Little Miami Triathlon (LMT) - Last 2013 Race
After a few workouts and a short taper, Morgan’s Little
Miami Triathlon (LMT) Fall 2013 was a few days away. The weather people were expecting “severe
thunderstorms” for Sunday, Oct 6, so the race was nearly cancelled. I set my alarm for 5:30am Sunday morning, checked the LMT
website, and the race was on. Giddyup!
I set up my bags and bike the night before, and was able to
get on the road by 6:30am. I brought my
custom made, 4-bike ,PVC bike rack for my team (Type 2) and Team Tri-Agra (Andy and Shannon) to
use in transition. It was raining as I drove
north on I-71 to exit 32. I got to Fort
Ancient at 7:00am, and was the 4th car in the parking lot. I felt like a nerd. I considered taking a nap for 30 minutes, but
wound up playing Sudoku on my phone instead, while listening to the radio.
Once my partner, Lars, Andy, and Shannon arrived we
staged our bikes and headed to the race start.
The rain was on and off, but no lightning – so we were good to race. We grabbed a canoe without dents, oars, and life jackets
and headed to the staging area. We
watched Team Tri-Agra push off in the canoes at 8:56am. We were in the 9:04am wave, and took the outside lane (far
right).
With all of the rain, the river was higher than usual and
pretty fast. We were cruising along
nicely, not zigzagging at all. I sat up
front and paddled at a steady pace, with Lars in the back steering us. We were in 2nd place for the 9:04am
teams most of the canoe part. We did catch them
in the last mile or two and pull ahead. We had a great
canoe, not hitting any rocks or tree stumps.
They advertise the race as 6 miles in the river, but my
Garmin 310XT clocked it as 5.23 miles.
We passed 3 or 4 other heat canoes and finished in a time of 49:53
(moving time 49:44). My previous best
time for the river was 59:51, so I was extremely happy with this. Having a good canoe partner is much better
than kayaking solo.
Here is the Garmin Connect data for the canoe (watch was set to run mode): http://connect.garmin.com/activity/386773760
Our transition was pretty quick, but I didn’t time it. The path from the river to the road (run
start) was like the Tough Mudder! Very
muddy and slick. We half jogged/walked while trying not to fall.Here is the Garmin Connect data for the canoe (watch was set to run mode): http://connect.garmin.com/activity/386773760
We started the run together, planning to keep about a 9:30mm
pace for the 5 mile run section. The
first mile or two is a slow climb, and 4 or 5 people passed us. I felt great the first 3 miles or so, and
Lars had to pull me to keep the pace for the last two miles. He is a stronger runner, so I am glad he helped me keep pace after I lost some steam.
We covered the 4.98 miles (per Garmin) in 46:49 (46:41 moving time), with an average pace of 9:24mm. This is a huge improvement for me, especially considering I’ve focused almost exclusively on biking the last month or two. My previous best run on this course was 50:12, or just about 10:05mm’s. I was very happy with our race so far!
Here is the Garmin Connect data for the run: http://connect.garmin.com/activity/386773795
About 500 yards from the end of the run, we saw Shannon
ahead of us walking. He was puking all
morning with the flu, so I was very impressed that he was out here racing in
this weather in his condition. Team
Tri-Agra is tough! We covered the 4.98 miles (per Garmin) in 46:49 (46:41 moving time), with an average pace of 9:24mm. This is a huge improvement for me, especially considering I’ve focused almost exclusively on biking the last month or two. My previous best run on this course was 50:12, or just about 10:05mm’s. I was very happy with our race so far!
Here is the Garmin Connect data for the run: http://connect.garmin.com/activity/386773795
Killer Hill is a brutal climb from the bike path up to Fort
Ancient without heavy rain. With the
heavy rain, it was a mud bath. I just
took it nice and easy and hiked up with a fast walk. Lars pulled away here and jogged up a lot of
it. When I finished the hill, he was getting out
of the restroom and we had a pretty quick transition time. We were off to the bike course!
My recent biking success has gone to my head, as I wanted to
average 20+ mph here. The weather was
crazy, with steady rain and strong wind for the 18 mile bike course. My bike’s tires are 23C racing slicks and have no traction. Literally no
traction, they’re as smooth as an inner
tube. So, I was taking the turns very
slow. Plus, some leaves had started
fallen with the seasons starting to change, which are very slick when wet.
One spill on my new bike and I could shatter my bike frame and/or break
something on me. But we pushed pretty
well on the straights and just took the turns cautiously. It's funny how my first thought is hurting my bike, then my second thought is hurting myself. Priorities?
We took turns pulling each other and after a couple miles my calves
were cramping real bad. I wanted to avoid
restroom stops, so I didn’t drink much all day.
That caught up to me here, as both calves were cramping. I had
to pedal with my heel down, versus pushing with my toes like normal. We still covered the first half of the bike section
with an average speed of 19.9 mph.
At the bike course halfway, point you turn onto Clarksville Road, which
was repaved over the summer with “chip seal”.
This is a less expensive way to pave a road, and it is like riding on
gravel. Very rough and slow, vibrating everything on your bike. This killed our momentum for the next 2-3
miles. We dropped to about 16 mph here,
with one Garmin mile showing 14.7 mph I think.
After this section though, there was a nice downhill on smooth pavement that
helped me catch up to Lars again. He is
a strong biker and a great partner.
About half a mile from the end, I knew we were going to PR
the bike section, even with the crazy storm going on, but we both floored it
and gave the bike everything we had in us.
I got up to about 33 mph here before breaking for the last turn into
Fort Ancient. I was pedaling so hard, I was bouncing on the nose of my seat. I hopped off the bike and
ran across the finish line, which was pretty muddy. I finished
the 17.58 mile (per Garmin, they advertise 18 miles) bike course in 55:24
(moving time 55:19) for an average speed of 19.0 to 19.1 mph. I wanted more (20+), but this is still a personal
best with my previous best at 1:02:05 (16.99 mph).
Here is the Garmin Connect data for the bike part: http://connect.garmin.com/activity/386773820
My watch didn’t have a cumulative timer going, only the 3 main
parts separately. So I had no idea what my overall
time was, but I was happy with each section.
At the time table, I punched in my bib number (4510) and saw 2:41:34! I almost fell over. It was surreal. I was hoping to break 3:00:00 and thought it
would be nice to beat the Bistor Family LMT Record my youngest brother has of
2:54:21. 2:41 is amazing! I still can’t believe it as I write
this. Here is the Garmin Connect data for the bike part: http://connect.garmin.com/activity/386773820
Lars and I, Team Type-2 (named after a CrossFit Facebook
Group we’re both in) joined Team Tri-Agra for some post race food and exchanged
war stories of the day. Andy finished in
2:36:30 with a 7:24mm average run pace!
Awesome time. He beat his
previous PR of 2:52:31. We all agreed
the river was a big help today. Shannon
finished in 3:16:20, which is also a PR for him and even more amazing
that he finished, considering he puked several times along the race today. Lars also beat his old PR of roughly 2:46
with a 2:41:43.
Here are the times and rankings:Brandon 2:41:34 Overall 50 of 593 (8.4%)
Lars 2:41:43 Overall 51 of 593 (8.6%)
Andy 2:36:30 Overall 31 of 593 (5.2%)
Shannon 3:16:20 Overall 257 of 593 (43.3%)
Team Type 2 5:23:17 Placed 7th of 70 male/male teams (10%)
Team Tri-Agra 5:52:50 Placed 21st of 70 male/male teams (30%)
*3 of the 70 male/male teams did not finish (DNF)
Here are all race results: http://www.finishspot.com/2013/MorgansFall/RaceDMC.cfm
Here are all race results: http://www.finishspot.com/2013/MorgansFall/RaceDMC.cfm
That is the end of my 2013 season. I had 10 races and a lot of fun!
1.
JCC Indoor Triathlon (52:25)2. Mini Heart Half Marathon (2:20:32)
3. Tough Mudder – Ohio (~5 hours)
4. Capital City Half Marathon (2:53:24)
5. Tri for Joe (1:27:11)
6. Little Miami Tri – Spring (3:02:12)
7. Amazing Race (2:03:39)
8. Warrior Dash Ohio 2 (37:28)
9. Great Buckeye Challenge 70.3 (7:21:10)
10. Little Miami Tri – Fall (2:41:34)
With the 2013 season behind me, I will be hitting winter
training next. I want to run the Mini
Heart Half Marathon in March 2014 and run the full Flying Pig Marathon in May 2014, before
getting into the triathlon season with the 2014 Tri for Joe (late May). Of the three disciplines, my run is still the
weakest so the marathon training will allow me to work on that specifically. I will set up my triathlon bike in the
basement on the trainer, next to the treadmill, so I can still bike through the winter. I also ordered bike shoe covers and I have lots of warm winter gear, so I hope I can get out once in a while for a mid-winter hill repeat day (just going up and down the same hill over and over - very tough and great exercise).
I’ll try to swim 100 laps in the pool at least once or twice a week at the Blue Ash YMCA. It's sad, to me, that after swimming for 11 months it is still better than my bike and much better than my run. I guess I really am a whale! Can I pick to be an orca?
I would also like to lose 20 pounds between now (October) and
March, by using MyFitnessPal.com and counting calories (which is just 1 pound
per week, or 500 calorie deficit each day).
With my running and biking calories burned, this should be easy. I really just need to cut
out the junk food, and things will take care of themselves.
But entering the 2014 season at 195 pounds (vs. 215) will help with all areas of racing, and make
my clothes fit a little better.
I'll keep posting blogs periodically, as I enjoy rehashing things and hopefully helping others seek a healthy lifestyle. "Seacrest Out!"
Here are pictures of the PVC bike rack:
I also made one single bike rack.
I just confirmed that we did earn a team award. The top 7 male/male teams will have plaques mailed to them within 10 days of the race. How about that? Pretty cool.
ReplyDeleteThe LMT was a blast! You trained hard and your PR by over 20 minutes proved it. Thanks for bringing the rack, it was a huge help. I saw plenty of racers checking out your handy work. I wouldn't be surprised if we see more PVC bike racks in the 2014 LMT races. Can't wait to see that award!!!
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