Showing posts with label triathlon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label triathlon. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Colchester triathlon 2018: Leroy says send a picture

Official results are in, and I've updated my spreadsheet that has all the individual results from the last 8 races (2014 canceled due to storms the morning of).

During the race I thought I had pretty good swim/bike splits (self-seeded too low on the swim and passed a few people), but the shocker is that this was a personal best on the run (it didn't feel that way during the race).  I'm still a shit runner (128/219 participants) and that's the avenue for improvement next year, but getting under 1:20:00 overall was fantastic.




Also, VTSportsImages has their photos up!

The best shots of me from this year are Baywatching in my farmer's tan with some other competitors.  This is technically part of the swim, since we haven't crossed the line between the swim and the transition area yet.  




,You'll note that, unlike the others, I leave my goggles on until I reach my bike in the transition area, because they're prescription goggles.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Colchester triathlon 2018: new rules, and try not to step on the clams

From the 2016 tri, no longer allowed... but look at that form!
One of the changes this year was that, near the end of the swim leg, once you crossed the pink buoys, you were required to stop swimming and wade in.  I guess they didn't want a mix of people wading and people swimming until they were in a couple feet of water?  Maybe there are dangers that aren't apparent to me, but...










...one of the reasons why I liked to swim as long as possible is that I'm faster swimming than wading.  The other is that Mallets Bay has a lot of clams, or zebra mussels, or something, and while Colchester Parks and Rec did a great job clearing away as many as they could, I still sliced my foot open on one while wading in.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Colchester triathlon 2018 playlist

The goal this year was to finish before Bono sings, and while the official results aren't in yet, I almost finished before Laurie was done singing.

0:00:00  TLC - Creep
0:04:28  Coolio - Gangsta's Paradise
0:08:30  Technotronic - Pump Up the Jam
Finish swim (during Pump Up the Jam)
0:13:54  Snap! - Rhythm Is A Dancer
0:17:35  R.E.M. - Harborcoat
0:21:28  Weezer - Surf Wax America
0:24:34  pill - mars meteorite
0:29:07  Bananarama - Every Shade of Blue
0:33:20  Eiffel 65 - Blue (Da Ba Dee)
0:36:59  Matt Sweetman - Watermelon Hills
0:42:06  Elton John & Ru Paul - Don't Go Breaking My Heart 
0:47:06  The Cranberries - Salvation
0:49:27  Blink 182 - All The Small Things
0:52:14  Weezer - Dope Nose
0:54:31  20 Fingers - Lick it
Finish bike
0:58:42  The Go-Go's - Vacation
1:01:41  Lipps Inc. - Funkytown
1:05:36  Eurythmics - Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)
1:10:28  Laurie Anderson - O Superman
1:18:53  Michelle Shocked - Anchorage
Finish race
1:22:19  U2 - New Year's Day
1:27:54  Ramones - I Wanna Be Sedated
1:30:20



Sunday, July 27, 2014

Colchester Triathlon 2014

Sadly, there will be no results to post this year, because the race was called due to thunderstorm**.  Shortly before 8am, they announced that the race would be delayed at least an hour, and they would make the call at 9am.  Just before 9, the skies opened, lightning flashed, and everyone mourned.  Even rained out, this was still a wonderful event to attend, chatting with volunteers and hopeful participants.  I'll be back next year.


Still, it is a little weird to have all this swag for an event that didn't happen.  I guess now I know what it's like to own a "Denver Broncos 2014 Superbowl Champions" t-shirt.

** Apparently, the Lake Placid Ironman Triathlon was affected by the same storm, but I don't see any news of that posted yet.  And, of course, the rain stopped here around 11am, and the skies had brightened and the sun is threatening to show itself around noon.  Sigh.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

2013 Colchester Triathlon

Pictured, at least a few people finished behind me on the swimming. 
Sunday was the 29th annual Colchester Triathlon, and my fourth, and the results are in (actually, the results were immediately in, because this year we had anklets with chip timers in them).

Also, for the first time since I began participating, the transition times were broken out from the race times.  Now I'm not sure whether I actually did better than my last year's times, or whether I was actually slower on the racing legs because last year's racing legs included the transition times.  I think, maybe, or maybe am just hoping, that it's the former.

This year vtsportsimages got nearly everyone on the swim, bike, and running legs, so I now have a swimming picture (see how kind I was to wear a rash guard so you're not blinded by my pasty white flesh?) to go with last year's cycling picture (apparently, I look more or less exactly the same on a bike from year-to-year).  I will not be showing a running picture until I learn how to run properly, or at least look like I'm running in the picture.  :-)

Takeaways:
  1. I was advised to get a wetsuit.  Maybe if I can find one on clearance.
  2. My conditioning was better, but could still be improved.  A couple of spectators were alarmed by my loud breathing (I do that even when I've only been running 5 minutes, much less 25; I'm like Monica Seles out there, only if she sang snatches of "I Wanna Be Sedated" during the bike leg).
Primary goal for next year: wetsuit or no, improve that swim time.  I'm finishing 96th on the swim, 83rd on the cycling**.  That's not good enough for someone who considers himself a swimmer.  I know I can crack 2min/100 yards, so there has to be more pool/lake time next year.  A better running time will have to flow from improved conditioning through swimming; at 40+ years and a 6'5" 200+lb body, I simply can't commit to doing more running to train (the wear and tear would be too much).

** Note: All Sports Events has an interesting concept of how far 1/2 a mile is.  An 18:34 1/2 mile is closer to a 2:15 / 100yds pace than a 3:27 / 100yds pace. 

Monday, July 30, 2012

2012 Colchester Triathlon

It looks like I'm riding
a toy bike

Yesterday was the 28th annual Colchester Triathlon, and my third.  This year, I had a road (touring) bike instead of my hybrid, pictured right (purchased from vtsportsimages' smugmug account).



They've posted the results in PDF format, so it will take me a little while to get it into my preferred spreadsheet format, but it's clear that:

  1. the road bike made a huge difference, beating my previous cycling best by 5 minutes (instead of being passed left and right, I was only being passed left),
  2. the low lake levels shortened the swimming leg relative to last year, and
  3. my conditioning could be a lot better (28 minutes to walk/run 5k is too slow)
Next year: improve my overall conditioning so that my legs aren't dead at the start of the bike/run transition, and so that I spend less time walking in order to get my breathing/heart rate under control.  I should be able to get to 1:20:00 "just" doing that.


UPDATE: spreadsheet up

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Got my road bike


Now I'm ready for the 2012 Colchester Tri, and I'm gonna break 40 minutes on the cycling section.


It's a used 62cm frame Motobecane Grand Touring**, which isn't a "serious" racing bike, but it's comfortable for me to ride and should be scads faster than my Trek Hybrid.  Picture at right in the ever-popular propped-up-against-a-building look


** fixed up by the Old Spokes Home

Monday, August 1, 2011

2011 Colchester triathlon

The race was on Sunday and the results are now out.  I've put a spreadsheet of the individual results up on Google Docs.  Compared to last year's results, my swim and bike times were actually worse.  I'm not too concerned about the swim time, because scuttlebutt after the race last year was that last year's swim leg was shy of 1k, and everyone's times were low as a result.  The increase in my time from last year to this is consistent with the overall trend (maybe even slightly less of an increase, relatively speaking compared to the leaders).  It's still slightly embarrassing as a self-identified swimmer to be in the middle of the pack, even if the pack is very fit.  I'm pretty sure I did worse on the biking because I did more running and less biking than last year, because the running training was actually less wear and tear on my body (the position of my bike's handlebars is conducive to making my hands numb after 15 minutes of cycling; I really need to fix that for next year).  So: more open water swimming, more cycling with improved handlebars on the bike, and more overall conditioning so I can go faster on the running leg (I have no excuse, other than relatively poor conditioning, to not be doing a sub-25 minute 5k).

Friday, August 13, 2010

Colchester Triathlon 2010 : final results

The race results were posted on trifind.net in pdf format. I've pulled out the results for individuals competing in the swimming (as opposed to kayaking) and posted them as a google spreadsheet.  From this I now know I was:
  • 108th out of 158 individual participants on total time, and
  • 59th on the swimming leg
  • 122nd on the biking
  • 116th on the running
That's slower on the swimming than expected, but this is because the swimming leg includes the transition to cycling, and that took me a long time -- it was getting the cycling gloves on that killed me here, but I needed them in order to prevent my hands going numb 20 minutes into the ride...  I think the running leg might include the transition from cycling to running, but that time is trivial in comparison to putting on shirt, socks, shoes, helmet & gloves for cycling.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Colchester triathlon: Weeks 2-5 Training

Belatedly following up on Week 1


Running: Still no better than 5 min/km, I meant to do some running during our travels in PA, but it was too dang hot to be outside, much less running in it.  I suck.



Swimming: Started swimming in the lake and am doing approximately 1/2 mile in 20 minutes at a not-too-tiring rate.


Biking: Got toe clips for the bike and did the 12 mile route that starts and ends at our house in just under 45 minutes (yay!); finally did the official bike route last night and finished in ~45 min as part of a longer hour and a half ride.  The first half is all uphill and took about half an hour; thankfully it's mostly gradual with just a few relatively brutal sections.  It's a good thing the bike leg isn't longer because right now wrist and testicle fatigue kicks in ~50-55 min.  If I'm gonna to regularly do triathlons in the future, gonna need a better bike.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Colchester Triathlon: Week 1 training results

Last Friday I decided that I would try to get in enough shape to do the Colchester Triathlon, at least to finish, and ideally under 1:30:00.  The course is a 1/2 mile swim, 12 mile bike ride, and 3 mile run; close to 1/20/5 km.  I like that, but better yet if the bike ride were 15km.  I'm going to try not to dwell on this too much, but looking at the 2009 results, the run and swim times are roughly equal**, but a disproportionate amount of the race time is spent on the cycling.  This is especially unfortunate because it seems to me to be the leg in which the (really expensive) equipment is closest to being as important as the athlete -- the "cheap" Trek triathlon bikes are nearly $2,000.  By contrast, you can easily spend under $200 (combined) for a good racing suit, goggles and running shoes.


At any rate, the good news of the first week of training is that, even when tired at the end of the day, I can maintain a decent jogging rate that does about 3 miles in 25 minutes.  I'll take 12kph on the last leg of the tri, but if I can up that to 15kph, that would be better.


The iffy news is that I did 12 miles in 50 minutes on my Trek 7100 (yes, it's not a racing cycle, that's why I'm grumbling about the bike leg being so long  ;-).  24kph won't cut it on the bike; I have to get that under 45 minutes (26.67kph) and ideally under 40 (30kph).  Toe clips are high on my priority list (no, they didn't come with the bike and I just never bothered to get them before) and frankly I'm hoping that just getting the clips will bring my time under 45 (no, I don't know anything about racing bicycles, so this may be wishful thinking).  Alternatively, I could rent a racing bike, but since this is my first tri, let's do this in baby steps.


A big unknown at the moment is the swim leg.  I jumped in the pool at the Y today and casually swam 1200 yards in 20 minutes (i.e., swimming at a pace I could keep up more or less indefinitely), but I've never swum competitively in open water.


** and bully for the Colchester on that score!  My impression is that the swimmers usually get screwed because the swim leg of most sprint triathlons appears to be 500-600 yards (to be fair, I think this is because the swim leg is in a pool, and the swim leg has to be abbreviated simply to accommodate all the racers, but it still stinks).  Making the swimming and running legs roughly equal is a huge step in the right direction.  Shrink the biking to 15km and it's still the longest leg, but much closer to being fair.