Captex Olympic tri-
After St. George 70.3 I was signed up to compete in Captex tri in Austin Texas 2.5 weeks later. I felt that this would be a fair amount of time to recover and gain a little speed for an olympic distance. Well, I was wrong. I was completely wrong. I had been doing my workouts and recovering as best as I could during the 2.5 week span but it was not enough time for me to recover properly. During the race I felt very sluggish and couldn't even get my legs moving, My heart rate was at a resting rate and I couldn't push it up and my power was so low my legs were burning and I was at a resting power number. I felt like a complete dud that day and like I was letting people down by not performing at my best level. I still came out as 5th overall female but was 5 minutes slower than last year at this race and was hurting a lot more.
Lesson learned: You can do a shorter race before a longer race as a tune up but you cannot gain speed and recover at the same time after a long hard effort like a half Ironman. Also, I have a difficult time racing at sea level. I feel sluggish and feel as if I can barely breathe every time! I thought being born and raised at 5800ft was supposed to give you an advantage?! Will probably stick to higher elevation races and avoid the humid/sea level climates.
Deuces Wild Olympic Triathlon
This was my favorite race last year so I made sure I returned to do this fun race this year. It was the weekend before an "A" race so I trained right through it and felt great. I had done some open water practice and was feeling comfortable in the water and came out of the water in 2nd place! I was able to summon some power from my legs on the hilly bike course and passed the lead girl around mile 10(she had a bad ass swim time). Coach Jaime and I had agreed it would be best to just chill out and rest my legs on the run if I had a decent lead so I was able to cruise the run comfortably and finish as the 1st female finisher. The run course on this race was marked really long so everyone ran a little extra which was challenging in the heat but it was fun and challenging.
Lesson learned: Don't panic and race super hard to catch the girls in front of you!!! Its not worth the effort it will cost your legs. I maintained composure and made sure my power was smooth and even the entire ride.
Buffalo Springs 70.3
Black beauty and I before the sufferfest at 70.3 Buff Springs. |
Lessons Learned: EAT!!! EAT A LOT!!!!! I needed to be filling my tank with better food and a lot more of it. It just seems hard when you're busy with 2 jobs and trying to train and do 100 other things. I am trying to make my nutrition a bit more of a priority. It's not OK to spend my day hungry because I am so busy. It makes me evil and cranky and leads to poor performance. Also, Drink more water. Coffee and Diet Coke are not OK substitutes. Lastly, race nutrition. It was too hot to be only having a few gels and 2 bottles with Osmo. Osmo is great and I like it for hydration but it does not have enough calories and it was so windy and the roads were too crappy to be letting go of your handle bars to drink and eat enough (aero position was out of the question in the 35 mph winds). I should have had more calories in my bottles as well as eaten more food at the beginning of the bike.
Hopefully, I can put it all together for the 70.3 World Championships in 5 weeks. I have not had the most successful past few races but I have learned a ton from them.