I got to hang out with Coach M and HT (Coach Heath Thurston) all weekend long. What a treat! Coach M is just the cutest girl you will ever meet and HT is a tease and a jokester. It is a good combination. We drove up to Boise Thursday with our friend Marci and we all stayed at Rob’s house. In one room. Good times.
Thursday consisted of pre-race meeting, packet pick-up, bike drop-off, fabulous and fun dinner with the HT training group, and getting 3 transition bags ready. That took all day and I was still getting stuff ready at 10 pm. Good thing we did not have to get up early.
We walked onto the dock, jumped into the water, gasped, tried to get used to the cold while treading water for 2 minutes, and off we went! I honestly was not too worried about the cold. Somehow I would survive. One thing I have learned from reading Lance Armstrong’s books multiple times is that I need to make adverse conditions my friend. If I can handle them just a little better than my competitors, I can use them to my advantage! And the water really was not too bad. I was actually able to draft behind some other girls (which hardly ever happens) for about 1/3 of the way until we ran into more and more waves that had started in front of us and things got a little crazy. Having a buoy about every 100 meters made sighting a breeze and I actually quite enjoyed myself in the water.
Swim Highlight: plenty of buoys
Swim Lowlight: masses of people to swim through
David Warden, teammate and co-owner of PowerTri, did some research and, thanks to his post here, I now know that I exited the water in 4th place, passed one girl in transition, and was 4 minutes behind the leader in my AG. On race day I had no clue who was where in front of me. One girl passed me early on but I was not ready to pick up my speed quite yet. After about 10 miles another girl passed and I decided to let her go as well and concentrate on my own race. The third girl passing me was not going much faster than me and so I decided to stick with her.
The bike course was hillier than expected which is always a pleasant surprise. I like hills. Being one of the last waves to start, there were so many racers ahead of us that I had plenty of entertainment on the bike. With more than 1,000 racers on the roads ahead of us, it was actually extremely difficult not to be drafting at any given time. At mile 30 we reeled in one of the girls and then the 3 of us kept leap-frogging each other until mile 50. I enjoyed racing ‘with‘ these other 2 gals who were all decked out in fancy gear and looking super fast.
Bike lowlights: realizing that my bike is (below) low-end, nutrition issues
I also needed to pick up a flask of EFS liquid shot, a little tube with salt tablets, and my watchband. In order to be able to adjust my race belt and put on my visor while running, I had to stuff the flask, tube, and band into my chest area as well. Good thing there is not much in there to start with. It was a little more complicated to retrieve it all than I expected. It must have been quite entertaining to the spectators lining downtown. I hope I was not too revealing.
I started the run (unaware) in 1st feeling great and cruising along (too) fast. I did not realize it was too fast until a terrible side ache hit me at mile 3 that forced me to slow down quite a bit. Luckily, it only lasted a mile or so.
Unfortunately, my nutrition was pretty much off all day. I still can’t figure out why but my guess is that it has to do with the afternoon start. I was planning on taking EFS drink on the bike + water + a couple of gels, and then the EFS liquid shot on the run. I had practiced it plenty in training and it always worked just great. So I was not worried about it at all until I was starting to have stomach issues on the bike. That is never a good sign because you start to wonder what your stomach is going to do on the run. I had less EFS drink on the bike and more gels than planned which messed up my salt intake some but I just could not drink more of it. I think my stomach was already sick of all the simple carbohydrates I had been feeding it since breakfast. I am not a fan of the late start.
I could not handle the EFS liquid shot on the run either. After realizing that I really needed some more calories on the second loop of the run, I decided to go with coke and it worked. Somewhat. I could tell that I was slowing down and I was very surprised that still no girl had caught up to me. I was certain I was going to get run down. The second loop was tough but it was very encouraging to see so many good friends and fellow Utah athletes out there on the course. It was a big sufferfest with 1,500 of my closest friends! It made my day!
Run Lowlight: positive splits
Huge thanks to PowerTri, HT training, and my super supportive family! Could not do it without you!
Comments
hallo Sarah, habe gerade deine Bericht gelesen, finde es wirklich toll wie du das alles machst.
Hoffe es geht euch allen gut und wir können uns mal wieder sehen. Kommt ihr dieses Jahr noch zu deinen Eltern nach Ispringen?
Wünsche dir alles Gute und weiterhin viel Erfolg.
Liebe Grüße
Congrats on your amazing accomplishment.