Another city, another new race and another long road trip
came together for the 7th race of my 2012 season at Lifetime
Minneapolis. Below is a race report of the whole trip and some of the events
that took place in the days leading up to it. Enjoy!
After finishing the Lifetime Philadelphia race on June 24th,
I came back to Chicago with some serious focus and dedication. I wanted to go into Minneapolis as fit as I
have ever been with the intention of getting top three and qualifying for the
Toyota Cup race in Dallas, Texas. If I
were to get top three in Minneapolis, I would receive a free entry to the
Dallas race in addition to a $500 travel stipend (a pretty sweet deal). So that Tuesday after Philly, I got back on
the horse and simply trained harder, ate better and focused on my recovery. I
had my best two weeks of training and I was feeling great 1 week out from the
race, more confident in my swimming, biking and running than ever before.
Saturday July 7th was exactly one week away from
the race and I had my last hard session planned before the pre-race taper phase
of my training schedule. I planned to
ride for roughly 3 hours with 2x 20:00 efforts and 1x 45:00 effort. I got out
there early that morning to beat the heat and felt great from the start. I hit
the first 20:00 interval right on and got ready for the next. I got about 15:00
into the second interval and then BAM…. CRASH.
Hello Body, Meet Pavement. |
I was going downhill at roughly 30 MPH and in the process of
dropping into my aero bars, I hit a pothole and flipped right over the bars,
skidding 20 feet in the process. I had no broken bones and no concussion but I
was pretty beat up and had some nasty road rash. All I could think about was
Minneapolis, a mere 7 days away.
Sunday morning I woke up pretty sore and just took it
easy. I took it easy on Monday as well
and was able to finally start some shorter tune up workouts on Tuesday. Still, the road rash was pretty nasty and I
simply could not swim. I pretty much had
the “it will be fine” method on this whole crash and just crossed my fingers it
would actually be fine in the end.
I made sure to get in with my miracle-healing chiropractor
Monday and Thursday last week to get everything properly adjusted. We left on Thursday afternoon to make the
6-hour drive and I was still feeling sore from the crash but surprisingly, my
legs felt rested and fresh.
We got in Thursday night around 7pm, hit up the Whole Foods
right away for dinner/ groceries and then settled into the hotel. I hit the hay pretty early on Thursday night
(sleeping on the awful pull out couch in the hotel room).
The trip was served a dual purpose for the Metzler family,
my sister, Jillian, is currently in the process of college searching so the
three of them toured the University of Minnesota campus on Friday morning. This
left me to take down the shake down, course preview and packet pickup on my
own. It was not a problem at all except
for not having the ability to drive the course and pay attention to what was
going on at the same time (while also messing with my Garmin to get a rough
estimate of the elevation on course). Lets just say I got a little lost out
there and after about an hour of driving the same road back and forth, curse
words were yelled and maps were thrown out the window in anger! (Not really
though, I didn’t want to litter)
After struggling to figure out the course, I swam a loop of
the course (the first time I had swum in 8 days), biked around on the course
and then ran for a bit. I had a light stretch, hit up Whole Foods one more time
to get some dinner essentials and then went to packet pickup to get my race
numbers. After that, I got back to my hotel, organized my things and then put
my feet up before my 8:45pm bedtime.
I did not sleep very well the night
before; I could not stop thinking about the race. I was actually pleased when my alarm finally
rang at 4am (really not that bad considering the 3:20 wake up call for Philly).
I switched it up from my normal pre-race oatmeal and had some rice cakes with
peanut butter/jelly/banana (rice cakes being my new addiction).
We got to the race site around
5:30; I set up my transition area, walked through the entrances/ exits and then
jogged around for 10:00 to warm up. I had
a light stretch and then got down to the beach to swim for a little and warm up
the arms. I mentally prepared to race hard all day and got focused before the
7:14 gun went off.
The swim is a simple triangle shape
going clockwise around the buoys. Before the Elite Males, the Professional Men
and Women went off and 1 oddly placed charity relay wave. The gun went off,
arms were flung and punches were thrown as usual and then within maybe 100m we
got caught up in the charity relay wave participants. I got stuck behind 1 or
two of them and missed a group of 3 faster swimmers who pulled out in front.
The rest of the swim I tried to bridge the gap between these 3 swimmers and
myself but just could not pull them in. I worked hard on the swim but was all-alone
out there. I exited the water in 4th position in a time of 21:31 (a
pretty slow time to be out of the water 4th overall, only: 60 behind
the fastest swim time). Overall, I was still happy to be in this position after
only swimming once in the past 9 days. (Also a bonus confidence booster was the fact
that my entire road rash was still in tact after the swim!)
Transition 1 went pretty smoothly
and I got out on the bike in 1:14.
I got on the bike and passed one of
the three guys in the lead swim bunch right away. The first half of the bike course is flat but
still technical and bumpy. I let my
heart rate come down a little bit after the swim and took it easy the first 2
miles, just getting some fuel back in and getting some blood back into my
legs. Still, I was moving pretty quick
and bridging the gap on another one of the racers from that lead swim
group. I ended up catching and passing
him somewhere around mile 4 and started to pick up some serious speed on this
section of the course. I was hammering and was feeling good but riding right at
my Olympic distance threshold pace, not over it. Around the 8-mile mark, I was
riding along at a steady/ hard pace with 1 guy on my tail. All of the sudden a group of 3 guys BLAZE by
me at what seemed to be around 35 MPH. I tried to keep pace but then realized
their pace was jus too strong and I backed off.
As they disappeared into the distance, another 2 guys went past and they
too were holding a crazy pace. I didn’t
event try to go with them and let them just pull away once again. Around the half waypoint, a group of 2 guys
bridged up to me and the three of us traded spots for the rest of the ride.
Around the 20 mile mark, two guys who had gone off with the group that went
past earlier in the ride fell back into the group I was around. The 5 of us
came into transition at the same time. With a bike time of 1:02:10, I was
pretty pleased especially because I clocked the course on my cycling computer
to be about .50 to .75 miles long. I was also happy with this time because
there were points on the bike course where it was so bumpy that I was simply
holding on for dear life. I think this caution to not go down may have had
something to do with going down HARD just one-week prior.
I ran into T2 with two other guys and
we made our way over to our racks. There
was one guy ahead of me and one to my left. The one to my left went to the
first rack in the row and the one ahead of me proceeded straight to the rack I
was in. Then out of nowhere, the guy on
the left knocks down the bike rack, going directly into the guy ahead of me and
blocking me out from my transition area.
I channeled my inner hurdler and hopped over the rack/ racer/ bike
conundrum that lay ahead. I got my shoes on and hit the run course with more
ease than expected given the roadblock that just presented itself. I was in and
out in 1:13.
The run course is two 5k loops
around the lake and is 100% flat. Out of
the group of 5 I came into transition with, I was in third position. I also
realized that I was probably somewhere between 9th and 12th
place overall, well off the goal of top 3.
At this point I just wanted to put my head down and run hard. I had swam at my threshold and biked at my
threshold and I just wanted to polish it off with a gut wrenching run. I passed
one of the guys from the 5-man group within the first half-mile and watched the
other guy pull ahead who decided it would be cool to run with Sarah Haskins who
was on her second loop of the run course.
I let the two of them go ahead and just stuck to my plan. I hit the first 2 miles steady but hard
enough to keep the pace honest in 12:35. I was feeling good and started to push
at this point. I was at 3 miles in 18:30, 4 miles in 24:30. I really started to bury myself miles
4-6. I saw a few guys up the road and
went into warrior-attack mode on them. I
passed 3 guys in the final 2 miles and came into the finish completely depleted
in 37:13.
My finish time was 2:03:23 and I
was 6th place overall in the Elite Male field. Even though it was
not a top 3, the competition was much more challenging than I had expected
given last years results. I raced as
hard as I could the whole day and was very pleased with my effort, especially
with what I think was a slightly longer swim and bike courses. I was also super
pleased with my ability to come back from a rather inconveniently timed wreck
just one-week prior. I did not let it
distract my mental focus and I did not use it as an excuse, all qualities that
I am happy to see myself show in times that it would be very easy to get
distracted and make up BS excuses.
After the race, it took me about an hour to come back around
to even half function. I was able to cool
down with a 20:00 easy jog and stretched out some very tight legs. I also made
3-6 trips to the Zico cart and stocked up on some coconut water. That counts as a cool down too, right?
I may or may have not taken 15 of them.... |
I lugged my bag with the Zico’s in it to the car and we
got some breakfast at this crazy good diner in downtown Minneapolis. It was also great to see my best friend and
roommate, also named Justin, from Iowa who lives in Minneapolis and came out
for the race (even though he was feeling… under the weather? Lets just say the
hungry man’s breakfast from the diner did the trick to make him feel better!)
This dude thinks he's strong or something. |
My post-race breakfast choice. Vegetable/egg white/ avocado scrambler, fruit and sweet potato tater tots. |
After heading back to the hotel for a quick shower, we loaded up the car and hit the road towards home!
I am getting pretty pro at in-car-post-race-delicoius snacks. |
And one more...... |
Next up are a few weeks of solid training and then a local
sprint race in Naperville, IL. I placed
second there last year and I am gunning for the win this year! The following
weekend I am doing Rev3 Wisconsin Dells to validate my qualification for the
2013 Collegiate National Championship. After
that, the season is not set in stone. I
am doing the 5150 National Championship HyVee Triathlon but I am going to
listen to my body and decide whether or not to add another race or two. I will be sure to keep everyone updated!
I want to give a quick thanks to my coach, Craig Strong, at Precision Multisport who put together the pre-race/ post-crash plan to get me to as close to full form as possible on race day. Thank you to Cycleops Power supplying the data that allows me to improve my bike power every training session and Running Away Multisport for hooking me up with a disc wheel for the race! Also consider checking out Eleonore Rocks, any donation is much appreciated!
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