qq_tracker_code_advanced_default

Archive for the ‘Ironman’ Category

What Does Your Dream Race Look Like?

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

Signing up for any iron distance triathlon is a major decision. Whether this is your first or tenth, it is a major commitment of a lot of money, time training, time away from your friends and family and a HELL of a lot of energy. But something was really bugging me this week. WTC just announced two new races in NYC and Canada, and my Twitter and Facebook friends were all buzzing about signing up and instantly marking their calendars with the registration dates.

Seriously? You could not have possibly researched the race, the course, the production company or the timing for more than a solid 15 seconds before you got all hyped up and mentally committed yourself to a huge race with extremely minimal information.

Breathe deep kiddos. Let the adrenaline rush fade and let’s think about this.

Wash away all those thoughts of NYC and Mont Tremblant and make yourself a list of the qualities that would make up your favorite race:

  • Timing: Does it conflict with any major dates on your social/personal/work calendars? How do you feel about training LOTS during the winter for an early season full iron? How do you feel about training LOTS in the heat of summer for an August/September full iron?
  • Course: What type of course suits your strengths best? Flat vs. hilly. Short rolling hills vs long mountain climbs. What about the types of places you like to race? Quiet country roads vs pancake flat highways vs technical descents.
  • Friends and Family: Will they be racing with you? Will they be able to come and cheer you on? How far of a trip is it for them? How expensive is it to get there? Would they need to take time off of work?
  • Race Production Company: Who is actually producing the race. And I don’t mean if it is Ironman branded or not. (WTC usually farms out that responsibility to someone else). I mean who are the people that will be recruiting volunteers, stocking aid stations, managing the timing and making sure the course is safe? Is it their first time running a triathlon? Have they successfully produced big long-distance events in the past?
  • Spectator Friendliness: Assuming that your family and friends are able to come and support you during the race, do they have anything to do to keep themselves entertained while you are out on the course from 10-17 hours? Is there a place for them to kick up their feet or grab a bite to eat? (Spectating can be exhausting.) Does the course allow spectators to see you fly by multiple times, or only as you come through transition.

This list could go on forever, but I think you get the point. Registering for an iron distance race needs more information than just a date and venue. Do your research or be prepared to endure the consequences.

Maybe NYC and Mont Tremblant DO look something like your dream races, but it is better to figure that out now than at mile 90 of the bike.

Tags: , , , | Posted in Ironman, Triathlon | 7 Comments »

Priorities

Friday, November 12th, 2010

They matter, especially when they change.

At this time last year, I was having a multiple-week long conversation with Sam about whether or not I could pull off training for an ironman this summer. I knew that I couldn’t do it without her supporting me, so getting her to agree to the race was more important than anything else. No training plan or extra piece of gear mattered if my girlfriend didn’t have my back. Eventually we agreed to tackle the race together and it all began.

From that point on, the ironman was my top priority above just about anything else. My commitment and determination to complete the race never faltered, and neither did Sam’s support of my mission. And it impacted everything I did over the next year. I told my friends that I couldn’t go on a rafting trip 10 months in advance because I knew it would be too close to the race. I planned my vacation in Burlington, VT around bike training, 8 months in advance. When I went on a work trip to Austin, TX in March, I scoped out all the best running trails, pools and bike routes before I jumped on the plane. I’m usually a “planning by the seat of my pants” sort of guy, so that was huge for me.

Ironman training dominated how I scheduled my life for almost an entire year, from the second it started. I built my 2009 race calendar and fit everything else in around that.

This year, things have completely flipped.

That other normal life stuff has become the top priority and triathlon is that thing that I fit in between everything else when I can. The new priorities feel strange, but I like it. Next year will be all about fun and balancing my triathlon and life priorities without making any major sacrifices in either area.

Wish me luck…

| Posted in Ironman, Life, Triathlon | No Comments »

Sacrifice

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

I gave up money, sleeping in, staying up late, having another beer, quality time with Sam, late night parties with friends, bacon cheeseburgers, the ability to walk up stairs at a normal pace, time with my newborn baby nephew, having clean laundry, eating food that doesn’t come in a gel flask or water bottle, Red Sox games, lazy Sundays, camping trips, white water rafting trips, afternoons in my back yard spent in front of the grill, living without having to plan my life at least two weeks in advance, being able to cook food that takes more than 30 minutes to make and eat, having pants that fit me, the ability to travel somewhere without my bike and running shoes and vacation time from work.

This is the first and only race picture that I have ever purchased. It is my favorite. It makes me happy because I remember that instant that all those sacrifices became worthwhile.

Since that day, my laundry basket has been emptied much more often, I’ve seen my baby nephew as often as I can and I’ve been shoveling a lot more bacon cheeseburgers, beers and chocolate chip cookies into my face.

| Posted in Ironman, Life, Triathlon | 5 Comments »

Your Triathlon Coach Sucks

Monday, November 8th, 2010

< Soap Box=”Jump On” >

I’m not usually one to stir the pot, but with most people’s tri seasons ending and making plans for 2011, coaching is on a lot of people’s minds. The one thing that really gets under my skin is the assumption that hiring a coach means automatic better results.

Over the course of my athletic career, I’ve had at least a half dozen coaches with completely different impacts on my training and racing. Some have made me faster while nurturing my love of the sport. Others have made me hate training and racing and I could have been faster without them. The rest of my coaches fall somewhere in the middle of that spectrum.

USAT Certification

What I think the general triathlete community doesn’t realize (or maybe I’m just wrong here) but I think there are a LOT of coaches out there whose athletes would be better off without them. And a pretty significant proportion of those coaches are USAT certified.

Granted, I’ve never gone through the USAT certification process, but as a result of seeing the coaches that the program puts out I’m pretty confident in saying that the ability for someone to be a successful coach coach is completely independent of their completing the coaching certification process.

For some athletes, getting your coaching certification is apparently just a part of life in the sport. You do your first tri, you get a fancy tri bike, you do long course racing, eventually your first iron-distance race followed by becoming a coach. Just because you spend a lot of time in the sport and collect masses of knowledge, what makes people think that not only they are capable of imparting that knowledge on others, but to the level which they deserve to be paid for it?

This sport just has too many damn coaches. Everyone wants to be a coach and is under some strange delusion that with some classes, they will have what it takes add some value to the overall triathlon community. In reality, I think they are doing more to hurt the sport than help it.

I’ve got a whole mess of triathlon knowledge. A whole lot more than my race times show. But I’m not a coach because I know that I don’t have the personality or skill to transfer that knowledge into training anyone other than myself.

My Triathlon Coaching Experience

One of the reasons why I have such strong feelings on this topic is that I made the unfortunate decision to go with a coach that wasn’t right for me. (I fully admit that this was my own mistake and not his.) He was sorta a big deal on the internet, knew a lot about triathlon and was an overall nice guy. Those are all great things, but in no way translated to him helping me reach any of my goals that season. A person can be awesome at self-coaching, but unless I have the same strengths, weaknesses, nutritional needs, personal and professional demands, none of it matters. Essentially, unless we are the exact same person, I don’t care anymore what you were able to do in your own triathlon career. That knowledge base may help, but it may just as well distract my coach from what I need to do as an athlete to reach my goals.

In my eyes, one of the biggest determining factors in whether or not is able to be successful with a coach lies more in the coach’s passion for helping the athlete meet their goals than actually knowing anything about athletic training or triathlon at all. If I ever chose to get coached again, I’d rather work with someone that was had a deep emotional investment in my success and zero triathlon knowledge than someone with all the athletic “book knowledge” in the world but didn’t give two craps about me being successful and happy in the sport.

My Advice On Picking A Triathlon Coach

Communication is key. A lot of coaches ultimately sell what are just training plans with limited or no communication. Unless You can guarentee that I can call you as often as I want with any question or that you will respond to my email within 48 hours, I don’t want to even bother talking to you.

Look at the other types of athletes that they coach. Are they all over the board? Are they all pseudo-elite athletes who return to Kona year after year? Are they all middle of the pack working professionals whose biggest struggle is balancing triathlon and family life? How do your goals math those of their other athletes? Ultimately very few GREAT coaches will be great at coaching every type of triathlete, so if they take on anyone who is willing to fork over some cash, I’d start off the conversation pretty guarded.

Have an escape plan. If you are getting a coach, it probably means that you are pretty serious about triathlon and triathlon is a major part of your life. So why would you not protect what you love? If you are entering a yearly coaching agreement and not month-to-month, make sure you have an escape clause to let you switch gears mid-season if things clearly don’t work out and can’t be fixed.

Analysis. If you’ve been in the sport for a while and have been following a training plan or documenting your workouts, you are probably pretty good at knowing how to repeat the same race day performances. But people don’t go to a coach to do more of the same. Look for a coach that can look back at your training volumes and intensity and race splits and identify opportunities to change things up and address some of your weaknesses.

So What?

Let’s be clear. I’m not throwing every coach out there under the bus. The vast majority of coaches out there that have been doing this for years are rock stars. They know their stuff and just how to dole it out. Plenty of my real life and bloggy friends are coaches or have their certification and I respect all that they do. The main point here is that I think people need to take a lot more care when picking out a coach or deciding if they are going to attempt a career as a tri coach.

Self-coaching is an alternative that I don’t think people give enough consideration to. For me, it has worked out great. I get to make sure I’m happy with the type of training I’m doing and I save TONS of money. Could a coach make me faster? Absolutely. Did I ever regret my decision to do the Cedar Point iron-distance race without a coach? No way in hell. Ultimately training flexibility and money is more important than speed, so it works for me.

Triathlon Mentors

Don’t confuse self-coached with going it alone. There is no way in hell I would have made it to the Cedar Point finish line on my own. Over the 12 months preceding the race I had countless conversations with coaches and friends who were critical in my successful training and racing. It was the perfect middle ground between going it alone and hiring a coach.

What the triathlon world really needs is less coaches and more mentors to fill in that middle ground. When people go out seeking a coach, I think a lot of them really want a mentor to help evaluate their training, bounce ideas back and forth and prepare for big races on a more informal basis. You save money, leverage the intelligence of those around you and get a built-in training buddy.

I have no interest in coaching anyone, but if you want to be my mentee, give me a hollar. I don’t accept cash or credit cards. Only beer.

< Soap Box=”Step Down” >

Want to read some other great posts on triathlon coaching? Check out these:

John: On Coaching

Meg: To be or not to be (coached): Is that the question?

ChuckieV: The Coaching Overkill

| Posted in Ironman, Triathlon | 12 Comments »