Funny enough, the week before the race I ended up with a
chest cold that thankfully was almost gone by race date. I flew down to Miami on Thursday where Isabel
picked me up in Ft. Lauderdale. That
evening while Isa was in class, I got in an easy 3 mile run…just as I had
expected, hot and humid. Friday I got a
mini tour of Miami, we went for ~30mi bike ride, and then had an awesome time joining
the Critical Mass ride. If you’ve never
been part of a Critical Mass ride which is held in multiple cities to raise
cycling awareness, its super fun and I highly recommend it!
We started Saturday morning off with some oatmeal, coffee,
and a light 2 mile run. That afternoon
we did packet pick-up which was held at the site of transition, during which we
each polished off a bottle of Pedialite.
Pick up tent was pretty hidden within all of the vendor tents but
eventually we found it. The race T’s
were cool, but other than that nothing crazy.
Everyone at the race (athletes and race directors) seemed to know Isa –
probably since she is an amazing athlete and won San Juan 70.3 earlier this
year among other events! We dropped our
bikes at our designated racks and headed home.
For dinner I had a small piece of salmon with a serving of rice and
beans and Isa and I split another bottle of Pedialite. Then we packed and lights out by 9:30pm!
Watching the sun rise w/ Isa and Lora |
Race morning I woke up around 4:45am and consumed a
breakfast of plain oatmeal and a single cup of coffee. We were out the door by 5:15. On the way to the race, I had some water and
an English muffin with Nutella. We
arrived around 6 and I set up my station – taped 2 packs of Clif Shot blocks to
my bike, shoes clipped in and fastened with rubber bands, and everything else I
needed set out in an orderly fashion.
For my bike bottles this race I chose to skip the Perpetuem since I was
trying to rule out what was causing my GI distress during the later portion of
the run. Instead I went with one of
plain water and a second with a scoop of Gatorade mix, a GU electrolyte tab,
and water (usually I use Roctane but I forgot to pack it). Last, we hit the portas and hung out watching
the sun rise over the water.
The 1st swim wave for Men’s pros went off at 7:25am. Thankfully, our age group was wave 4 which
started at 7:35. Much better than at
Timberman! I felt good going out at the
start but it was pretty tight and within the 1st 5 minutes us middle
of the packers were all fighting to make a right turn around the 1st
buoy. By 7 minutes in I was already
catching groups of the Wave 3 swimmers (mostly older women ~45ish group if I
remember correctly). About halfway
through the swim we hit a large patch (maybe 100m or so) of thick sea grass. Some of the women from the group in front of
us almost were panicking and pulled up in the water. There were a few times that I had trouble
picking my arms up during the recovery portion of the stroke or I couldn’t kick
or turn to breathe because of how heavy these “grass mats” were. The only other portion of the swim that I
struggled with was the final stretch toward the swim exit where I was being pushed
laterally toward shore, but otherwise felt decent. I rounded the swim out at 37:19, not my
fastest this year, but all things considered I wasn’t upset when I checked my
watch on the way to transition.
I had no problems with T1 – spotted my bike easily and everything
was set up how I had left it this morning. Mounted my bike easily and I was on my
way. During 1st 5 miles of
the bike we were making our way out of the city and had a few small inclines
but nothing to write home about. The
rest of the bike was a pretty boring single shot out and back in the left lane
of Highway 27. As compared to Timberman,
due to our start wave it was mostly a solo ride. On the way out with a headwind, I passed
quite a few females from my wave and the one prior and by the halfway
turnaround was being caught by males from the start wave that had followed
mine. About 40 miles into the ride, a tight
pack of about 15 (males and 1 female) athletes drafting caught and surrounded
me. With them came a van with officials
and it was nice to see that they were calling a lot of the athletes out in the
pack and awarding penalties. Thankfully,
the pack had moved past me within about 2 minutes. Once we returned back into the city our
wonderful tailwind was gone and we had to grind out the last 5 miles. Some
turns and intersections were not well marked off (Isa actually took a wrong
turn and had to turn around at one point).
I closed out the bike in 2:38:46 (21.16mph) and as I was pulling my feet
out of my shoes while coming into T2, my left hamstring cramped up and that was
enough to make me re-think how I had pushed my bike pace.
Coming into T2 |
T2 went smoothly as well.
Bike racked, hat, race belt, socks and shoes on, 3 GU’s in pocket and I
hit the run. I opened the run up around
7:30 and was feeling pretty good, but 10 minutes in I was brought to a
standstill as that dang left hamstring was cramping something fierce. After about 90 seconds of stretching and
minimal walking I reached the point that I could kind of jog without a full on
cramp. I took my 1st GU and a
2nd supplied by the race before the end of the 2nd mile. By the 3rd mile I had was back to
the fastest run pace that I could tolerate and felt much better as I packed my
top and shorts with the loose ice being handed out by the volunteers. Seriously the ice was my saving grace as the
84º heat and
humidity beat down on us as we crossed a large open bridge (over and back). I completed the rest of the 1st
run loop with no major problems, took my 2nd GU, and was definitely
thinking “why in the world do I sign up for these things?” The 2nd
loop felt just as bad as the one before and I ate my last GU around mile
8. By now I was drinking both water and Gatorade
and walking a few steps at each aid stop.
The final 2.5 miles were the worst.
I knew I had less than 20 minutes to go and my body was threatening with
cramping with every few strides. My run
finished up at a 1:44:47 (7:59 pace) with some light sunburn. One big thing to mention...NO GI DISTRESS! Yes! On the
day I went 5:04:52 which is a big PR for me, good for 7th in AG. Looks like 5 hours will have to remain my goal
for 2014!
So happy to be done! |
Isa won our AG with a 4:47:23 and her friend Lora went second
with a 4:51:13. I also had a chance to catch up with Monica Sanchez who claimed
2nd in her AG with a 5:01:25. All 3 claimed their spots for Canada
in Sept 2014! We spent the rest of the
afternoon at the race finish hanging out, recovering, and taking in a few adult
beverages.
We may or may not have beers in our back pockets... |
On the whole I had a lot of fun in Miami. The race wasn’t anything crazy or
picturesque, but if you are looking for flat and hot (when the northeast is
posting low 50’s) then it’s a good choice as a weekend getaway!!
Made some new friends (Frank, Isa, & Roy) |
No one ever includes the embarassing pics....well they caught me. |