Ironman Lake Placid Race Report
Well it is the early morning after the big day and this is always a time of reflection about the months of work that I put into the pursuit of finishing an ironman. Good news, I completed IMLP as it is known. Better news, I achieved a personal best at 11:33:28 by 8 minutes over Ironman Canada. Both of these courses are considered to be tough by Ironman standards and so I believe this truly is a pb. In rough terms, I had a 1:15 swim, a 5:33 bike and a 4:33 run – the rest was spent resting (as Stew McGuire would say) in transition.
Each time I race one of these events, I always come away humbled. The effort of training never seems to be quite enough to prepare me for the challenges that will exist out on the race course. Yesterday was no different. Here is the backdrop to my day.
The good news is that I got to race day without any major injuries, training went largely according to plan, a lot of time spent on the bike and running, far less so this time around on the swim. If anything remains clear, i love riding my bike more than I love running. Having said that, one of the things that I implemented in my training was running to work in order to fit it into my day. This will probably remain a part of regiment post ironman training. A great byproduct of this craziness.
For race week, Maddie and Dianne joined me for the journey down to Lake Placid, we left early on thursday morning and made the 7 hour trip to our hotel. A great place for anyone planning on attending this race – Whiteface Lodge, pricey but they take great care of you. This was supposed to be a mini vacation for Maddie and Dianne, of course always a challenge when your dad/husband is preparing for his race. We managed to get in a number of activities around my preparation, all captured by my daughter’s list.
Friday morning I wandered down to the lake to get a swim in. The air temp was 8 celsius, the water temp much better at about 20, so lots of steam coming off of the lake at 6:30 in the morning. At placid there is an underwater buoy line that marks the race course, negating the need for sighting. Having said this, no doubt that this will be a busy place on race day. I got in a good warm up swim, putting in about 2km, feeling very good. Following the swim, I went back to the hotel and had a great breakfast buffet. The plan for the rest of the day was a trip to the bobsled run (Dianne hurtled down the course in 43 seconds – not bad for $70!!) and then a reconnaissance of the bike course and then fit in some of Maddie’s activities (shopping ). For the bike course, I had heard that the descent into Keane was ripping fast but that the road could be quite treacherous, bumping and grinding you all the way down. While I am very confident in my own bike handling skills, it is always a worry about those around you not holding their line, particularly if the wind is up or the ground is wet, the latter was fully expected. I took the descent as quickly as was reasonable given I had to hug the right side of the road, on race day we would be given three lanes to work with, making the descent much better. After this segment, I jumped back into the car and we drove the rest of the route to mile 40. This is the point at which the climbing back into Lake Placid begins. I wanted to get a good sense of how I would be managing my watts. My goal was not to push through 280-290watts for any sustained period. During this test climb, I found I was able to maintain a reasonable speed, while aero and not pushing the watts beyond my target range. Check. During the rest of the day, Maddie and I went fishing at the little pond they have out back, she swam in the pool and then we made smores over the campfire.
Saturday morning I went out for a nice run around Mirror Lake. As has been the case since Welland, I have been running 2kms and then taking a 1 min break. My plan in IM was to run 5:30-5:45/km and then have the rest after 2 sessions, believing that I could manage to convince myself that 2 x 1km segments were easily achieved. Everything felt good, no stress. The rest of the day we used to check the bike in, do some fishing with Maddie, some more shopping, we watched a movie in the cinema at the hotel and even used their bowling alley – as I said, a great place to stay. For the bike check-in, I was not thinking and instead of putting my bike and run stuff in a plastic bag within the transition bag to keep everything dry (given all of the weather reports said rain was a given over night and on race day), i simply put small holes in the bottom of each bag to allow the water to drain out. We had an early dinner in Saranac, decent family italian restaurant, ate whole wheat penne and chicken. Felt good on race day eve.
Sunday morning – I had set the alarm for 4:15am and a wakeup call for 4:30, didnt need either as I was up at 4am. Had my usual breakfast of Vector, some OJ, banana, and some coffee and then got regular. Given there was no rain over night, I put out some plastic bags in order to do what I should have done yesterday and repack my transition bags when I got there this morning. Weather reports still were suggesting that at least 2-3 hours of the race were going to be done in the rain. I gathered Maddie and Dianne and we drove the back route to the race site that we had carefully plotted out and found a parking spot 5 minutes from transition. At this point, despite being a 3 time ironman, I was to prove that i am still an amateur. I got to my bike and pumped up my tires. Good news was that the tubes didn’t blow during the heat of Saturday (wasn’t likely but is always possible – right Stew). I filled my aero bottle with my eload+carb mixture and put my concentrated bottle (equivalent of 4 bottles once mixed with more water – a first time experiment for me) on the bike. As I walked back through transition taking note of entries and exits again, I realized that I didn’t have the plastic bags with me – stupid! Worse still, I had left my special needs bags (for the bike and run) at the hotel – stupider! Oh well, I have not used the special needs in the past, except in Austria and that was a disaster. Having said that, I did not have enough room on the bike to carry all that I wanted (nor do you want to lug the weight around) so I had planned to pick up round 2 of nutrition at the special needs. This time i had made PBJ on Hawaiian bread rolls (great tasting and 240 cals for each one), other than at the Tour of California, I had not raced with these but thought they would break the sugary gel load.
I left transition and found Dianne and Maddie out on the road, after being body marked, I put on some sunscreen, not expecting to need it, but not wanting to be burned if the weather man was totally wrong – and then waited. Dianne had suggested that she might go to the hotel and pick up the special needs bags and drop them off, which would solve my problem. I told her not to worry about it. The excitement was building, the swim area was a throng of athletes and spectators.
The swim:
I got into the water about 10 mins before the pros started, simply to get wet and ensure my goggles were sealing – check. For the second race since announcing changes, this was going to be a “time trial” start where they would send us out in waves of 100 or so, self seeded by time. I put myself at the back of the 1:10 group, feeling that this would be a quick time but doable. While standing there Jodie Ferneyhough joined me, funny in the mass of 2500 athletes, the two BCCers were going to start together. At 6:30 they sang the national anthem and everything became real, ironman 4 was about to begin. Within about 10 minutes we were into the water, the kicking, shoving and slapping began in earnest. While much more manageable than the mass starts that have been my Ironman experience till now, there was still lots of action. Frankly I have to say, the women are the most aggressive in the water, as everytime I was thrashed by kicking, I would look up to find a pink cap in front of me. In any event, the swim went reasonably well, loop 1 had a couple of occasions where it bunched up and it was difficult to find open water. I was staying relatively close to the underwater line, which likely meant I was going to be in for more contact as people fought for this line. I came out of the water after the first loop in a very tidy time of 35 minutes, faster than projected. The second loop was a little less chaotic and this time I wasn’t getting on as many feet as I did on the first lap. As a result this cost me about 5 minutes of additional time – i probably also settled in a little bit more. I always think of the swim as the mere price of entry to completing an ironman, do it fast if you can, but just get it done. Official time out of the water 1:15, this put me 121st in my age group and 969th overall, clearly not Michael Phelps!
Transition:
coming out of the water, they had the wetsuit strippers available immediately, so quickly that I hadn’t actually unzipped myself. After a little bit of wrestling, they finally got me out of my wetsuit and I started the 300m jog to get my bike. As I ran down the chute, I was looking for Dianne and Maddie in the hordes of people hoping I would see them before leaving for the next couple of hours and they didnt disappoint, standing right agains the barricades before transition. I stopped and gave both a hug and kiss – now I was on two round two. In my mind, my strongest part of the event, but this year I saw it as simply the precursor to the marathon – I wanted to have the legs to complete a reasonable IM marathon. Nutrition – 1 gel and half bottle of water
The Bike (2 loop course):
I changed with reasonable speed but nothing earth shattering. I decided to ride with a vest and arm warmers, I used the former to carry food and I probably didn’t really need the latter, but they weren’t a bother. As I came out of transition on the bike it started spitting ensuring that a more conservative approach to the ride was in order. There is an immediate quick short descent out of transition with bales of hay at the bottom of a sweeping left turn. The idea was not to HIT THE BALES OF HAY! check. As I got past this dicey little part, I started to take inventory of how I was feeling. The stomach was good, the legs felt strong, the butt felt good and my mindset was good. I then took stock of my electronics. I had put my old garmin 310xt on the bike with the sole purpose of showing me my watt output. My 910xt was on my wrist, to take me through all 3 events in triathlon mode. Everything had worked yesterday like a charm, and so there was a bit of panic when I saw that the watt screen on the 310 showed nothing! Hmmmm, no issue, maybe it just hadnt picked up the power stages meter yet. So as I was riding, i began scrolling through the screens in order to pair the power meter with the 310. Hit the “pair the device” button, here the beep that pairing is successful – great, I can ride with power again – NOT. The screen was blank. No issue, maybe it is just the 310 acting up, it is why bought the 910 in the first place. Scroll through the screens, no power. Ok, pair the device, get the beep, no power!! WTF, I have done all my training with the express purpose of riding this course to a prescribed watt level. I went through last minute jumps through hoops to change over my crank so that I could use my stages crank with my race wheels instead of my power tap on my training wheel. AND NOW Nothing is working. Ok settle down, this isn’t my first rodeo, I will ride by heart rate, speed and perceived effort. I had expected that my 235 watts planned output should have delivered a race time of 5:20-5:30 if I was able to maximize my aero position. Now I will never know. For me the bike is fun, I am able to reel in rider after rider, rarely giving up position to anyone and this was while keeping myself under control. The first 45 minutes on the bike, give you the opportunity to start the nutrition process given there is some modest climbing but nothing to challenging. The descent into Keene would be great fun on most days but with the rain, I put more caution into the ride, although still hit 71.4km/h on this descent with an average speed that was closer to 60km/h. What I didnt realize given we drove the next part of the course was that once we “bottomed” at Keene, the course still descended modestly, allowing me to maintain 40+km/h with a heartrate of 140-145, everything in check. I took the opportunity to take in some PBJ, a gel and taking on liquids. Until we get past Jay (there is an out and back there) the course is relatively flat and boring, turn the pedals, take in nutrition, pee if you can and get ready for the climbing that will be the last third of the course on this lap. The climb to Wilmington is probably steeper than the climbs back up to the race start. I focused on just providing a steady output, if I had power, my guess is should have said 280-290 watts, but I will never know. Past the short out and back in Wilmington, we begin the climb of 16 miles into Placid. The general bias is an unrelenting move up with probably 2-3% grade until you get to the 3 climbs within the climb – Mama Bear, baby bear and the Papa Bear. Here people line the climbs cheering you on. Here you climb from 300m to 600m in about 20km. Again I just kept my focus and didn’t get carried away trying to reel people in. Once past the climbing it is a fast 5km run into placid itself with people lining the course screaming at you. As I rounded the last corner I pulled over to pick up my special needs bag and get my next two PBJs. Dianne had taken me for my word, they didn’t have my bag, oh well, I will survive! Lap 2 was much the same as Lap 1, only this time there were a lot fewer riders on the road. While I wasn’t focused on time, I knew my pacing would be putting my in the top 20% of riders meaning I was now catching or distancing myself from those who came out of the water ahead of me. My first lap took about 2 hours 40 minutes. As I came through the start area, I wondered where I would see Dianne and Maddie and I didnt have to wait long, as I rounded the first corner past the start area, there was Dianne with her signs screaming at me. I stopped gave her a kiss, and got a slap on the ass from a race official!!! The next 90kms was simple, focus on getting good nutrition and hydration (pee at least once – check), keep the legs turning at a good cadence (no cadence meter – given it is embedded in the stages crank, which wasn’t working) so that they were not exhausted for the run – it was all about setting up for the marathon. I figured my pacing was solid and I could afford to back off a little bit. While my times dropped I felt good coming in off the bike. Total Time 5:33 a good result. I had now moved up to 24th in my age group and 223rd overall, which means that I was 16th in my age group on the bike.
Nutrition had 4 PBJ sandwiches, 5 gels and 5 bottles of eload+carb and 1 bottle of water. Ideally, I would have added 2 more sandwiches.
The Run:
My nemesis, but it was something that I was setting up my entire day to complete. Since my disaster at Welland where I posted a horrific half marathon, I was hell bent to change this experience. In training, I had decided to change from “run for as long as you can” to “run for 2kms then walk for 1 minute.” My goal was to post 5:30min kms which were then followed by 1 min of brisk walking that covered about 110m. If I did this 20 times I would post a marathon of 4 hours – a real achievement in my view. I figured that negative self talk (i hope everyone goes through this!) could be overcome with you can run for 2 kms, then you get to rest. And so my marathon began. As I came out of transition I began looking for Maddie and Dianne and once again they didn’t disappoint. Resplendent in their pink t-shirts with Team Q – 2244 they were waiting for me with big cheers and signs. I stopped for hugs and kisses and off I went. The Lake Placid run course is a fair one except for the last climb into town that you do twice – however, as you leave town the downhill is huge and while on a bike it is a time for massive speed, running can be a challenge. For the next 13 miles I stayed very close to plan, the best start to the marathon of any of my 4 ironmans. I had a bottle of eload+carb in my hand throughout the run and 1 eload gel I took at 40 mins (1 had 1 gel in transition). As I came through the start area to begin my last 13 miles I started to feel some sluggishness and a little lightheadedness, nothing surprising. Dianne and Maddie were there again cheering my on, Dianne told me I was well on plan. I stopped for another round of hugs and kisses and began the descent out of town. On a number of race reports, they talk about how this is where the race really begins and so it was for me. My groin started growling at me at about 24kms, not a good sign. This is where training doesn’t really help you because in training you stop as you don’t want to become seriously injured, only becoming race hardened helps figure out how truly hard you should push. The next 14kms would be nothing more than arguing back and forth with myself about my ability to run, jog, walk quickly, walk slowly, just don’t stop putting one foot in front of the other. On this I can say that except for 1 pee break I delivered. I got myself back to the massive hill climb back into town and while I didnt really know my total elapsed time, I knew I was well past breaking 11 hours and the only thing I had to fight for was my PB at Ironman Canada of 11:41. As I got to the top of the hill, once again my support crew were there for encouragement. Some more hugs and kisses and this time Maddie escorted me by running “along side” me – ok she only had to walk quickly! Dianne told me that she would see me near the finish line. One nasty of IMLP is to take you past the finish line on an out and back of 2 miles before the finish line. There are huge crowds lining the streets yelling out your name and encouraging you to run. I tried but man was it tough to do more than shuffle. The interesting thing is how that all changes with less than a km to go. As I made my way back to the Olympic oval and the finish line, I could see by my position relative to the swim start that I was now less than 1 km to finish. The adrenaline started to kick up and my cadence quickened. By the time I came into the Olympic oval I was running again, with a huge smile on my face, trying to find Dianne and Mads in the crowd. I rounded the final corner, hearing Mike Reilly calling out the names of newly minted ironmen and then I saw them standing right at the barricade, about 50m from the finish line, BIG Smiles – I had done it, Dianne and Maddie were screaming at me, I heard my name Quentin Broad, YOU ARE AN IRONMAN, but I stopped short of the finish to give them another set of hugs and kisses, then crossed the finish line in 11:33:28 with a 4:30 marathon – respectable, but still not first rate.
I finished 47th in my age group of 329 who started (losing 23 positions from when I got off the bike) and 435th overall out of 2,536 competitors.
Post Mortem
Ironman is a humbling experience. Each time I do one of these I am amazed at its ability to bring me to my knees. I always believe that I can do better than what I achieved never quite believing that I left everything i had on the course. I am not sure whether this is a defence mechanism or the truth. The challenge of ironman is evidenced on race day, but it is all the effort in the 6-8 months leading to the event that is the true challenge. I can thank my family who make all of it possible. They have been very supportive in allowing me to pursue a sport which takes a lot of training time, some of which definitely comes out of family time. I love the sport, the culture, the focus, the energy levels, and the impact it has on my body. Being able to compete in Ironman is a tremendous luxury, thank you Dianne for being an enabler for this part of my life.
Austria
28C / 82F
Sunny
Overall Rank = 1890/2198
Age Group = 40-45
Age Group Rank = 0/
Hello all, well I did it, I completed my first ironman. For those who prefer the readers digest version – it was a real tough day on sunday and while my time of 14:28 was well behind my goal time of 13hrs, (aprox, 1:15 swim, 7:00 bike and 5:40 run plus lots of transition time), it was far better than the alternatives I was contemplating during the race. I came to find out first hand what ironman does to your body and mind. This is the toughest thing I have experienced.
For those looking for the more gruesome details and a parental warning – graphic details, I offer this race report for your entertainment and insight into my experience at ironman austria.
The day looked good as I got up at 430 and started the same routine that I had done for taining, bowl of vector cereal brought from home and chopped fruit and yogurt. The sun was rising, the temp was going to be about 28 and the water was calm. We got to the ironman city and everything was a buzz, I dropped off my special needs bags and then linked up with stewart and christian for pre race pictures and camaraderie (as veterans of ironman they were cool calm and collected, I on the other hand was running a standing Heart rate of 120!!).