

That first loop was a lot of fun – the course is jaw-dropping beyond description, and but for a couple of short sections the roads are in excellent condition. Plus, there's barely a moment when there's not a spectator shouting for you. The sound of cow bells, hooters and screams of “Hoop, hoop, hoop...Bravo, Suuuper!” are still ringing in my ears. I laughed, waved and shouted my way around. 

The other highlight came after just 15km or so, passing the first aid station when ironman superstar Chrissie Wellington cheered me up the hill. I'm neither the biggest Wellington fan nor easily impressed by celebrity, but if I had the breath I swear I'd have giggled like a schoolgirl and screamed “I love you Chrissie”.

I hit the turnaround in 2.45 and have to admit that, for a second, I allowed myself to dream of a 5.30 bike split. But only a second – it was now sensationally hot, and I'd expanded more energy in the first loop for that reason. A 3 hour second loop was the target, I told myself; a 5.45 bike split would be something to be proud of in these conditions and on this course and would leave me with a chance of that little finish time target I still hadn't quite admitted to myself.

The second loop it was like a different course. The little bumps turned into hills, the hills turned into mountains. The big two main hills were long, slow, painful deaths. More and more riders went past but I just looked at the heart rate – always the heart rate. I was taking on a 600ml bottle of water at every aid station (every 20-25km), and dumping another bottle straight over myself. Yet I was still overheating and thirsty. I managed to find myself in a couple of pace lines here and there but would invariably get left behind when hitting anything with an uphill. There were a couple of groups out there and a few times I saw two riders working together, taking short turns... really pathetic and sad to see, but I thought the marshals did a good job on the whole. They looked at every situation – I was passed at one point and sat up to slow down just as they came past and they indicated I needed to drop off an extra metre... totally fair. There could just never be enough of them, I guess.

I lost my chain twice on this second loop – slight issue with the front derailleur – but this probably cost me a couple of minutes and a little momentum at most.

I have to admit, I was happy to find myself steaming down the fast final few kilometres into Klagenfurt and getting off my bike. The 5.41 bike time was fantastic – and I felt pretty good all things considered. It's amazing that, while out there on the bike, it felt like an endless chain of uber-bikers had powered past me; I must have been towards the back of the field by now, I thought. Yet, arriving in transition, it was still pretty much empty. Looking at the results, only around 400 of the 2,800 total entrants were actually out on the run course before me, so I was still relatively far up the field. That's another lesson I'll take into future races – you're almost always doing better than you think.

Transition was fairly speedy and, after almost seven litres of fluid, I even managed my first pee of the race... a sign of just how hot that bike course was.

The run: 4:14

Heading out on to the run, I looked at the race time. Let's first see how the legs feel, I thought.

The first section took us over the canal and into the main park where the Ironman village was located. Once again, the support was overwhelming, with hundreds and hundreds lining the route. I ran fine until the first aid station at 2km into the run at which point I realised that I was overheating like never before, my asthma was playing up to the point of hyperventilating and I could barely open my mouth to drink. You'd think that somone who lives and trains in Dubai would be used to this, of course, but that's not the case – I really don't get on too well with the heat and, if I've learnt to cope with it to some degree, it's through avoiding the hours of direct, strong sunlight. Now, it was very hot and very sunny.

The plan had been a 30 minute/5 minute run-walk strategy, basically timing the walk to coincide with every other aid station. I really, really wanted to get close to a four hour Ironman marathon – I felt like I had it in me and was sure that I could get there with this strategy. But right then, walking through that first aid station, I knew I had a decision to make. If I ran a 4.14 marathon, that was my sub-11. Any faster, I might blow up trying... decision made.

So, the strategy changed to a 25/5 run-walk, with a minute to walk through every aid station. What's disappointing, looking back, is that I was comfortably able to run 5.20-5.30 pace when I was running, and that it was heat rather than fatigue that was the limiting factor. I was stopping to cool down rather than rest the legs; but conditions were what they were and I had to find a solution.

Chrissie Wellington again popped up after a few kilometres of the run. Say what you like about that girl, but she was the loudest, most encouraging spectator out there (and that wasn't an easy contest to win) and it gave everybody a lift to see her.

The first section of the run headed along the lake to some of the neighbouring villages, looped through the villages and actually passed through a beach resort, before coming back to race village and heading out on the second section, into town along the canal (and then do it all again). There was basically no shade on the first section and it was a hot, hot mess. Even on the first loop, people were being carried, stretchered and ambulanced off the course. Up in town, the course took in the main town square and there was a bell there that – legs allowing – everybody jumped up to ring. Every ring of the bell saw local businesses donate a Euro to local charities... just another example of how the area has embraced Ironman.

By the time I got back to the main park ready to head out for the second loop, the aid station pattern had been established. Sponge in tri suit, water, sip, pour over head, coke, more water sip and over the head and – in the few places they had it – ice down the front of the tri suit... then time to run again. My pace rarely deviated. I was bang on course. The quad strain from the swim (felt a little during the bike but not enough to cause pain or discomfort) was now very stiff and painful. There are a couple of underpasses and steep slopes out on the course and I had to walk up and down them – no point blowing a quad for the extra few seconds of running that they'd bring, I decided.

I was also hallucinating, it seemed... thinking I'd seen two helicopters land in the middle of a playground. Turned out they were real, whisking people off to hospital – by this point, emergency medical services were being drafted in; after 9 hours, there were already more DNFs than at the end of any other running of IM Austria.

The last loop of the run I was entirely in my own head space. Just kept plugging away. Some friends I'd made at the hotel said they'd tried to call as I'd gone past – I didn't hear a word. The 30km marker is a big one – that's when you know you've made it, I think. You know that, by hook or by crook, you're going to finish this race. The next, for me, came at the very top of town – final section, 37km marker, 5k left and 32 minutes to do it. I had it. I was going to go sub-11 but, to make sure, I stopped the walks (other than the quad-saving underpass walk and 30 seconds through aid stations). I'm glad I did – the markers had been placed wrongly, it turned out...

I hit 41km in 4.04 – 10 minutes to go, I should make it easily. I was running 5.25s at this point...and I kept running, and kept running. Then, with horror and frustration, I realised exactly where the turn towards the finishing chute was and that I had to pass through the special needs section, through another underpass and along the lake first...

Funny what you can find deep down when you need to, isn't it. My Garmin shows a last kilometre at 4.40 pace – something I'd have thought impossible but, after all that, nobody was going to take my sub-11 (no matter how minutely 'sub' is was) away from me. Turning to the finish line, it looked so far away and I could see 10.59.32 on the board – the announcer was even counting down the seconds. There were huge bleachers and big cheering crowds either side, but I saw none of them. Head down, sprint. Two guys were crossing the line just ahead of me, milking the moment – I basically ploughed them down to get over the line. But I was over the line.

I grabbed for my finisher's medal and saw a couple of helpers come over towards me... and that's all she wrote. Legs went, the fire in my head exploded and down I went... I was dragged along into the shade and, briefly, over the road and into the medical tent. All I needed was fluid and shade. 10 minutes later, I felt 100% better and was grabbing a shower, then a massage. That's when the big grin first appeared – not sure it's left since.

Part 3 - post-race thoughts
Part 4 - thanks

Ironman Austria - Race report: Part 1 - the preamble

I've been kidding myself that, as I was posting little blogs and other morsels in the run-up to IM Austria, my race report would be a nice, quick affair. But I'm a writer, and brevity doesn't come naturally; so get the kettle on, pull up a pew, and make yourself comfortable... we might be here a while.

My goals and ambitions heading into Austria were perhaps different to most people's. I'd done Ironman Wales (12:50) last September and, somewhere along the way, had forgotten to 'enjoy' it. I know that you don't truly enjoy an Ironman – not in the same way you do, say, having a nice cold pint on a summer's day, or watching fat people fall over on YouTube – but I'd forgotten to 'experience' it and, as a result, didn't feel like I'd done myself justice on the day. In short, I had unfinished business with the 140.6 mile distance.

Unfinished business shouldn't be confused with lofty aspirations. As everything from my Aerofit scan to the unholy mess of agony and anguish that is my face after a long run will tell you, I'm very much a short course triathlete. With that in mind, I set my team coach, Jason, the unenviable task of prepping me for a UK Sprint Qualifier (I did actually qualify for the GB Team to go to the World Champs in New Zealand but decided to pass on it) and Ironman Austria, just five weeks apart...

On the whole, I think it worked well. I felt fit, ready and confident (within reason, of course – you can always be fitter, faster and more ready but...) heading over to Austria. I was confident that I was a different athlete from the one that lined up at Ironman Wales. Just as importantly, I was mentally in a different place. I spoke with Jason about the process – swimming hard and trying to find fast feet; concentrating on heart rate, nutrition and hydration on the bike; a steady run-walk for the run. It was mentioned that, on a very good day, a sub-11 hour time may be on the cards; but that smiling and soaking up the atmosphere and scenery was just as important.

The days before were fairly undramatic. Describing the Klagenfurt and Worthersee venue as stunning is a bit like saying Scarlett Johansson is pretty, or Facebook is popular. It's breathtaking and the lakeside resort location for the Ironman village – along with Europe's biggest outdoor sports expo – gives the whole event a real festival atmosphere. 
a small section of the giant Worthersee
the canal that connects the Worthersee with the town of Klagenfurt - part of the canal features at the end of the Ironman swim, and part of the run goes up and down the canal as it runs into town 
Add 2,800 triathletes and their families and the atmosphere soon becomes electric. Not wanting to tire myself out or expend too much nervous energy, I headed down to the race village as necessity demanded – registration, briefing, swim practice, massage – but then got away back into Klagenfurt town as soon as I was able.

Everything, I would say, went like clockwork until the day before the race. If this race has taught me anything at all, it's that the saying 'man makes plans and god laughs' possibly applies more to long distance triathlon than anything else!

On Saturday morning, in the race briefing, it was revealed that, for the first time in 14 years, the Worthersee was too warm to allow wetsuits. If I were there for position, this would have been good news for me. As I was sort of there for time, it was sort of bad news, but no great shakes. Others, however, saw it differently. The announcement was met with the sort of loud clamour and screamed questions that I associate with movies in which a notorious villain is cleared by a corrupt jury on a technicality. In fact, I was pretty certain that 'wetsuits will not be allowed' must have sounded very much like the German for 'all of your family have just been killed by a nuclear bomb'. I saw two women actually crying.

For me, the bad news started after lunch. I ate a standard, plain pasta dish from a local Italian; it made me feel so ill I could hardly eat for the rest of the day, while my stomach tried to play bongos on my intestines. Meanwhile, much to everyone's concern – not least, we later discovered, the organisers' – the unseasonably hot weather that was the cause of the non-wetsuit swim was only getting hotter and hotter.

In retrospect, there are a couple of things that I'm glad that I was ignorant of before race day. First was how many hills were in the course – but we'll get to that later – second, and most pressing, was just how hot it would get out there. Official figures had it at 36C but, in the sort of mind-blowing coincidence that Ironman has a habit of throwing up, we discovered the sort of 'hilarious after the fact but painful as hell at the time' truth the next day in the local newspaper and at the presentation party: not only was Sunday the hottest Ironman Austria, but the single hottest day in Klagenfurt since records began (200 years if you've a taste for macabre humour!) and one of the five hottest days of all time anywhere in Austria! The road temperature on the big climb reached 41C, with 47C recorded at the finish line! Being a lake venue, there's unfortunately none of the cooling breeze that you may get near the sea – so the temperatures soon stack up.

Friday, 29 June 2012

Ironman Austria: day 2 - more chilling...

(couldn't be bothered arranging pics artfully so find them all at the bottom)

A great second day in Klagenfurt as the town and lake front really came alive with all things Ironman. I made an early start and took a bus down to the lake where I did a 35 minute swim and the water was every bit as lovely and clear as it looks fro the side. It's certainly not cold but I wasn't baking hot getting out either so it came as a surprise to hear that wetsuits may not be allowed as the water's too warm - we get a decision tomorrow. In terms of final age group positions, a non-wettie swim helps me but it's not so good if going for the time.

After that I met Sean (lives in Fujairah and we have several friends in common) and he's a lovely bloke - nice to have a bit of company throughout the day. He's been here for a few days now and ridden the bike course twice and was telling me about it. Everyone seems to agree that it's not an easy bike and feels very testing while out there, but just seems to produce good times.

I had a massage from a local Austrian lovely who could have doubled as a Baywatch babe - not the worst part of my day by some way - then had lunch with Sean at a nice caff along the lake before coming back to town for a 15 minute run and a few hours of relaxing.

Tonight was the pasta party - I only stayed for an hour or so but, like the rest of this huge event (2,800 competitors!), it was incredibly well organised and good fun. The highlight being a 20 minute dance-acrobatics demo from a big group of Danish kids. Superb!

Hoe early - going to watch a movie on the laptop with a glass of wine and hope to get a really good, long sleep. Tomorrow we get down to business with the race briefing, bike and bag check-in.

bridge over the canal that the last 1k of the swim goes down



part of race village

more pics of beautiful worthersee




race expo - apparently europe's largest outdoor sports show 



pasta party





Thursday, 21 June 2012

Making a mix taper


And so, after all these months of early mornings, solid training volume and simple hard work in the build up to Ironman Austria 2012 – my second Ironman – my taper has finally begun.
To the uninitiated wondering what the hell I’m talking about, the ‘taper’ is the period of recovery that comes just before a big race, when you allow yourself to scale back the training, letting the body to recover, so you arrive on the start line feeling healthy, rested and ready to rock.

To those who have done an Ironman before, however, the taper means something different. It’s a time of sluggishness, of last-minute panic that fitness is slowly but steadily seeping out of your body. It’s a period during which every single meal sticks straight to your tummy and your weight increases daily. It’s a time of insecurity, sleeplessness and general hatred for humanity but, more specifically, triathlon.

Triathlon and Ironman in particular create obsessives. We do so much training that we’re addicted to it. Our sense of self-worth and our self-image becomes wrapped up in what time we were doing for those 100m reps in the pool this morning, or how many kilometres we ticked off on the bike at the weekend. When that starts to get scaled down, it’s inevitable the lack of endorphins rushing about the body is going to make us feel a bit, well, erm… what’s the technical word for it again… erm, oh yeah… SHIT!

Then there’s the simple fact that with less time spent exercising, there’s more time to think about what you’re not doing, should have done, everyone else has done etc. It’s not merely proximity to the race that makes me much more nervous during the taper than I’ve been throughout the rest of the process, but having more time to think about it.

Having been through all this once before, I’m finding it easier this time. I know feeling a bit unfit and slow is normal. I know I’ll be fine come the big show. But I also have some idea of what does and doesn’t work.

You see, although you’ll get set training programmes with standard tapers, no two people are the same. For some, the ideal taper is as long as four weeks. For others, it’s two days; although I think the average is around two weeks.

I never enjoyed tapering back in my swimming days as a kid and it’s something that – following a one-size-fits-all plan – I got very wrong last time around before my first Ironman. While a little sluggishness and a bit of weight gain are inevitable, I basically felt like one of those fat American Jerry Springer people who have to be airlifted from the house… sluggish doesn’t get close. The weight gain was probably comparable to those Yankydoodlefatasses as well. To make up for this, I went out for a couple of sessions that were too long and too hard. It was a train crash of a taper.

This is one of the real benefits of having a coach this time around. Having discussed it with coach, I’ve not laid off the training to the same extent – there’s an extra day off this week and the sessions are a little shorter but, at the moment, they are still fairly intense. I think this is something that suits me but, also, as I’ve said before, my training for this Ironman has been more of a slow nine-month build rather than a traditional 12 week peak. Also, the time I spent in the UK last month means I don’t have too much accumulated fatigue in the legs.

After tomorrow morning’s session (the team is down for a 60km, 40km and 20km time trial, although I may only do the 60k and 20k) my foot will come right off the gas but I’ll continue swimming hard and every day right up til Wednesday night, when I travel. This, I think, is the answer for me. Coming to triathlon with a swimming background, I derive a lot of my confidence from how I’m swimming. So, while swimming daily may not actually really improve my Ironman swim time, it will help me go into the race feeling good. Just as importantly, mentally, being able to keep training almost right up to the day stops me from feeling unfit, fat and sluggish while swimming doesn’t take the toll that running or even cycling have on the body and is quick to recover from.

In the meantime, it’s a case of relaxing a bit, working extra hours so I can enjoy the time in Austria doing Ironman, and trying to stop myself from eating every sweet, treat and chocolate bar I see! Otherwise, next season, you’ll be more likely to see me on Jerry Springer than on any podiums.

Sunday, 10 June 2012

Three more weeks…


Just three weeks to go until Ironman Austria, dear peeps, and everything – toucheth ye olde woode – appears to be going OH KAAAYH. I was initially worried that I’d end up paying for the time in the UK but it actually seems to have done me the world of good – a few big, hilly bike rides followed by a bit of an enforced rest (just two runs in five days).

Now, if you’re doing a more standard 12 week build for an Ironman, I wouldn’t recommend that sort of lull just a month or so out but there are a few reasons why I think it’s worked for me.
Firstly, I don’t feel like this has been a standard build but more the result of a long, hard, gradual increase in fitness and stamina over the past eight months since I joined Tri2Aspire. I’m far calmer, more relaxed and less sore than I was at this point before Wales – some of that, of course, is down to experience and knowing exactly what putting my body through a 3.8k swim, 180k bike and full marathon feels like. But, also, Wales was a traditional build – from decent shape to IM shape in 12 weeks. This time, I feel like my fitness has increased steadily since Wales and, therefore, there’s been no need to force it or peak. For that reason, a bit of a break made little difference.

Also, I’ve always had a fairly unique approach to pressure: run, run like the wind! The Easter before my final exams in university, for example, while all my uni mates were sweating over their studies and revising for 10 hours a day, I went to Portugal to work in a kids’ club for the whole holidays. Undue stress, I feel, is more likely to undermine my abilities than lack of work… that’s the theory at least.

And it’s a theory I may need to fall back on as what I call ‘Final Month Fever’ kicks in. Usually, I’m a fairly social sort but can happily go weeks without going out or having a drink… I just sort of, well, forget. Now, however, with all that hard work under my belt and just a few weeks to go, I’m consumed by the sort of desire and appetite to go and get smashed that is usually reserved only for sailors on shore leave. I guess it’s a kind of cabin fever – I know I’m so close to ‘getting er done’ and being able to enjoy a bit of a blowout (hey, all those weekends of being well-behaved, having early nights or dragging my ass out of bed at 3am have to be balanced up somewhere) that it’s tempting to start early. That week off, with a few beers and less focus on training, has potentially saved me from a week-long epic bender of IM-destroying proportions!

Then there’s the weather. A couple of days ago, Allah hit the thermostat and changed it from ‘Stupidly fooking hot’ to ‘Holy crap, my face is actually on fire, no seriously, my skin is melting’. It is unpleasant. It would be unpleasant if Ironman were at the end of summer and I was having to get the miles in now but it’s somehow worse that this particular journey is nearing its end.

You see, in reality, nothing I do now is really going to make any difference – I’m as ready as I’m going to be. I don’t mean I’m in perfect condition and am going to go out and win it – simply that, if I haven’t put the work in now, nothing I do between now and three weeks’ time is really going to make me significantly fitter. If anything, there’s the risk of injury, illness or overexerting. So, every single ‘hot as a dragon fart’ kilometre that is swum, biked or run in these here conditions is being done ‘just to stay the same’. That’s frustrating. I want it to be here NOW (please imagine footstamping while reading this last sentence)!

But it is what it is – and it’s only that for 17 more days as I fly out to Austria on the night on 27 June.

And, as it approaches, there’s a voice that sits there like one of those devils on the shoulder that appear in bad sitcoms and worse movies… It’s a voice that says just one thing and, I imagine, that voice doesn’t change whether you’re coming up to your first, second (like me) or 50th Ironman: “Have I done enough?”

It’s hard to tell. As I said, I feel far more in control than I did three weeks out from Wales. The build-up to Wales hurt; I was permanently sore, always tired… but that, in the perverse way that the mind of the triathlete works, was preferable to this calm. I knew I was pushing myself. I knew I was hammering it. I had to be – I was hurting!

It’s at times like these that you need to look outside for your gauges as the internal ones are useless. Since the run-up to IM Wales, I’ve been logging my training on DailyMile – a very simple but easy to use site for recording your sessions, distances, times and intensities. It’s not technologically complex, but neither am I. The past few months I’ve also been keeping a more detailed diary on a spreadsheet. These are both godsends (should that be allahsends here in Middle Earth?). In times of doubt, I can take a look and see that I have been putting the work in and hitting sessions. I realise that volume isn’t everything, but I can also compare the final few months with those that preceded Wales and see that, although I may not be so continually sore or wiped out, I’m actually covering way more kilometres. So, I can conclude, I am just in better shape.

And that was backed up this weekend when the team went to Hatta to hit the hills. It was my third time there and I did the full long ride all the way down to Kalba and back – a 115km long ride that has some 3,000m of elevation in it… and all that in frying pan heat and hell’s ass humidity – and, although I may never be king of the mountains, I definitely crushed it compared to any of my previous Hatta excursions. I even came off the bike feeling fresher than I have before.

So, by these exterior gauges, things are looking OK. Now it’s all about the final few weeks and the taper – two things that can be quite difficult to get right, being a mix between keeping the foot on and also getting the right amount of recovery. I feel I far from nailed this period last time around. Get them right, and I’m confident I’ll put in a performance I can be proud of.

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

The race – Ironman Austria


Although newer races like the yet-to-be-run Ironman New York and Ironman Melbourne are maybe now taking a bit more of the spotlight, Europe (and more specifically, Austria and Germany) are really one of the heartlands of Ironman racing. Along with Challenge Roth, IM Austria is right up there as one of the most iconic, well-established and best-supported races on the scene.

I’ve been lucky enough to see quite a lot of Austria in the past few years and have rarely stumbled upon anywhere that is less than spectacular but even by those high standards, the region of Carinthia looks stunning. Austria’s southernmost state, it borders Italy and Slovenia.
Carinthia (all images courtesy of kaernten.at)
The race takes place in the Carinthian capital of Klagenfurt which is a relatively small city (population of 90,000) which is all the better for Ironman racing as, apparently, the town comes alive during IM week, and the locals lap up the experience, the excitement and, of course, the huge boost to the local economy.
Klagenfurt - a bit of a change from Dubai
Although it can rain at this time of year, the past few editions of the race have all been dry affairs, with average highs in Klagenfurt of around 27C (80F) in July – so, if it stays dry, it’s perfect Ironman weather.

Klagenfurt sits on the banks of the stunning Worthersee, a 20km long Alpine lake that plays a central role in the race.
Picture postcard Lake Worthersee - bit like Wadi Adventure, but bigger...

Swim
Swim start
It’s 3.8k, of course, in the crystal clear Worthersee; being an Alpine lake, even in summer it’s a wetsuit swim, and the water is usually flat as a fish pond. 

Not a bad place to swim.
The swim course heads directly out from the start on the east side of the lake, then comes back into the most iconic section of the swim – the last 700m or so is up a narrow canal, so spectators line both banks to cheer on the competitors.
Swimming up the canal.

Swim exit in front of a giant Connect 4 board.
Bike
The 180km bike course is two identical 90km loops which I like the sound of – not so many laps that you get bored, but manageable rides and you can learn from the first loop as you tackle the second. 
Biking along the lake.
The loops head off to the south of Worthersee following its banks, then comes back a little further south. 
Drafting? Us?
Apparently, the first and last 30km of each loop is rolling and can be tackled on the aero bars, with the middle 30km where most the challenging climbs can be found. 
I can almost hear the cow bells!
It’s not an easy course – with a couple of tough climbs in there and more than 2,000m of climbing on the bike – but a lot of the elevation differences are said to be through rolling terrain rather than pure climbs.

Everyone that does the race also talks of the amazing atmosphere, with locals flooding on to the roads Tour de France style and even writing their support across the tarmac.

Run
The marathon course heads out in the other direction, following the lake’s northern shore. It’s a sort of double figure of 8 course, with transition/start/finish located in the very centre – you head north along the shore into the town of Krumpendorf before coming back, passing transition/race village and heading east into Klagenfurt city centre. 
Race village.
You then head back to transition/race village and that’s the first lap completed – you just have to do it all one more time. Again, I like the sound of this course – it has the interest level of a two-looper but the motivation factor of a four-looper – i.e. you only have to see each section of the course twice, other than the transition/race village area which is where most spectators can be found, which you pass through every half loop.
Crowds gathering at the finish line.
It’s pretty much entirely flat on lakeside paths and main roads which, after the non-stop climbs and descents of IM Wales, I’m almost looking forward to!
Can't wait to get to this point!
Almost as much as that big stein of local beer at the end of the race!