-Matt Rodgers
===============
Race Report - Matthew Sessions
Full Rev3 Cedar PointSunday, September 9, 2012
Cedar Point Amusement Park
Sandusky, Ohio on the southwest shore of Lake Erie between Detroit and Cleveland
Pre-Race
I
flew Frontier Airlines as they are on the only domestic carrier to accept
hard-shell bike boxes as a standard luggage (no b.s. $175 United Airlines fees). For just a few $$$ extra at time of booking,
you can upgrade to priority seating & boarding, in-flight DirectTV, and two
checked bags R/T…a no-brainer.
SFO/DEN/CAK
on Thursday and stayed with my Mom and step-Father for the weekend in Cleveland
(Hilary and the kids stayed home with the school year just starting). Bike box made it fine but getting it into the
‘full size’ rental car took a bit of origami.
Successfully assembled the bike Thursday night which is a bit stressful
but fun. Friday I worked remotely and
hoped to get a light Lake Erie swim and 5m ride but a massive late afternoon
thunderstorm ended those plans. Did not
want to swim in the Lake just after a rain or take my bike puddle-hopping. My Mom joined me Saturday to drive the hour
to Cedar Point for the mandatory bike drop / athlete check in / athlete meeting. The process was quick and efficient. Friday night’s storm brought clear skies &
cooler temps but 30-40 knot winds on Saturday.
Summer humidity was gone but washed out were the new Olympic distance
and KidsTri events. The good news is we
had another 18 hours for the High pressure system to blow through.
Race Morning
Went
to bed at 9pm; fell asleep about 1:30a; alarm woke me up at 3:45a. After three days of huge meals and no
exercise, my stomach felt like sh*t. I
could barely eat my planned pre-race meal of yogurt with granola & fruit;
toasted bagel w/honey; a glass of OJ; and lots of water. Showered, shaved, and then drove to C.P. at
4:40a with Eminem blaring in my iPod. I
decided to stop force-feeding myself and just relax and get focused. Sipped some more water and my crap stomach eventually
progressed to just pre-race butterflies.
My mood was a bit negative as I dropped off my Transition and Special
Needs bags – thought that was a good sign.
Swim – 2.4 miles
·
2.5x triangle shaped course on Lake Erie
·
73 degree water - didn’t need a wetsuit but everyone
was wearing them· 1:12 chip time
· 6th of 48 in Age Group
· 43rd of 359 overall
I
walked in darkness down the beach at 0635 and was hoping the sun would rise
soon. Good news was Lake Erie was
completely tranquil and the air temp was about 10 degrees cooler than the
water.
The
0705 mass start was about 50 yards offshore on a knee-deep sand bar. To entertain those on shore, it was a running
start…i.e. we ran in waist deep water / dolphin dove the first 50 yards of the
swim. Mark1 seemed WAY far out and the
sun was just rising. Fortunately a Coast
Guard vessel had a flashing strobe at Mark1 which helped my spotting. Mark1 was located at a 45-degree angle to the
left – not straight out. Utilizing my
sailing skills and basic geometry, I walked about 75 yards to the left of all
the starters pre-start. I was the most
left on the starting line by 10+ yards.
This was great as I sight/breath right and it was the shortest route. I swam solo the first 75% of the leg, and
best of all, my stomach was settling too as the blood started to pump for the
first time in days. The next five legs
were just a matter of settling into a groove and thinking about the few
hundred-thousand yards I’ve swum with North Bay
Aquatics Masters. I had
some short-lived demons around Leg 4 of 6 thinking that 2.4m of continuous
swimming is indeed pretty long. Those
thoughts went away when I could see a stream of fellow swimmers already a leg
behind me. I knew I was doing great and
not ‘burning any of my pack of matches’.
Running up the beach at the swim exit was sweet with a few hundred
cheering spectators.
Bike – 112 miles
·
Course – First ~17 miles southeast away from
Lake Erie to rural (and gorgeous) OH farm country; 2 x 39 mile loop; then
return to C.P.
·
Roads were open to traffic but every single
intersection with a Stop or traffic light was shut down for our
right-of-way. H/T to the local &
state police!· 6:18 chip-time (17.7mph). Strava riding time of 6:11. http://app.strava.com/rides/21520431
· Fell from 6th to 20th in Age Group; 43 to 140 overall
I
took my time in T1 (8:24) and lost 23 overall spots from entrance to exit. Sprinting T1 was not in the plan. I changed from full swim clothes to full bike
clothes…even took the time to de-sand my feet, apply sunblock, drink some
water, etc. I wasn’t going to win the
race in T1 but rushing could cost me dearly.
I was definitely heading into the unknown for the rest of the race (this
was my first century ride in 3+ years). The first five miles were focused on lowering
my HR from the high-150’s. This was the
first time in the race when I started talking to myself – not in my head – but
aloud. I find it much more effective when
the ears hear it. My first words on the
bike were, ‘Slow-the-fuck-down-and-relax!’
Miles
0-45’ish were consistent…I got dropped by fancy TT bikes. No worries I kept reminding myself…the race
does not start until M80 of the bike, ‘Stick to the plan’. And it was good to know each of them suck at
swimming.
I
braked at the 22M Aid station as I did not want to ride further with a full
bladder. Everything came out clear (TMI
but relevant). When I came back to the
bike 90 seconds later, my new 3-hour bottle of Perpetuem had been
topped off as well as bottle #2 with plain water…these volunteers rocked. Around the corner, the locals were going
crazy as we raced through their town square (remember the vuvuzelas at the last
World Cup?). I left Milan, Ohio with an
ear-to-ear grin.
Racing
an IM bike leg for the first time was interesting. I noticed how quiet the race is…most athletes
were not too chatty. A few words
here-and-there but it was usually me initiating. After hearing horror stories of 2,000+
drafting cyclists at WTC events, it was great to not see a single cheater all
day. Everyone was respectful and stuck
to the rules. Despite the relatively
small field, a minute did not seem to go by all day when I was not being passed
or passing. One female athlete and I
passed each other about 20X - it became humorous by the end. On the flat rural roads of Ohio, it was great
to shift gears often (of speed & HR)…a few minutes to wind up the HR to
mid-130’s followed by a few minutes to pace back down.
My 3rd of 4 stops was at the 71M Aid station. I pulled up to a volunteer to help me to make my 2nd and final 3-hour bottle of Perpetuem. In about 2 minutes, I learned that Roxy had just lost 120lbs with more to go and training for a 5K run. I told her what she is doing in life is a 10X greater accomplishment than anything I was doing. We High-5’d and I told her that I was going to keep giving my best today on her behalf. Keep focused Roxy…
My
nutrition plan was working well – fantastic actually. Perfect weather conditions of a mild tailwind
for the first 40 miles, 70 degree air temp, no humidity, high clouds, and miles
of cornfields kept me in a good mood. I
had a small pouch of Advil, salt tablets, Gas-X, and Tumms that I consumed on a
consistent manner…no panicking of being behind the nutrition curve. Around 75M, I did exactly what no-one should
do on an IM race day - I experimented with new nutrition. The Perpetuem was getting boring and my
stomach was only about 75% so I decide to start switching over to EFS Liquid
Shot. It was going to be my run
nutrition and I figured now was the time to see how the vanilla flavored gel
would absorb. Within miles, my stomach
bounced back from 75% to 95%. About M95
I dumped the last of my Perpetuem and switched over to just EFS + Water at the
prescribed dosages.
Another
interesting thing happened starting around 80M - The Race Started. I had become the passer and not the passee. Around me hips were starting to rock and
shoulders drop. $7,500 TT bikes were
going backwards. Some who blew by me at
M15 were now in my sights. The best part
is that I was not doing anything different…’keep it up’.
Overall,
my feared demons never really came out on the bike leg. The wheels rolled (SRAM S80 - thank you Dr.
Mark!) and miles clicked along better than planned. The headwinds back to T2 for the last 15
miles died too. In the last five miles,
I passed at least ten riders. At M109.5,
I kicked it up to 21mph – to get off my bike sooner as century rides are really long. At 1450 (10 minutes ahead of schedule) I pulled
around the last corner going into T2 and stated, ‘I feel amazing…bring it’.
Run – 26.2M marathon
·
Double 13.1M loop into Sandusky
·
Aid stations every mile with water, ice, bars,
Gatorade, pretzels, etc. and great volunteers· 4:47 chip time
· Strava run time of 4:41 http://app.strava.com/runs/21520421
· Total non-run time was therefore ~6 minutes for two toilet breaks & two band-aid stops
My
T1 plan was the same for T2 - full change from bike gear to running gear which
took 7:30. Yes – I just lost nine more
people here.
I
started the run course in a great mood.
I had run most of the course about six weeks prior so I knew it was
going to be pancake-flat. The run course
into Sandusky is a mix of abandoned factories, a nice waterfront on Sandusky
Bay, sailboats in new marinas, and a rust-belt town of locals who were
gracious, welcoming, and a bit confused why any human would want 140.6 miles of
continuous exercise.
The
first 10m or so could not have gone better.
As planned, I ran to each aid station and then walked 25-50 yards to
take in the EFS shot + water; topped off by a few ice chips. Where the bike course was quiet and focused,
the overlapping runners in the Half & Full distance courses were mostly
upbeat…the end is in sight and it’s time to celebrate making it this far.
At M12, the usual toe blisters came on very fast. I thought I had some Band-Aids in my belt but no luck. Fortunately I put one blister Band-Aid in my Special Needs Run bag along with a new 5oz EFS flask which I grabbed just a mile later. Hit the mid-run mark at about 2:05-2:10 – sweet.
By
M17, I had moved up from 149th overall to 113. Knee was starting to hurt but I was already
2/3’s of the way done with the run. Bad
news is I still had a 1/3 of a Marathon to go and the pain factor on my left
knee jumped quickly. Coincidentally
(not!) this distance was about 10% longer than I have ever run in my life. I thought of the term ‘Hurt Locker’ and
realized I had just become the poster-child.
My great race was crumbling along with dreams of a 12:00 Finish. The splits recorded by Strava confirmed
it…10:53 (M16), 12:06 (M17), 12:20 (M19), 13:56 (M20 & 21 each). Eating some food for the first time of the
day – pretzels – seemed to help.
I
am going to finish – but this really hurts. Athletes I passed in the first 15 miles were
trotting away. Speed walking was an
instant solution for the pain. (I found
out post-race that I was suffering from a very tight IT band on my left
knee for the first time in my life).
I
was literally shrieking aloud in pain but had to continue. Run ten race cones; walk three. Run two telephone poles, walk a minute. I had to play games with my left knee as I
was not going to let a great day die at M135.
The pace improved for the last few miles but the pain did not –
13:50…12:50…11:50 splits. I can see the
finish line, ‘keep going’.
The
last full mile at 10:30 pace was just a game with some athletes near me…I
wanted the finish chute for myself to savor the moment. A marathon is 26.2M but it ended for me around
M26.0. The last few hundred yards were a
pain-free dance ten feet off the ground.
Spectators cheered, music blared, and here was the finish line. Tears were choked back as I-DID-IT!!!
The Finish – 12:35 race time
·
20th of 48 in Male 40-44 age group
·
131 of 359 overall· http://rev3tri.com/cedar-point/2012-results/
I
sat down immediately after finishing and was given an ice wrap for my left
knee. My pre-race photo was plastered on
the jumbo-tron and it was awesome to have my Mom and step-Father Dave right
there. Bad news is Mom ‘forgot her
camera in the car…’ WTF? Don’t make me do this again so it can be properly
documented…
The
Race Staff offered to help me in any way but I felt great. It was as much fun to watch others finish
behind me as my own finish…we did it together and everyone was in a great
mood. I had an ear-to-ear grin. WOW!
I
took my time to hobble over to Transition and find my cell phone. Just as I reached into my backpack, the phone
was ringing and it was Hilary and the kids.
We were thrilled to connect.
Hilary reminded me of the Nice, France McDonald’s adjacent to the Finish
of Ironman France packed with athletes…she said I deserve that too. Volunteers helped me carry my gear the few
hundred yards to my car (in a very short lived downpour) and then it was
straight to McD’s for the first time in 5+ years. A Big Mac, cheeseburger, and large fries
never tasted so good. It got even better
to wash it down with a 24oz can of Corona from the next gas station. I’m not sure if open containers are legal in
Ohio but talking away on the phone is while driving. The next hour was celebration calls to family
& friends – and still smiling.
Pro’s & Con’s
·
Great location, weather, and overall event
organization by Rev3. Volunteers were
fantastic
·
Reasonable entry fee, easy travel logistics,
affordable housing options if required· Safe swim start with less than 400 athletes on the line
· Super flat bike & run course
· As much as they tried to rally the spectators, blast great music and emcee, the Finish Line was low-key…IM events have them on this element. If the Finish line was 200 yards earlier, it may attract some of the thousands of Cedar Point visitors who may hang out and get sucked into the celebration. Instead, the finish area was tucked around the corner a few yards out-of-sight…apparently too far for your average park goer to investigate
· Post-race food provided by C.P. sucked…was widely agreed to be inedible
· Best wheel-based bike racking in Transition – every athlete gets a reserved spot with name. Transition volunteers took bike security very serious
· Easy check-in, nice sponsor village w/merchandise store. Cool jumbotron with my photo, name, and hometown for all to see at Finish.
· I would HIGHLY recommend Rev3 to anyone looking to do a Half or Full Ironman distance race. We need to support non-WTC events to make the sport better. Rev3 C.P. is great for veterans to chase a PR but manageable for under-trained athletes like myself.
Just
like you don’t decide one Tuesday to become a vegan monk, I never set a goal to
become an Ironman. These decisions and
fate just evolved over a long period. I am not that great of an athlete. I’m mediocre at three sports and stubborn. My failed attempt at Ironman France 2011
ended up with significant physical pain and emotional scars. I think I succeeded just a year later by
being more mentally open, less rigid on training, taking the time to learn
race-day nutrition, and a lot of luck staying injury free. I believe anyone can do this with the
proper commitment.
I
could thank about fifty of you but the ones that matter most are Hilary,
Alexandra, and Nicholas. To achieve
these goals, a lot of selfish decisions have to be made. I love them more than anything in life and
owe my family a lot of makeup parenting.
I don’t know if I’ll ever get back to this fitness level again but I’ve
got a lifetime of memories to savor.
Thank
you for motivating me to the Finish.
Matthew
SessionsMill Valley, CA
mcsessions@gmail.com
3 comments:
Matthew - Congratulations and thanks for sharing the great race report. Both you and Matt have been truly inspiring age groupers. I used to go to Cedar Point when I was kid before the amusement park was there - fond memories.
Matthew,
Congrats again. Thanks for sharing experience with us!
DV
Fabulous race report - thanks for sharing!!
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