Coach P's Race Report (forgot to post it here, sorry!)
PreRace
This was the first year of our Kona Race Camp, which had me on the Big Island more than a week prior to race day. I was really excited to acclimate here and spend some time getting my bearings as I prepared for race day.We swam in the Ho'ala Open Water Practice swim and completed multile rides, run, and brick workouts on critical sections of the course. By the time race day was looming, I had put in several hours of good training in the heat and was feeling very relaxed and acclimated. Bonus that it was fun hanging out with the camp crew and enjoying the Big Island vibe. We'll be back next year with more amenities at the same incredible location...we'd love to have you join us an we'll take all the logistical pain out of your Kona experience! Learn More Here.
Day Before the Race
We were here long before the crowds, and stayed far from the madness...but when you drop off your bike and get to walk around transition, there's no denying the energy just radiating from the pier next to the King Kam hotel.My logistics were great, thanks to AnnieB saving my butt more than once with her incredible resourcefulness. Can't say enough about how awesome it is to get dropped off / picked up and not have to find parking, etc.
Another great Team breakfast was held at Denny's the completely unofficial pre-race breakfast sponsor of Endurance Nation. In addition to carbing up and sharing a few laughs, we got to meet Debbie and Seton from TriSports, one of our newest Team Endurance Nation sponsors...thanks to their schwag, I hit my goal of getting 8 free trucker hats, 10 shirts and uncountable bottles! No more gear shopping for some time!
I was in bed, and passed out, just after 9pm for my 3:15am wake up call...trying not to think about the High Surf Advisory that was issued for our side of the island.
The Swim -- 1:09:xx
I had done much swimming this go around, both in the pool and open water. I was really hoping I could go under 1:05 for the first time.I lined up about 50 feet to the left of the buoy line, and when the gun went off it was hammer time -- literally. My goal was to count 500 fast strokes before settling, but honestly I gave that up after 100 because I wasn't really taking strokes...I was just slapping backs, legs and feet. I swore I was going to stay with the crowd all day, and my focus was making me pay...
The water seemed good and I swam faily straight on the outbound section (a first!) except for pulling inside the buoys once. Note to self -- bilateral breathing helps you swim straight. I never really found a smooth, strong stroke, however...just wasn't in my rhythm.
The return trip is where the water turned ugly. If the water carried us outbound, it was trying to stop us on the way back. Swells and clearly a wind was chopping up the surface of the water. I was in my group, but could tell by looking at how folks were swimming next to me that it wasn't a fast group. Regardless, I hung in there and just...kept...swimming.
Big Shout out to the SUP volunteers who kept us on course. I couldn't see all the buoys but their flourescent orange shirts helped keep me on the right path.
Turns out it was a rougher swim than usual, with pro times being about 3 minutes slower than typical. That would put me at my best time here (a 1:06, adjusted)...so no complaints and overall a good swim from a line up and draft execution perspective.
The bike...just what I wanted!
The Bike -- 4:59:xx
If I was serious about anything here this year, it was the bike. My plan was to ride hard, at about 78% of my FTP for you geeks out there, through Mile 80, then dial it back to my usual Ironman watts for the final leg. The reasoning here is that the winds get worse the later you are out there (both to Hawi / Turnaround and heading back to Kona).I got my bike in T1, mounted and was pedaling away. A momentary panic of no Powermeter signal was solved by restarting my Garmin, hence losing a mile. I was solid through the first 10 miles and was drinking and eating ahead of schedule...even snuck in a few family high fives too!!!
I rolled through Special Needs (thanks volunteers!) which was made easier by it not being crowded. I got my salt pills out -- really wanted the tylenol! -- and got to pedalling. By the time I got to mile 75, the climb to Kawaihae, the heat was back on and I was feeling the early work I had done. Despite some wind I sat up to climb and saw more than a few folks pass me.
My heart rate had dropped all day and by the end of the bike was around 140 where I wanted it to be for the run.
VI 1.04 VI 1.06
Avg HR: 140
The Run -- 3:42:xx
The story of this run was the heat. It was so hot out there that I was hot on the inside. Like it felt like my stomach was hot...probably my hottest run here ever. Off the bike I took a nice pee in T2 and then ran out. I could tell the heat was on and I locked in my HR to the happiest place...about 135. This was lower than my bike HR of 140, but honestly it was the effort I knew I could sustain.My history here is a solid first 10 miles and then a fade over the final 16 miles as my stomach and/or mojo are shot.
I had decided on three sections where I needed to be mindful of my Heart Rate -- Mile 7 to prepare for the Mile 8 climb, Palani Hill (Mile 10), and then the top of the Energy Lab (Mile 19.5) to recover for the final push home. This paid off from a mental focus perspective, but I never really felt like I was running out there on Ali'i.
When I hit Palani, I ran until my HR hit 145, then I walked...but a minute later checked the HR was 131 and so it was time to start running! I was moving but not running really, as folks continued to pass me.
I continued to eat, drink and move forward. Plenty more walkers now, and by the time I headed into the Energy Lab (Miles 16 to almost 20), I was feeling pretty good as compared to other folks. No one was passing me anymore and I was on the move.
Returning to town, the headwind felt AWESOME! It was cooling and helped refocus me. I wanted to pick up the pace, but was still worried I might bonk...the sun went behind some clouds here, so it took the edge off the final hour of my day.
A very strong push over the final miles had me flying through the chute, high fiving my family and crossing in 10:02:02.
Avg HR: 133
The Final Word
While I missed that elusive sub-10 mark, I never looked at my watch. I just ran as well as I could (or jogged or whatever) all day. I am incredibly pleased with the whole race from an execution perspective, especially my run performance. The time doesn't show it, but the graphs don't lie...a great run for me.It was also epic to spend the week with my Endurance Nation teammates, having fun and getting ready. What a week and what a race.
Congrats to each and everyone of you rockstars!!!!!!
Now it's time to recharge, eat a ton, have fun...and starting thinking about 2016!
Thanks for reading!
Comments
Coach P...great race. So happy for your as it seems like you have figured out what works at Kona for you.
2x what Tim.
Congrats and great to spend time with you in Kona.
Coach P, Truly great race. Fantastic effort throughout. I am amazed at how hard that course is. I watched you and several other racers I know throughout the day. Each of you have dominated other IM races. It is clear that throughout the day the combination of different terrain, different weather, higher overall competition and HEAT make this race the toughest. To be able to race your race and do so well is remarkable. Congratulations.
Patrick, another in a long list of rock solid races. It's so great to see all the HARD work you did in your build up pay off for you! When I saw you out there you looked like it was another day at the office although I know it never is. Carol and I were so glad to see Maura and your girls and hope they had a great time too! This was a special experience for me made possible because of the coaching and this special team you and Rich have created! Thank you.
Put that in the back pocket of your brain, and pull it out whenever you're feeling like the world is beating you up - you'll have this race for the rest of your life. reading your words, I can see the smile on your face after mile 23. You left it all out there and still survived, man!
Patrick the Racer managed a busy year and worked your butt off for this. Really glad it all came together for you!
I still don't get how you guys go so fast with such a low HR. I feel like I'm a pretty fit 44 yo but I have to crank my HR to hold those bike speeds and to even come close on the run. Incredible.
Congrats, again. Recover well.