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Wilkes Barre Triathlon
August 5, 2007
-- Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania

1 Mile Swim, 25 Mile Bike, 7 Mile Run.

http://www.wilkesbarretriathlon.com/

 

A fantastic race on a classic course.

 

Originally Published to TRI-DRS on August 10, 2007.


It was a dream come true: This would be the day I would finally get to try something I'd always wanted to try - the first stroke I would take on the swim at Wilkes-Barre would be my first swim stroke since my previous race, June 30th, at Tupper Lake. 35 days. I would be trying to survive a 1 mile swim on nothing more than dryland training, core work, and experience.

To make things more interesting, the water temperature at Wilkes-Barre was its usual self: 80F. Some wept openly and without shame at the race meeting, and opted to race in the "I won't count in the results please let me wear my life preserver even if I'm going to get heat stroke 400 meters in..." wave. Fools.

So as I stood there on the beach staring through my Seal Mask into a rising sun, everything was calm. I hadn't trained for the swim, so why worry? I was rested, and it was only a mile. The water was billiard-table smooth, and likely very toasty. My wave was the second to go off, so in those last two minutes things became eerily quiet. Everyone got into their own space.

"One minute. One minute to go." One last check of the mask - sealed and set. Chamois in place. Cap, on. Watch, on. Set to Chrono, all zeros. Bladder, full. Wait, check that - ahh. Nevermind.

"Thirty seconds! I'll give you a countdown from 10." said the starter. The guy ahead of me turned and said apropos of nothing, "You never lose the butterflies, do you?" We all smiled. I said, "11 years, and no. Never. Great feeling, isn't it? Just makes me want to go, go, go, go, go."

"Ten! Nine! Eight!" The countdown started. Too late to worry, but that doesn't stop the field sprint of last-second thoughts from flooding my brain. Maybe I should have warmed up? Did I fill the JetStream? Both tires felt good - maybe too solid? It will get warmer. Did I forget anything in T2? Is that GU going to stay in the JetStream? Did Katie sleep through the night for St. Lynda? When is she ever going to take some time for herself? I mean, here I am, waiting to start a race - a purely selfish thing I love to do, and she lets me do - but how can a man ever get a mom to just take some time for...

"...Two! One!"

...herself?

And just like that, silence. Time to go to work.

"GO!"

SplashSplashSplashSplash...it's a beach start at Wilkes-Barre, so the first 50 or so feet is always organized chaos while we run, waddle, splash, then Dolphin into Harvey's Lake. A photographer from the local paper happened to be on my side of the start, and captured this great angle that shows the essence of those first frenetic moments where all that potential energy goes kinetic, into the morning sun.

I'm #127, in the green and yellow suit:
http://timesleader.mycapture.com/mycapture/enlarge.asp?userphoto=0&image=15729757

The water was wonderfully warm, and I told myself, "Don't rush - don't rush. Nice and easy - warm up." Well, yeah. Since I hadn't exactly done much in over a month, that wasn't hard to do. I took nice, long, easy strokes, and let my body warm to the pace. I'd picked a good side of the course to be on; I was 15 or so feet from the buoys, and well outside the usual scrum. I just took my time and sighted occasionally, watching the turnaround boat come closer a little bit at a time.

I started catching pink caps from the previous wave before I even made it halfway - a good sign. Someone from that first wave was head-out, swimming breaststroke, his wetsuit unzipped all the way. It was billowing out with every pull; dude looked like a Stingray, only slower, and somewhat less deadly. I felt bad - there was still over a half-mile to go, and lots more once we got back to land.

As I made the turn around the boats and buoys to head for home, it hit me just how relaxed I felt. I wasn't working too hard - I was just enjoying the swim, and moving up just the same. I'd bounced off of #129 a few times, and had settled on his left hip. Without wetsuits, it was funny to be able to see numbers on people for once.

As the flagpole at the Harvey's Lake Beach Club grew closer and closer, the shoreline closed in from the right. All along the lakeside, people were out on their decks and porches, coffee cups in hand, watching the race. From up high, I bet it looked pretty cool. WB isn't a big race (just under 500 people total), but seeing all those arms and caps motoring along through the water? Has to look cool. And that's what I told myself for those last 200 meters, "You have to look good. You have to look good. They can see you, so look good." It worked - I'm sure I looked good. Heck, I might have even looked faaabulous.

I came onto shore in 27:14 - 44th overall, and one minute faster than my 2006 split that I actually trained for. Hah.

Without the wetsuit to deal with, T1 managed to pass without any circus music, clowns, confetti, or swearing. Shoes on, helmet on, take a moment to be sure everything is in the bag (WB is a two-transition area race, so everything goes into a bag that the volunteers bring to the finish for you), and away we go. T1 - 1:46. How did that take me almost 2 minutes? Wha-hey?

The bike course at Wilkes-Barre is one of the most fair I've ever raced on. Instead of the usual leg-breaking climb out of T1 (since water generally gathers in lakes and rivers, which are by their nature, like, lower than everything else), Harvey's Lake is on a mountain. So you ride a half mile on the flat perimeter road, turn left, and bombs away! You descend almost a mile to a long flat stretch, a perfect beginning. I love it - I don't have to work too hard, and I always move up. When you're 190 pounds (and now soaking wet, 191), gravity in your favor makes life just grand.

As I motored through the field, my legs came up to speed right away. I picked off rider after rider, and settled down into the bars. The Olympic Distance is best raced like a 10K - as hard as you think you can go, then just slightly harder, the entire way. I've found that if you're questioning your ability to hold the pace minute after minute, that's just about right.

After passing a group of 5 in short order, my brain was telling me, "Perhaps you take it easy here on this stretch. Take a drink - settle, and get ready for the long climb to come..." The 'long climb' being a 5K steep-to-false-flat that makes you pay back all that "Hahahaha-wheee!" descending you did from Harvey's Lake. It made sense - I should settle...but then I saw him. Single bike. Red jersey. Riding in the drops, so he had to be a relay rider - no aero equipment.

But it wasn't the position that caught my eye - it was the sparkle of reflectors. REFLECTORS. "Wait, check that. Permission to engage." Even my brain knew there was no way I could set back behind REFLECTORS. As I drew closer, things got worse. The sun momentarily blinded me, reflecting off of his HANDLEBAR MIRROR.

OhmyGOD. At least I knew he'd started in the wave before me, or at least, his swimmer had. Maybe.

"Right. Legs, take us to DEFCON 4. Up 2 in 2, bring cassette to 14, speed to 30 plus, stay seated." With a quick woosh, I just rolled past, and made the pass stick - I didn't back off for another 10-Mississippi count. "Good pass, down 1, stay seated. Drink. Take us back to DEFCON 5 - good work, legs. Nice day, eh?"

My brain was always chatty when there wasn't anything to do. It was a nice day, however. Gorgeous. No wind, low humidity, blue skies, and an open road before me. What wasn't there to like?

I spotted the State Trooper at the bottom of the climb, and flicked down to the little ring before making the turn. I reminded myself not to panic if people roared past me on the steep lower slope; I knew from experience we'd be climbing for almost 12 minutes, so there was no need to get it back right away.

As I spun up the first 100 meters, a woman in a flourescent yellow suit went scuh-re-ming past me, out of the saddle, turning and impossibly huge gear. her hair was swishing left-to-right as she climbed, adding a nice dose of style to the massive @ss-kicking she was dishing out. I immediately recognized her: "Go Tracey! Way to work it, girl!" It was Tracey McGurk - I was staying with her and her husband John for the race. Both John and Tracey officially qualify as "Stupid fast" in my world. Both have sub-10:20 finishes at IM, and have been USAT All Americans.

John, as many of you might recall, also provided me with the best racing advice I've had in the past decade: "Don't race like a dipsh*t."

So as Tracey blew past me like I was nailed to a post, I watched her dangle a bit...then slowly, surely, come back to me. Tracey's pretty intense when she races (hell, she's intense when she sits still, too), so when I re-passed her, I didn't say anything. I didn't want to make her mad. If it was possible for a gigantic, Crayola-colored trisuit to tiptoe by someone, I did my best to just sneak by. I knew I'd probably see her again.

After working my way up the valley wall, I knew the "berg" section of the ride was coming soon. The second half of the ride is typical Pennsylvania riding: Short climb, short descent, rinse, lather, repeat. While a shark can eat you in one or two large bites, the Wilkes-Barre course is more like a piranha. A little bite here, a little bite there, and before you know it - WHAM.

"Hey. Where'd my legs go?"

I wasn't afraid to use the little ring and stay seated, unlike many of the guys I was riding with. I could tell by their numbers, I was circling with three relay riders. Two guys who didn't have to swim, and wouldn't have to run. This 25 mile ride was their entire day, so if I could find a way to hang with them, I knew I'd have a good ride. One guy was totally tricked out - Garneu TT helmet, Cervelo, Zipp disc, and IM-USA jersey. Each time I passed him on a climb, I'd hear the "click" as he shifted up to come back by me.

It was so cute.

So on one climb as I went past, my ego stepped into the drivers seat. I just couldn't help myself. I made the pass, and just as made the predictable reach for his lever, I turned around and said, "CLICK!" while hitting the Ergo button at the same time to jump up myself. I got out of the saddle, and took off. Just a 30-second attack, but it was enough. When I got to the top, Zipp-dude was gone; I just had two other guys left.

One was riding for the local Hot Tamales Team, and the other was wearing a Rose-colored jersey. On one pass I took a good look - it was NOT the Maglia Rosa from the Tour of Italy, thankfully - just a local club jersey. A bright, hot, pink, rose jersey. So there I was, stuck in the middle with Hot Tamale and Yankee Rose.

Pass, re-pass, re-pass. I'd spin by them on the uphills, and they'd tuck and motor by me on the descents. That was strange, but I was making the passes because they both liked to stand up and just muscle the gears up any grade. On one descent towards Route 309, they were both ahead. A car passed me on the left, then stopped for the State Trooper at the bottom of the hill. I knew we went straight across here - momentum was everything. You descended, blasted across 309, then rolled up the other side. If you did it right, it was free speed all the way.

So when the State Trooper pointed to the left, I don't know why I reacted. But I did. I just turned left, and even as I did my brain was screaming, "NO! NO! NO! NO!" My "AAAAARRRRrrrrggghhhh!" probably had a Doppler Shift for the Trooper as I rolled past. For the first time in 11 years, I'd made a wrong turn...and on a course I KNEW!

It probably cost me all of 30 seconds, but it felt like 10 minutes. Stop, turn around. Downshift. Rejoin where you left. Don't worry about those 6 guys that just went by (including Zipp-dude!). Just ride. You won't get it back in the next minute - you'll get it back in the next 10 miles. Don't panic. Smooth. Smoooooooth.

I quickly settled back into my groove, and within 2 miles, was right back between Yankee Rose and Hot Tamale. Despite being cross-eyed more than once trying to stay with them, I stayed right there. Legally, never taking a draft (for more than 14.99 seconds during a pass, anyway), we just rode together. With 3 miles to go I mentioned to Yankee Rose, "You don't have to run, do you?" On the next pass he answered, "Nope." On my re-pass I countered, "You b@stard." On his next rotation, Yankee Rose just smiled.

At least they kept me from being bored.

We rolled into T2, and while they sprinted in to tag their runners, I shifted down and bid them farewell. I finished the 25-mile bike in 1:08:08 - good enough for 22nd overall, average speed of 22.0 miles per hour. Not my best WB ride in terms of speed, but the best placement I've ever had. Of course, as I shuffled to my rack spot, I thought, "Hey. Where'd my legs go?"

The racks were empty - I was having a good day, now I just needed to run steady and seal it. As I bent over to change my shoes, the sweat just poured off of my head. It was incredibly salty, and there was way more than I expected to feel. It wasn't that hot at all - why was I this soaked? I put the hat on before my run shoes, just so I could keep my eyes from burning any more.

T2 - 1:16. That's more like it.

As I took the first strides away from Penn State Wilkes-Barre, my legs were coming up nicely. All those parking lot bricks; all the ride/run/ride/run/ride/run workouts I'd done at lunch while people stared and thought, "What's wrong with that boy?" They were now paying me back. My legs were ready - just 7 miles to get this done. Per standard Olympic Distance pacing rules, I wasn't sure I could run another mile at the speed I was going...so I knew I was right where I needed to be.

Mile 1 - 7:57. Whoo. Feeling good!

Just as I reached back to congratulate myself on being so great, a familiar flourescent yellow suit and pony tail went whistling by me. For good. Daaaaang. "Go Tracey! I knew I'd see you again." I managed to pant. "Thanks." she said, barely above a whisper.

Mile 2 - 7:54. Tracey must be running 7-flats. I can't even see her on the horizon.

Oh. Well, that ends the flat miles: Mile 3 is uphill the entire way. That one was an 8:24. Much more like it. As I shuffled and tried to hold on, I could tell that I was pretty much near redline. Just then, number 129 passed me...again. I hadn't seen him since the swim, but we must have been close on the bike. He looked over and said, "Good job."

Why is it people passing you always tell you you're doing a good job? No I'm not. If I was doing a good job, you wouldn't be passing me. But you are. Confused, am I, but I understand. I appreciate it. We all do it. It's just how we are: We're nice sharks. We're out there to make the kill, but do so nicely. If you're going to bury someone on the run, "Good Job" is a way to put a pillow on their @ss right before you kick it.

Had that conversation with myself on the run. No lie. Thought I'd put it in the race report. So there you go.

"You too!" I replied. "Ohh, I feel terrible..." he said. I reminded him about my thinking on Olympic Distance racing, and how feeling bad meant he was doing it right, and he agreed. "Good job!" I said, as I watched him suffer away from me, somewhat slightly faster. Dang.

Mile 4 - 8:39. Now I remember why I told Mark Markley the first year he raced Wilkes-Barre, "The run? Uphill, back to the start." I felt like my legs were slowly setting, like concrete, or the morning's oatmeal still in the bowl at 2:32 in the afternoon. But despite how bad I felt, I wasn't losing positions. The people I could see ahead of me weren't getting away, and the occasional pass from behind had stopped.

I reckon that meant I was holding my own. Just 3 miles to go now...

I missed the mile marker for 5...but I knew passing the High School that it meant the big hills were just about over. Motoring down the dirt road back towards Penn State, the "MILE 6" sign came into view: I'd run a 16:42 for 2 miles - not bad. When I came into this race I had two goals I told nobody about:

1. Break 2:40
2. Finish top-10 in Age Group. Last year I'd been 12th.

Now with one mile left, things were looking good - I just had to hold on that little bit longer. The last mile of any race is always hard, but at the same time, it's never long enough. For all the time you spend training, the races are rarely long enough. Standing on the beach, squinting into the sun, you never think that...but they're short. Even Ironman, when you put it next to all the training, is short. The last mile? A blink - a beat of a bird's wings.

So I reminded myself to look around and enjoy it: The taste of salt on my lips. The feeling of my heart pounding so hard, I could hear it in my ears. Deep breaths, keeping control (barely). Blue mountains off in the distance. Blue skies and puffy, white clouds. The field of wildflowers - yellow, blue, and green, with the pond that meant the campus was just around the bend. Taking the final right-hand turn to the last 400 meters. One last look back to make sure I wasn't going to get caught...looks good.

Tomorrow I'm back behind a desk, staring at carpeted walls. So many of my co-workers will never know what it feels like to feel this right now - to feel this moment. The see the guy out in the parking lot when it's 95F, while they eat lunch. They see that guy turn lap after lap of a parking lot circuit, then put on his shoes and run. Again. And again. They think, "That's just nuts." As I run towards the arch for my 6th finish at Wilkes Barre, as my smile gets wider and wider, as my heart beats faster and faster, some would call it pain. Some would call it suffering, but I don't know what they're talking about.

This is what it feels like to be alive. To not take this chance? To not get out there and see what I'm made of? That's just nuts.

I high-fived kids and volunteers, and just cruised in. Over the grass, onto the chute, and across the line. My last mile was my slowest - 8:37, but I always thought it was kind of long.

I finished in 2:36:32, 44th Overall, and 8th out of 26 in my Age Group. My run split for 7 miles was a 58:18 - 99th overall - 8:27 pace.

Tracey, as you might have imagined, buried me on the run (even though I didn't make her mad, I think), running nearly 7 minutes faster than. She won her Age Group and was the 3rd Overall Female. I'd hate to think what she could do if I got her mad.

So that's pretty much it for me this year in triathlon - just two races, but that was enough. Time to get ready for the Fall Marathons and Dragon Boat, and that's fine with me. It's not like I felt like going to the pool, anyway. Heck - from what it looks like, do I really need to? Maybe next year I step up this plan: No swimming except in races?

Shame that doesn't work for running.

Hurricane Bob
* Keep it simple. *

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