All-Time Most Popular Crushing Iron Posts

I feel like there may be a lot of late comers to Crushing Iron, so I wanted to share a list of the most popular posts:

Mom always dominates Ironman reading and she hit a home run here.

My Mom Figured Out Why I’m Doing Ironman

This is Kevin’s dramatic recap of Ironman Louisville

Intense Motivation from a Guest Blogger

Allison recounts her first half Ironman at Gulf Coast

Our “Plus One,” Allison, Guest Blogs Her Gulf Coast Half

My prediction for my second ½ Marathon in New Orleans

How I Will Cut 25 Minutes Off My 1/2 Marathon Time

My head to head battle with Daytime’s favorite doctor

My 5K Face Off With Dr. Oz

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Now, these are some of my favorites that aren’t necessarily at the top of the stat counter.

My neighbor and I are pretty tight, but he clearly thinks this Ironman training is nuts.

This one is for dog and cat lovers (or haters).

My response to people who are following my “little running journey.”

From the beginning of my training, Swimming with Little Old Ladies, is an eye-opener.

In an effort to secure early season sponsorship, we went straight to the top with, Beyonce’ Knowles, Meet the Fab Five

The Kid Inside is potentially the origin of my love for triathlon.

If Running Clubs Were Gangs is a spin-off of the cult classic, The Warriors.

Our "Plus One," Allison, Guest Blogs Her Gulf Coast Half

Allison started training with the Fab Five in January and has stayed with us the whole way.  She was right there in early January, hammering spin bikes for hours, then joining us for frigid “brick” runs through the shadiest Nashville neighborhoods (Ie…Wasky’s* hood).  It didn’t take long before all the guys welcomed her as “plus one” to make the Fab Five, “six.”  Below is her awesome recap of a race that weighed on her mind for months and pushed her limits beyond anything she imagined.

70.3 – Gulf Coast Triathlon Race Re-cap – by Allison Leigh Miles

I was nowhere ready to train for a full Ironman when the Fab Five started tossing around the idea of racing Wisconsin, but I thought if I put my mind to it, I could focus on the 70.3 distance. Jim suggested the Gulf Coast Half, it was his first, it was at the beach where I grew up and it was in May so I had 5ish months to train. I was nervous but I committed to doing that race.

Race week got here much faster than I anticipated, but it was almost as though my mind was seasonsnoteforalliepreventing itself from being nervous; I was way too calm. I had so many sweet friends write encouraging letters and cards.  My good friend, Season, even wrote everything I needed to remember in a small square that I could attach to my race bib!

Jim and I rode packed up his Smart Car and headed down to Panama City bright and early on Thursday morning.  He thought it was crucial that I have an extra day to get acclimated, settled and calm since this was my first 70.3 distance race.

We checked in to the hotel about 1pm and decided to do take a quick swim to test out the water temperature.  Once Robbie got settled in his hotel, we met up with him, grabbed some dinner with a few of his other athletes and settled in for the night.  We planned a SBR (swim, bike, run) workout the next morning with all the X3 athletes and I was a bit nervous.  I was the only one who was new to triathlons and this distance specifically; they were all racing for PRs and podium finishes for their age group, I was simply TRYING to finish.

The swim workout did NOT go well for me; I was struggling to swim parallel to shore, got separated from our group and was wondering why in the world I thought this race was a good idea.  I could tell by the tone of Robbie’s voice and the look on his face when he finally spotted me in the water that he was concerned too.

I was in full on silent panic mode coming out of the water, barely said a word to anyone else on the bike or the run, both of which went well I think but I was so mentally distracted by the swim I honestly don’t remember.  Robbie, Jim and I met for a post workout chat/lunch and they knew I was freaking out so we talked a bit about expectations and what I needed to focus on going in to the race. I had a lot of things to remember, mostly regarding nutrition, but for the first time coach gave me a really vague race plan, and per usual I was banned from wearing a watch:

Swim controlled

Bike smart

Run fast

My first thought was seriously?!? I made it all the way here and THAT’S all you’re going to give me? I asked a few more silly newbie questions and started to feel better; I trust coach to help me achieve my goal, but made up some arbitrary goal times.

Swim- 60 min

Bike – 4 hours

Run- 2.5-3 hours

That put my estimated finish time right at 7.5-8 hours (I’ve been told to note that both Robbie and Schwan thought these estimates were complete crap and way too slow)

jimalliebullRobbie, Jim & I went to dinner at Angelo’s Steak Pit, with the other elderly snow birds just as they were unlocking the doors at 5 pm – that place was a madhouse, but we managed to get our pre-race steak and potato meal in, plus a glass of wine and a picture with none other than the local celebrity, Big Gus.

By 6pm the seasoned vets were ready for bed, but I was wide eyed and nervous as hell, no way I’d be sleeping much tonight. Between newbie jitters and the head cold (which I’ve just learned developed into bronchitis) I acquired almost a week ago, I woke up about every 2 hours. Around midnight I had a notification of a new Crushing Iron post Tarrolly wrote regarding the three of us racing -I read it, loved it, and remembered a note he sent me a few days earlier- he reminded me that the work was there, I simply had to trust it and stay out of my head.

My alarm went off at 4 am- we had to get out the door and walk the mile from our hotel to transition by 5 because my swim wave was the first to go off at 6:20 am and transition most likely closed by 6.  By the time I got set up in transition, body marked, my wetsuit on and met up with the other x3 athletes I had about 5 min until my wave went off-

SWIM- CONTROLLED

My swim got moved up by 10 min, which I found out late the night before; I don’t like change AT ALL, so I was very anxious and antsy. Once I started walking towards the beach the nerves set in gulfcoastgirlsand needed a pep talk—I couldn’t find Robbie or Jim, but thankfully Carrie and Betsy offered to walk down to the start with me since their wave was going off second. We got there about 4 min before my start, some photographer that Carrie knew snapped our picture really quick, the girls zipped me up, got my cap on, talked about breathing, staying calm, and not worrying about time. They kept reminding me to stay relaxed and just focus on getting to the next buoy, not stress about how far I had to swim.

I stepped in to the start chute, had about 3 seconds to decide I wanted to start at the back of the pack, looked around to see if Robbie or Jim made it down to the start, didn’t see them, waved to the girls, and then the horn blew. I knew the water would be shallow at first and I could wide knee jump the waves, then it would get deeper and I’d have to swim, before hitting a sand bar and being able to stand up and jump again. What really happened was all the women decided they were going to wade out to their necks, then doggie paddle to the sandbar— that hindered my plan a bit because I couldn’t get around them until after the sandbar. Once I got beyond that, I started calmly swimming. It was a bit crowded at first and I had nowhere to go so it was a very slow start. Some girl next to me was having a complete meltdown so I decided to talk her through it since I couldn’t move any faster–that allowed me to stay calm before actually having to put any work in. Finally the field broke up, and for whatever reason–probably poor sighting on the lead swimmers part, the field took off to the right and I sighted the shortest path left to the next buoy.

I was still behind most people, but I didn’t want to go out too strong with such a far distance to cover. I focused on picking off the buoys one by one and finally got to the turn; everyone was out right so I got to cut close and just as I made the turn my cap fell off. I found it, stuck it back on, caught my breath and a glimpse of “control” written on my hand and re-focused. I turned and made my way across, I couldn’t see the shore or the other buoys yet so I sighted off a sailboat just ahead of me to the right–occasionally looking left to figure out when I could see the buoy–finally caught the top of it and headed towards it-made the turn towards shore and mentally took an assessment–legs weren’t kicking, arms weren’t tired, breathing wasn’t bad. I felt good but still had 950 meters left.

I picked off the rest of the buoys, elbowed a girl in the face pretty hard because she was trying to swim ON my back (Season told me not to be nice haha) then at the last buoy, with 125 meters left I decided to hammer it….two seconds later BOTH of my calves cramped up and I had to sit up in the water. I remembered Daniel Hudgins saying he tries to run through his cramps and they usually go away, so I flexed my feet, put my head down and plowed toward shore. They relaxed pretty fast, but the twinge would last all day. I swam over the sandbar and didn’t stand up until I knew the water was about thigh deep. I was walking faster than people were swimming around me so I started pulling my wetsuit off.

When I hit the sand I looked up at the clock and it said 44 min and some change. I was surprised and I remember thinking that the clock must have been wrong or that it restarted with each wave.  I was so confused by my time that the woman behind me thought I couldn’t get my wetsuit unzipped (I paused with my hand on the string when I was trying to focus on the clock) and she kindly yanked the zipper down for me.   There was no way I swam 1.2 miles in 44 minutes. Robbie later told me that my swim time was shocking, as in, no one expected me to come out of the water that fast, myself included.  I walked the few hundred yards up the beach to the showers, ran through the showers and sat down on a bench to pull my suit off. I thought this was a better plan than trying to pull it off in transition and it paid off.

T1-

T1 was just about 4 minutes. I had to chug some cough syrup, spray some sun screen, and dry my feet off enough to get socks on. I decided not to risk the no-sock ride since it was probably going to rain and my feet would be drenched. I grabbed my helmet and sunglasses, slipped my bike off the rack, and made my way to the bike exit.  My garmin was already set up for the 10 min interval alarm so I didn’t have to worry about starting it. The women that passed me while I was sitting on the bench calmly removing my wetsuit were still struggling as I rolled my bike out and on to the course. I rolled a couple yards past the bike mount sign, clipped in and I was off.

RIDE- SMART

Robbie told me I needed to ride smart, not hammer it, and basically survive. It was a fairly flat course with the exception of one bridge we had to cross twice, but I also knew it would most likely start raining at some point. Nutrition was going to be a HUGE component for me, so I needed to focus on taking in Gatorade or water every 10 min and nutrition every 30.  Jim set my Garmin up to alarm in 10 min intervals, so all I had to focus on was spinning my legs and hearing the alarm. That worked beautifully.

The day before Season told me not to worry or get upset by the amount of people passing me on the bike.  She told me that there were a TON of much faster, much more experienced athletes that would be coming up fast behind me and that if I just followed Robbie’s plan I would pass a lot of them on the run.  These words turned out to be invaluable to me during the 56 mile ride.

Once I hit the highway, which comprised the majority of the ride, I watched the road ahead of me; it wasn’t smooth and the cones were not in a straight line so if you took your eyes off them for one minute you risked hitting one.  My biggest stressor was the fact that other racers did not respect the “on your left” etiquette when passing.  I spent a lot of time in aero, more time than ever before and felt comfortable; the next thing I knew I was half way through the ride and feeling great.

Up to this point, Robbie had caught up to me around mile 5, I saw Carrie and Mike on the first and second out and back and finally saw Jim around mile 38.  It was so calming to have familiar faces on the course.  I clearly was wearing a “newbie” sign somewhere on my back because it seemed like every experienced cyclist that passed me had some encouraging words or tips; I thanked each person for their offerings.

This was the first long ride that I didn’t have any negative thoughts or “get it together Allison and get through this” moments. When I hit mile 40 I stopped wanting my food, but kept drinking fairly regularly and right about the 45 mile mark it started POURING.  It was sprinkling before, but this was full on downpour. I slowed down a bit knowing that it was notoriously windy the last 10 miles and I didn’t want to crash on the wet roads. I witnessed several crashes, falls, and many a racer that had clearly taken a spill based on the road rash flying by me.  I had to come to a complete stop with about 5 miles left in the ride because a pickup truck decided to back out in my path, unfortunately the jerk riding behind me didn’t head my “I’m slowing” signal, sped around me, started yelling about not slowing or stopping during a race and promptly rode right in to the side of the truck—so sorry sir, you should’ve listened.

I got back in the groove, finished out the last 5 quite cautiously and couldn’t believe I was 2/3 of the way through the race.  My time took a hit for riding smart, I finished at 3:40, but my legs would thank me later.

T2

T2 took a bit longer than I wanted because the girl on the opposite side of the bike rack decided to rack her bike DIRECTLY ON TOP of my transition stuff, with her back tire resting squarely on my running shoes. She jammed her aero bars on top of the rack leaving it impossible for me to unwedge my shoes so I had no choice but to flip her bike up and grab by shoes (please note, its illegal and grounds for immediate disqualification for touching another athletes equipment.  Had an official noticed any part of this, both her bike placement and my subsequent flipping, we both would’ve been out) I finally got my shoes on as a kind volunteer was picking up that girls bike from the ground on the other side of the rack, grabbed my race belt, visor and some nutrition which were all linked together and took off running, putting it all on as I tore to the opposite side of transition.  About halfway to the exit I remembered that my garmin was still strapped to my bike.  Robbie told me to leave it there, but the control freak in me just couldn’t let it go.  I made a turn and snagged it off the bike, picked up speed and headed out to run. Just about 2:30.

RUN-FAST

Run fast, that’s what I was supposed to do. I had NO guidelines pace wise, just to listen to my body. I blew out of transition too fast, about a 8 min mile now that I’ve gone back to look at the splits, but I ended up catching up to an older super talkative guy. He asked me my plan, I said run fast and he said that he was planning on run/walking the entire race.  I was only going to hang with him till I caught my breath and slowed down, but then he said he could complete the entire half on that plan in 2:06. I made the decision to stick with him as long as I could.

Even though my legs felt great, I was still worried about my calves cramping again and wasn’t sure how the 13.1 miles would play out for me. I saw Robbie on the second mile, of course in the midst of our first walk break, and I knew he wasn’t happy with me. I needed to stick with this guy and come out with a quick-ish half otherwise I’d never hear the end of it from coach. My buddy talked a lot and I blocked him out a lot but he stuck to the 5 min run hard, 1 min walk brisk and what seemed like 5 minutes later I heard him say we were approaching the 7 mile mark. My only thought was “well hell that went by fast…I’ve got this”.

Once I focused, I realized I hadn’t taken any liquid or nutrition yet and remembered Meg Willoughby telling me to drink the coke if it was offered.  I snagged one at the next water stop and it settled well- I was feeling alliegulfcoastfinishgreat.  My hands were sore from gripping my bike in the rain, so I was grabbing the cold sponges, one for each hand, and holding on to them so I didn’t clinch down too hard. The miles ticked away and then we hit 12.  Buddy (I don’t remember his name) said he was going to skip the last walk break and hammer it the last 1.1–I told him to go for it…I wasn’t going to walk either;  I knew I couldn’t keep up with him but I would run as fast as I could.  I sailed in to the finish, saw my sweet friend Lisa and her yellow lab cheering for me and caught a glimpse of the race clock.  I thought it said 6:44 something.  I WAS ECSTATIC. I had finished under 6:45!!!!  All in all I finished my first 70.3 roughly 45-75 min faster than my estimate and 17 minutes faster than Robbie’s guess.  I FELT AMAZING!  I couldn’t believe it was over so fast or that I felt as great as I did when it was over.

* Wasky eventually became +2

Gulf Coast Triathlon Guest Blog – Robbie Bruce

Last Saturday, Jim, Allie, and coach Robbiewent to Panama City to crush Gulf Coast.   The following is a race recap from Robbie who continually inspires me with his words and actions.
He takes us through his preparation, his game plan, and how it all played out in the race.  It’s a great read that’s loaded with helpful triathlon strategy.

GCT Recap- Freedom to find my Edge – Robbie Bruce

There is a certain freedom that comes with going into a race without real knowledge or data of your current fitness level.  The last 4-6 weeks have been both frustrating and enlightening. Battling and nursing a nagging Achilles injury leading up to Country Music Marathon was frustrating.  But my result, and what I learned about myself and my fitness at CMM, was enlightening. It will most likely go down as one of the defining moments of my triathlete career.

I spent the majority of the 2 weeks before Gulf Coast Triathlon just trying to recover and get healthy enough to give myself a shot.  Not just to “complete” it, but race it.  My race week usually goes from ready-confident-relaxed to nervous-anxious.  The week before GCT it went in the exact opposite order.  Many of my friends asked “how do you feel?”  And my response was,” I’m actually pretty confident and I have no reason to be.”  It as a weird feeling.  One that I have not been accustomed to but will welcome back with open arms if it presents itself again.

I drove to Panama City Beach solo on Thursday.  It was actually nice to make the trek alone.  It have me plenty of time to think, plan, re-think, and plan again.  I was brainstorming a variety of game plans on how to attack GCT.  All were quite different but with the same objective.  Find out where I am and where I need to be for Kansas 70.3.  I shared my options with many close friends and athletes.  Having so many people in my life that are involved in the sport, that I coach, or just close friends is so invaluable when it comes to races. They always give great insight and are totally objective and usually in areas that I fail to be.  I got into PCB around 3-4. I checked in, grabbed my packet and tried to settle.  I was staying by myself and I must say,  I enjoyed every minute of it.  I got to create my own bubble of focus.  Finished the night off having dinner with a few of my athletes and turned in early.

Fri- The Day Before
I woke up with a feeling of freedom. I was loose. I was ready. I had a SBR workout with all of the X3 athletes that morning and told myself I would listen to my gut and decide on a game plan when I got done.  It was so great to have my athletes around.  They are all so fun, positive and just flat out great people.  It’s an easy bunch to stay loose with.  I have found over the last 2 yrs that the more athletes I have at a race the better I do.  I think it helps relax me as well as view the race much differently. The workouts went off without a hitch and I retreated back to my condo for decision time. It was pretty clear to me as many of my friends had also pointed out the day before. The Final Game Plan I have myself was:

I’m going to play to my current strengths. I will crush the swim.  On the bike I’m going to play it conservative.  I know I have the short term power but no idea where my bike fitness is so ill play it safe until mile 40ish and listen to my gut.  The home stretch will be the hardest and windiest. I’ll count the guys in my age group that pass me on the bike. Then, I’ll get off the bike and run like hell for as long as I can and as fast as I can. Steady in the first 5-6 then negative split the back half.  That’s it.

Swim- My ability.
Bike- smart.
Run- like hell

I was confident with that plan.  Now it was time to prepare for it.  Spent the rest of the morning getting everything ready for Sat.  Grabbed a quick lunch with Allie and Jim and then back to the condo for more rest and preparation.  Bike was checked in at 4 and then Jim and Allie and I hit up a steakhouse like true snowbirds at freakin’ 5pm.  I got back to the condo around 6:30. Again.  More relax and prep time.  I was getting impatient.  I was just ready to race.  When I get to that point I just get bored.  Bored.  Bored.  Nothing to do but sit and think.  Think.  Think.

Within about a 15 minute span I got 3 messages all from 3 different people that really put my focus for the race into overdrive.  One was the photo you see below about “The Edge,” and then  a text and Facebook message both centered around my epic debacle at Ironman Louisville. Both, in a light -hearted banter of seriousness, the theme was . . .  “Don’t let that happen again.” It wasn’t “don’t fail.”  It was more, “Just do it.”  I had my plan and now it was to execute that plan all the way to the edge.  Stay on the edge for as long as I can and when it’s time to go over, just make sure you’re falling forward and not backwards. Test yourself. It was time.  I was ready to race.  Hit the sack around 9 and slept like a baby.

Race Morning
I often wake up on race morning in a massive hurry.  Hurry to get ready.  Hurry to war.  Hurry to get to transition.  This morning I was calm, focused and relaxed.  Got my stuff together.  Checked in with my athletes and walked out of my condo for the short walk to transition.   Headphones in.  Music flowing.  An easy stroll.  Totally relaxed.  No expectations.  No “I should be able to do this today.”  Instead it was, “Today I will give my absolute best effort and empty whatever “fitness” tank Ive created.”  I can control that.  Everything else is out of my control.  Meandered my way into transition to prep my area.  A friend from Nashville spotted me walking into transition and said “Man,  you’re cutting it close huh.  There gonna close it in a minute.”  I didn’t seem to care.  I was just relaxed.

I prepped my area and as I was about to walk to the swim 2 guys on my rack stopped me and asked if I had ever done this race before.  I responded with “Yes, this is actually my 5th straight year.”  They predictably countered with “Do you have any tips for first timers.” I said “Yea.  Just have fun man.  That’s it.  Just enjoy it and have fun.  Too many people take themselves to seriously.  Especially on race day.”

As I heard myself uttering those words I also came to the realization that I’ve come along way since my first race at GCT.  I have so much more fun now.  The sport is meant to be fun.  I made my way to the swim start (had to switch swim caps) and chilled with my athletes before the start.  It’s such a cool experience being able to go through a race like this with them.  Sometimes it’s difficult to find the right coaching, friend, I’m also racing balance when I’m participating too. But I do the best I can.  Everyone seemed loose, which made me relax even more.  Grabbed my wetsuit as everyone else made their way to the swim start.  Jim and I didn’t start till late so we got to kill sometime hanging out.  We shared some laughs.  Both of us fairly relaxed.

As my wave crept up I made my way to the starting corral.  As all the guys flowed in to the corral, looking around, sizing up the competition, nervously chatting I made my way to the front corner.  Quiet.  It was game time.  The calmness, relaxed, laid back feeling vanishes when I put my goggles on.  It’s a different view. It’s what racing looks like.  The feeling presumably comes from all my years swimming.  Goggles on.  Step on the block.  GO!  I went over my game plan in my head. Pressed my goggles against my face. Shook the hands of both the gentlemen on my right and left, wished them good luck and set my line to the first buoy. 5-4-3-2-1 BAM!

The Swim-
As the gun goes off my first thought is, lets see if someone jumps out hard in front.  I’ll hop on their feet and let them pull me. Some guy started like a bat out of hell.  I made my way across the water to try and get his feet.  Held it for a minute.  Damn.  This guy is in a WHOLE other league than me.  I could prob hang but I’d be toast.  I fell off his feet and began to cruise with another guy.  We stayed side by side.  Both waiting for the other to make a move.  I was probably about :2-3 faster per 100 than he was so it was decision  time.  Work with him, or drop him and go solo.  I felt great in the water and decided go on my own.

There wasn’t much current so sighting was easy.  As I hit the first turn buoy the NASCAR game started.  I began to catch the waves in front of me and the ocean became a congested highway of slower swimmers, people floating in their damn back, breast stroking . . . Come on people. Move!

I spent the cross section weaving in and out, hit the final turn buoy, and headed home. I picked up pace and sighted off the hotel.  Weave.  Move.  Go around.  Sight.  A lot of the same.  I sighted the finishing chute and picked up my kicking.  As I streamlined it towards the chute I had no idea what my time was or if others in my age group were ahead of me.  Got out of the water. Looked at my watch.  28 mins?  Man.  Nice swim, Robbie.

I was pumped.  As I ran up to T1 a guy yelled “2nd blue cap out of the water. Two minutes down.”  I thought “Man, that dude was flying.”  He ended up with the fastest swim of the day and it was obvious my choice not to go with him was a smart one.

T1-
Same stuff as usual. Helmet, shoes, blah blah. I hate talking about transitions. So I’m not.

Bike-
Heading out on to S. Thomas Dr and settled in.  I was preparing for 56 miles of NO IDEA what I’m capable of.  I knew I would get passed but also knew I could catch some on the run.  I kept telling myself to relax.  Be patient.  It’s all about the run.  The forecast called for storms and wind rolling in and if it was anything like last year the last 16 miles would be hell.

I went by feel.   Left my heart rate monitor at home in purpose.  Just thought to myself “I can hold this for X duration.”  Vroom.  Vroom.  Vroom.  One after another.  Passed.  Passed.  Passed. Dropping . . . 3, 4, 5 in my age group.

As disheartening as it was.   It is what is. I could’ve gone with and then walked the run.  Just stick it to the game plan.  Be patient.

The next 30 miles was more of the same. It was nice to see my athletes on the course.  Give an encouraging word and get one in return.  Don’t know why.  But it makes the ride always seem shorter.

The rain and wind began to come it about mile 50ish.  As I hit the coastline I was averaging 22mph.  I wasn’t going under that.   Nope.  I had plenty in the tank and was realizing I may have held back too much.  But who knows.  Vroom.  Vroom.  Vroom. Vroom.  6-7-8-9.  I got passed by 4 guys in my AG in the last 15 minutes of the ride.  Every ounce of my competitive valor screamed GOOOOOOOO!  Go with them.  My mind.  My confidence.  “Robbie.  Chill.  They can’t run with you.  You’ll pick them off one by one. Just wait. ”  I had absolutely no idea if they could or could not run with me.  But I told myself they couldn’t.  Cruised the rest of the way into T2. Time 2:32. 22MPH.

T2- strip down. Load up. That’s it. Now we race.

Run-
Simple.  Negative split.  Run like hell.  Pick them off.

I came FLYING out of T2 like I was shot out of a cannon.  I was a little too amped.   About a 1/2 mile in I had already caught one guy.  Mile 1 — 5:48.

Ummmmmmmm.  Robbie. Cool it.  You’re not Crowie.  Relax unless you wanna do a 10k recovery walk back to the finish.  I still had 12 miles to go and plenty of time to catch people.

Pace slowed to a 6:40 for mile 2.  Another one bit the dust.  I passed 1 guy in my age group every mile for the first 5 miles.  I was feeling solid.  Smooth.  Like a runner.  The rain began to fall and helped cool me off.  Every time I would come up behind someone I’d make an effort to pick it up and blow past them.   Bye.  Break them.  Leave them with no inclination they could stay with me.  The pass was permanent.  The one on your bike was not.  As I rounded out of the park I was done seeing people in front of me.  I couldn’t see anyone to catch.  I was also creeping towards my “edge.”

The first 2 miles were a mistake.  I went to fast. Legs were hardening.  Pace was slowing .  Body was heating up.  I was on the edge.  I hit about mile 7 and it became “you can hold this “feeling” for 6 more miles.”  Had no idea of my pace, but figured I could teeter on the edge for that long.

In a focused haze I mustered a few hand signaled “Hey, thanks,” to friends as they passed.  Remembering some.  Not others.   I was red lining.  Came around a corner and saw Allie, and remember her saying “finish.”  That’s what I was going to do.  She also informed me later that it looked like I had fallen on my face when she saw me because of how red my face was.

Miles 10-13 were a blur.  A lot of the same.  I wanted to walk so bad.  I looked at my watch and new getting in under 4:40 was a shot.  I’ve done this GCT so many times so I knew the run course was long.  So I couldn’t go by pace, time, calculations.  I just had to go.  I was hurting bad. I turned the corner down S. Thomas for the home stretch.  I could see the finish line. I was still a ways away. 500-600 meters maybe.  Looked at my watch. 4:47…. Not going to lie.  For a moment I thought “it’s long.  So of you just cruise it in no shame in not going under 4:40. ”  No.  Not today.  The old me would’ve taken that route.  But I’ve changed. It was go for broke. Empty the tank.  All of it.  Head down and give it hell.  Fall over the edge.  I sprinted with all I had.  I crossed the line. 4:39:52………. My hands on my knees.  Legs wobbling.  Chills from overheating.  Red faced.  Tank emptied.  I couldn’t quite muster a physical smile but was smiling inside.

1:33:56 for 13.41 miles  to finish. I was helped out of the finishing chute where I was asked if I needed to go to the medical tent. “No mam. I always look this bad when I empty the tank. ” I was happy with my time but more so bc I wasnt so afraid to fail that I didn’t give myself the opportunity to win. I don’t mean “win” an award or getting 1st place. Giving 100% of your effort now matter the time is a win. I gave it all I had. I left every ounce of the athlete I brought to GCT on that course. Now. Recover. Reload. Do it again at Kansas 70.3 in June.970580_453266051430873_734089047_n

GCT STATS
26 overall
Swim- 10 OV
Only out swam by 2 people in front of me and I ran faster than both

Run- 13 OV
Of the 13 that beat me. I out swam them all by more than 2:00

Sending the Kids Off to Gulf Coast

Hopefully they are sleeping as I write this, but some of my training buddies and our coach will soon be running into the Gulf of Mexico waves to begin their 70.3 mile trek around Panama City.  I really wish I was there for support, but work and races the last two weeks have my body craving a couple days of relaxation.

Are you really asking that?
Are you really asking that?

Jim is the one who got me into running and subsequently triathlon.  He was incredibly patient at the start.  Showing up night after night to drag me along as I trained for my first 5k.  He then sacrificed his time by pacing me in that first race.  It took me a long time to realize how important his attention was, but eventually I realized I owe him for helping me turn around my life.

This isn’t his first time at Gulf Coast, but he’s been struggling with a foot injury and as of Wednesday night he was a little uneasy about this race.  His best event is running and he just hasn’t been able to put in the time.  But, we have trained an awful lot since January and there is no doubt in my mind he is ready.  He’s a competitor.  He’s a gamer.  When the gun goes off, he will lose himself in the moment and I predict swim and bike will be just what the doctor ordered for that foot.  By the time he hits the run his adrenaline will be full on and his legs nice and warm for the run.  He loves this race and it will love him back.

I met Robbie at the Calypso Cafe in East Nashville.  He was sitting at the table alone and I was Robbie Still 2the first of the Fab 5 to show up.   I sat across from him and felt a little strange making small talk about Ironman.  Truth was, I didn’t know shit about shit, but I have always had confidence in my athletic ability and Robbie sensed that.

He has pushed me beyond anything I could have imagined.  His workout schedule in the beginning was far more than I was ready for, but I honestly believed (or hoped) he was just testing our limits.

He has answered 100’s of questions in the last 5 months and there may be 1000 more by the time we get to Wisconsin.  He has been patient, tough, and inspiring at once.

He came with me to Rev 3 in Knoxville last weekend and having that time with a coach who has been in the thick of triathlon so long is invaluable.  He stood in the rain for 3 hours and I’m pretty sure he spent a good chunk of it thinking about his strategy for Gulf Coast.

I’m not sure what he expected from me that day, but his coaching and my work showed up.  In some way I was hoping my performance inspired him and would in turn give him a little boost for his race.  He’s an athlete and a competitor whose toed the line many times and I sense a new intensity about to bust out.  I want success for my coach as much as he wants it for me.

+1
+1

Allison was there with Jim and I when I started my Couch to 5k program.  It was obvious she loved to run and often did in pain.  She had a toughness about her that I recognized immediately.

When the Fab 5 started talking Ironman last year, she started talking Half.  She did a sprint, and that was the end of it until we started training in January.  She was right there with us on our 4 hour spins and jumping off the bike to join us for the runs.  She was doing our full training in preparation for her half.  I kept thinking she might back it down, but she never did.

In about 7 hours, she will find jump in the water and swim in her beloved ocean.  I know there is a good chance she is awake as I write this.  Tossing and turning much like I did before my race last weekend.  Questioning whether or not she is ready.  But she is, and the other day, I sent her this note:

Hey…. I’ve been thinking about you and your race. I think it’s important for you to realize that you’re ready. It is very hard to recognize when you are so close to it, but you have come a LONG ways since we first met. You have put in the work. This race is now all in your mind. You have to believe in yourself and let go of the doubt. Your biggest goal for this race is to relax. A relaxed athlete is a stronger athlete. Spin your arms in the water. Spin your legs on the bike and run. Don’t resist. Just let it flow. Your endurance is there. Your strength is there. The allergies will not bother you once you start moving. Plus, you will be in your comfort zone. The ocean. It is a place you love and want to be. By far the biggest thing I have to work on is “letting the race happen.” This doesn’t mean you aren’t racing… it just means you can’t finish until you get to the end. The rest is just movement. Being focused and in the moment. Not worrying about what could go wrong, but being focused on what is going right. Be mentally tough, but don’t let your mind take control of your soul. Trust that you will know what to do when you face decisions on the course. Play the race through in your head, but always successfully. Stay calm, stay focused, and enjoy one of the most amazing experiences you can have.

Allison is ready.  Jim’s Ready.  Robbie’s ready.  The hard part is over, now it’s time to let those long hours in the pool, on the bike, and in running shoes pay off.  I will be watching closely from a distance and likely be more nervous than them.  It’s hard watching your kids grow up, but sometimes you have to let them swim in the deep end by themselves.

Spin Class Number 2

Our last spin class, Kevin almost got shanked by a female inmate.  Today, was a little more under control.

In a stroke of miracle, I showed up with my video camera at 7:25 am today and Jim was digging hard in his new Crushing Iron shirt which will help us promote the documentary along the way.  They turned out great and were designed and produced by my old business partner, Brian, at Creative Pig Minds Design, in Rockford, IL.  He also owns a vegan brew pub (for which I made the video).  jim2spincishirtThe plan was to start at 7, ride an hour, then do the spin class.  I started peddling at 7:30.

For the second week in a row we were joined by Allison, who has taken over the official “plus one” role if one of the Fab Five is missing.  Today, she filled in for Mark and crushed two hours on the bike before joining us on the 20 minute run.allistillspin

She really digs Florida and is training for the Gulf Coast Triathlon in May.   I am still pondering this race, mainly do to the potentially harrowing swim in the gulf.

Daniel is nearly 100% after a mid-foot injury that sidelined him for a couple weeks.  He’s also leading the Country Music Marathon training group for the East Nasties, so homey has a lot on his mind as can be seen in this revealing photo.  danielspinclassyellowshirtIf there were an award for most dedicated early season performer, it would likely go to Kevin.  He has been steadfast on his workouts and is clearly determined to develop his bike skills.  I spent half the spin class scoping out the instructor while Kevin hammered hard and focused with an intensely spiritual approach to his technique (notice the interlocking fingers).  kevinspinbikeAfter the bike, we trekked out into one of Nashville’s most impressive wild-dog neighborhoods.  Every damn house on the first block seemed to have big ass dogs chained by cruise ship docking chains laying around on the porch.  But, they all seemed very nice.

The 20 minute run was nice and easy, I think around a 9:15 pace, and it was very clear to me that my leg strength has increased dramatically.  Each step was a little heavy, but the typical aches and pains associated with weak knees, quads, and ankles seems to be going away.  I guess sleeping in is working!

Daniel, Kevin, and Jim took their sweet time changing while Allison and I sat in the midst of a daycare rally for kids who drink a lot of coffee.  The sweat dried on our crusty bodies and we critiqued people’s workouts.  Eventually they walked down the hall looking like a GQ ad in motion and I thought to myself, these guys are prematurely celebrating their stardom from the soon-to-be-famous Crushing Iron documentary.  The sea of children parted and 3 of the Fab 5 casually grabbed a bottled water and led us down the road to stuff our faces at the Pied Piper.

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