A few weeks ago we heard from Xterra that the triathlon would be turned into a duathlon (2.5-mile trail run/19-mile MTB/5.5-mile trail run). Although Karel was a little bummed that he was not participating in the swim-bike-run format, one needs a flexible mindset when approaching an off-road race. With this being his second ever off-road triathlon (and first triathlon at altitude), he was looking forward to the unknown challenge and welcomed whatever the day would bring. No race is ever the same with Xterra and that makes each race exciting.
After pre-riding the bike and run course on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, he knew it was going to be an incredibly tough day of racing. Excited for the adventure ahead and the opportunity to be competitive, Karel didn't have any nerves going into the race as he views Xterra racing as "playtime" on his bike and loves the chill vibe on race day.
We arrived to the race venue at Snow Basin around 7:30am and it was a cold start to the morning in the low 50's. The race started at 9am with the professional wave and then a few minutes later, Karel's wave went off to start the first run. Immediately with an uphill start to the race, he was breathing hard right from the start. The climb continued for a mile and Karel averaged 9:03 min/mile. The next 1.6 miles were mostly downhill and he averaged ~6:11 min/mile. But with the altitude (race started at ~6400 feet) Karel never had a chance to lower his heart rate, even on the downhill. Over the entire 2.66 miles, he covered ~600 feet elevation, which included running on gravel and over rocks.
Once he got into the transition, he was near the front of his age group. His transition was a bit slow so that is an area he will continue to work on. He put on his hydration pack and shoes and then he was off to ride.
The 18.1 mile mountain bike ride was primarily off-road with just a very short section on the paved road. Over the 18 miles, the course was broken into two main sections. The first went up to Sardine Peak and then a loop by Wheeler Creek. The bike course had ~2900 feet of elevation gain and it took him 1:39 to complete (average speed 10.9mph). The nearly 4 mile climb to start the bike took almost 28 minutes. But once he got at the top, it became very rocky and technical with a lot of switch backs. The course continued on and with a little more climbing and descending, Karel had to stay mentally engaged to navigate on this technical course. He had one minor fall where his wheel slipped but nothing serious. There were several crashes which is normal at these Xterra races. It was really inspiring to see all different levels of athletes out on the course. I walked 1.5 miles out on the course to see Karel on the bike course and then walked back to the venue and headed up the hill to see him on the run.
After the bike, it was back up the hill again to start the 5.36 mile run. Karel was able to run for most of the first climb but eventually started walking (for ~75 seconds) as he was not gaining much ground running (and expending too much energy with the altitude and fatigue). The second run was longer but just a bit more elevation (~700 feet). After the first 1 mile climb, he had a bit of a downhill - although it was not really downhill and very rocky. Karel even had a slight fall on one of the rocky sections (he was thankful he had on his cycling gloves). Around 1.75 miles in, it was time for an even longer climbing section of 1.87 miles. This section took him just under 17 minutes (8:56 min/mile). Finally the descend for 1.65 miles (6:49 min/mile). It started to get really warm out so Karel was thankful he had his flask of Skratch with him for the run (in his kit pocket) and that he had his camelback with NBS Carbo-hydration for the bike. He got thirsty on the first run but there were only aid stations on the 2nd run. I was able to tell Karel his results as I was tracking him throughout the race and although he wasn't going to take first, he was in a strong fight for top 10 overall amateur (and 2nd in his age group). It took him 43:50 (8:11 min/mile) to complete the run and he had a nice sprint to finish the day.
RESULTS HERE.
Between the altitude, course, terrain and competition, Karel was pretty beat up after the race (and even on Sunday while spectating me during my 21-k trial run). He was mentally and physically exhausted from the event, especially after just racing the 70.3 in St. George a week prior. But he had so much fun and just loves the atmosphere at these races. Plus, we met several new friends!
After pre-riding the bike and run course on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, he knew it was going to be an incredibly tough day of racing. Excited for the adventure ahead and the opportunity to be competitive, Karel didn't have any nerves going into the race as he views Xterra racing as "playtime" on his bike and loves the chill vibe on race day.
We arrived to the race venue at Snow Basin around 7:30am and it was a cold start to the morning in the low 50's. The race started at 9am with the professional wave and then a few minutes later, Karel's wave went off to start the first run. Immediately with an uphill start to the race, he was breathing hard right from the start. The climb continued for a mile and Karel averaged 9:03 min/mile. The next 1.6 miles were mostly downhill and he averaged ~6:11 min/mile. But with the altitude (race started at ~6400 feet) Karel never had a chance to lower his heart rate, even on the downhill. Over the entire 2.66 miles, he covered ~600 feet elevation, which included running on gravel and over rocks.
Once he got into the transition, he was near the front of his age group. His transition was a bit slow so that is an area he will continue to work on. He put on his hydration pack and shoes and then he was off to ride.
The 18.1 mile mountain bike ride was primarily off-road with just a very short section on the paved road. Over the 18 miles, the course was broken into two main sections. The first went up to Sardine Peak and then a loop by Wheeler Creek. The bike course had ~2900 feet of elevation gain and it took him 1:39 to complete (average speed 10.9mph). The nearly 4 mile climb to start the bike took almost 28 minutes. But once he got at the top, it became very rocky and technical with a lot of switch backs. The course continued on and with a little more climbing and descending, Karel had to stay mentally engaged to navigate on this technical course. He had one minor fall where his wheel slipped but nothing serious. There were several crashes which is normal at these Xterra races. It was really inspiring to see all different levels of athletes out on the course. I walked 1.5 miles out on the course to see Karel on the bike course and then walked back to the venue and headed up the hill to see him on the run.
After the bike, it was back up the hill again to start the 5.36 mile run. Karel was able to run for most of the first climb but eventually started walking (for ~75 seconds) as he was not gaining much ground running (and expending too much energy with the altitude and fatigue). The second run was longer but just a bit more elevation (~700 feet). After the first 1 mile climb, he had a bit of a downhill - although it was not really downhill and very rocky. Karel even had a slight fall on one of the rocky sections (he was thankful he had on his cycling gloves). Around 1.75 miles in, it was time for an even longer climbing section of 1.87 miles. This section took him just under 17 minutes (8:56 min/mile). Finally the descend for 1.65 miles (6:49 min/mile). It started to get really warm out so Karel was thankful he had his flask of Skratch with him for the run (in his kit pocket) and that he had his camelback with NBS Carbo-hydration for the bike. He got thirsty on the first run but there were only aid stations on the 2nd run. I was able to tell Karel his results as I was tracking him throughout the race and although he wasn't going to take first, he was in a strong fight for top 10 overall amateur (and 2nd in his age group). It took him 43:50 (8:11 min/mile) to complete the run and he had a nice sprint to finish the day.
RESULTS HERE.
Between the altitude, course, terrain and competition, Karel was pretty beat up after the race (and even on Sunday while spectating me during my 21-k trial run). He was mentally and physically exhausted from the event, especially after just racing the 70.3 in St. George a week prior. But he had so much fun and just loves the atmosphere at these races. Plus, we met several new friends!
Here's a video I put together of his race. Enjoy!
from Trimarni Coaching and Nutrition https://ift.tt/3CQYC9R
Comments
Post a Comment