30 April 2015

Another big step in growing up

In the near future I will have some exciting news to share!  This is if everything goes to plan.  You can't always count on things going to plan.  I am excited to share the news with my growing following!!!

Stay tuned.



21 April 2015

Another Wonderful Trip to Athens, OH!

This time the trip was being made for a half marathon.  Athens, OH holds the longest running marathon in the state of Ohio at 25 years.  It is also probably the most boring marathon in the state of Ohio.  Why did I decide to run this race then?  Two reasons:
1.      I went to Ohio University and try to find any reason to go back and visit my hOUme away from home.  Athens has such a weird mixture of beautiful scenery and crazy college kids getting really drunk.
2.      Athens Marathon is net downhill and a very simple out and back course.  The course starts uptown, goes down a medium grade for a quarter mile, turns onto a bike path and that is the level of complexity.  12 of the 13.1 miles are on the bike path or on a track.  Nice and simple but very boring.

The wonderful wife decided to tag along this time because her family decided to get a cabin in the area.  Most of Saturday was spent driving to the cabin (6.5 hr drive from Asheville).  Once we got there, the M.I.L (mother-in-law) had brats and mac&cheese ready for my consumption.  Yummm!!! Dinner got even better with lamb roast/ gyro combination.  I definitely ate waaayyy too much the day before the race.  Luckily it didn’t cause me any indigestion problems during the race.

Race Day

The gun was scheduled to go off at 0800 and I had a 35 minute drive from the cabin.  I got up at 0530 to eat my typical pre-race meal (beON Cacao powder, Earth Balance Coconut Peanut Butter, Bob’s Red Mill Rolled Oats, and a cup of coffee).  I was worried about the parking situation in Athens because the previous day had a couple fests in the town.  There were a lot of out of town visitors.  I was lucky though and got prime parking pretty close to the finish line.  I jogged up to the starting line where I met with my friend to go through some minor mobility drills.  I wanted to get warmed up but not waste any energy. 




I was pretty happy with my routine and decided to line up 5 minutes until the start.  The front line was looking pretty thin which was good for overall placing but bad for any pacing help or protection from the wind.



Gun went off and the games began.  The first 400m were on slightly uneven bricks so it was crucial to watch your step.  After the first 400m the eventual overall winner passed me and immediately started to get a gap.  Turns out he was a pretty elite marathoner who already qualified for Olympic trials.  His gap continually got larger and larger.  Most of the race I could not see him.  The guy behind me was also 3-4 minutes behind so I ended up doing the whole race by myself.  This was crappy because at times there were some serious winds that I had to battle.  It would have been nice to have someone to work with and block the wind. 


I hit the turnaround just past 38 minutes. This was a little bit slower than I anticipated which meant I needed to turn it up for the next 6 miles.  There was some confusion on mile marker locations and they didn’t end up jiving with the GPS watch.  After the race I heard this same complaint from multiple people.  I think the mile markers were placed short by a half mile.  This was only a problem on the second half of the race.  At about mile 8 my body started to feel the effort.  I started to see the pace drop off and negative thoughts entering my head.  The only way I could fend them off was by lying to myself about how much distance was left.  Breaking up the race into smaller chunks makes it easier for the mind to stay motivated.

I ended up crossing the line 90 seconds slower than goal time of 1:15 but was still very happy with the performance.  My coach and I did not get the ideal training situation because of a couple early season races and some occasional minor injury problems.  Next year I will try to find a half a little bit earlier in spring.  I think March will be a good time to attempt another half marathon.






I want to say thanks for all the support from my family.  It truly amazing how much a support system can do to one’s performance.  I also want to say thank you to my amazing and beautiful wife for putting up with all the hours of training and traveling.  Training on top of a 40 hour work week does not leave a whole lot of time for spending time with the wife.  I finally want to say thank you to my awesome coach Scott Proscia of IREP athletics.  Without his dedication and knowledge I would never be able to race at the level I currently do.  I am pretty sure he has an opening for one or two more athletes if anybody wants an amazing deal on one of the up and coming coaches in the multisport world.


13 April 2015

Race Week - Athen's Half Marathon

To be nervous means to be human.  There is not much we, as humans, can do about getting nervous.  This is just part of our biology.  What we can control is how we channel the nerves.  It is easy to let the nerves make you doubt.  I one thing I try to do is visualize the race and trust my training.  I know I have put in the work to hit the goal times.

Two weeks ago I did a pretty good simulated race workout and it went really well.  It was a 15 mile workout that had 9ish miles at faster than race pace.  The 9ish miles were at the back end of the workout so there was some fatigue buildup in the legs.  Everything went to plan and I even went faster than expected on some splits.  Some valuable lessons were also learned.  One lesson was that I need one more gel earlier into the race.  This will insure that my glycogen levels maintain a consistent level until the end.  The benefit to the Athen's Half Marathon is the first mile is almost completely downhill.  Taking advantage of this downhill will be crucial.  It will be a fine balance of not going out too fast but not wasting the free speed from gravity.  The rest of the race will just be about hitting nutrition and maintaining goal pace.

It looks like there will be good weather for the race too.  So far I have been lucky with my races.  Every race has been sunny with decent temperatures.  Even my race at the end of January was cold but not unbearable like it had been all winter.



I want to put a couple videos up that I think athletes need to watch about running and the mental side to racing.  Let me know what you guys think of these videos.




01 April 2015

Three for Three. One way to Start the season

Who knew that almost exactly one year from a horrible auto accident that I would be winning races?  It is amazing how a lives can change when you realize how fragile it really is.  I would have never have been able to recover so quickly if it wasn't for my amazing wifey-poo and such a supportive family.


I am lucky to continually have the support of so many people.  It is good to know that there are friends and family to house and help in a moments notice.  This past week I had to travel back to Findlay in order to wrap up some National Guard duty.  Northwest Ohio didn't get the memo that spring had arrived.  The temperature only got above 40 degrees one day.  I was lucky enough to have a great friend still living in town that was willing to let me stay the entire week.  I also got to enjoy some home cooked meals by the mother in law.  She spoils me so much when I come to visit.  I can't get enough of that Mac & Cheese... Big weakness of mine.
Snow at the end of March! Not to mention the temp was below 20 F
I ended up having a weekend to split duty days so I headed down to the old college stomping grounds to get in some bike racing.  Traveling to Athens, OH always lifts the spirits because of seeing old friends and reminiscing about good college times.  I can't believe it has already been 2 years since I graduated from Ohio University.

Lake Hope Road Race

Another 10am race start for me.  I am really enjoying these late morning starts because it makes planning meals and travel very easy.  A nice 0730 wake up followed by my usual breakfast of oatmeal, peanut butter, and honey.  I was staying with my good friend Kennedy who decided to tag along and be an unpaid photographer.

We arrived an hour before the start but after registration and bundling up there was about 10 minutes to "warm-up."  This wasn't a huge problem because of the length of the race.  The race started out very slowly.  It was a 2 lap course (so 20 mile lap for the lazy math people).  The first lap took over an hour to complete.  I probably could have left the pack during the first lap but didn't want to risk blowing up at the end of the second lap.  I ended up waiting it out and feeling out the group.  It seemed that nobody really wanted to work (mostly deduced from the speed of first lap).  Cat 4/5 typically are unorganized anyways so with about 16 miles left there was a climb that I casually attacked at the top.  I took an aggressive descent to see if I could get away.  I didn't end up getting away at this point and realized that nobody was going to follow my attack.  So I slid back in the peloton for a minute or so to recover and then went off the front again.  This time I went off hard and didn't look back.  I just hit the pedals hard and kept my eye on my power.  I made sure to make a strong surge for 4 minutes to gain a gap.  I then rode slightly above my FTP for the remainder of the race.  There were some climbs and turns in which I could glance back to gauge my gap.  Every time I turned around I couldn't see the group.  I started to feel that I could win so I continued to hammer it out just to make sure.  

Well... it ended up that my effort was enough to get the win.  I ended up breaking away with 14 miles left in the race and taking the solo victory.







I just want to say thank you to all the people who helped me out this past week, especially Corey over at Qwik Fix for yet again saving my butt with regards to my bike.  I always seem to mess up my bike and he is always there to fix it.  Sucks he doesn't live in Asheville...