Tuesday, August 23, 2011

A bit of history :)

How I became to be a triathlete.


My plan for 2012 is to train and race full time at middle distance triathlon. 
I am quite a newcomer to the tri scene and realise there are aspects I need to improve on,  mainly the swim!!!

To date I've raced 5 duathlons. The biggest which was my first race was the London Duathlon in Richmond park, this being the worlds largest duathlon. Having only owned a bike for 5 months, I set about my training and went to the event with a hope of finishing in the top 100.
When I read the official results and found I had finished 16th overall, I was seriously shocked.
This result got me thinking...... And so over the winter I spent many long hours out on the bike and running trying to improve my transition times and off the bike run times.

When the new year arrived I signed up to the Winter Duathlon series at Dorney lake. These races consisted of 5k run 20k bike 5k run.

My results were:
                         First round 8th overall.
                         Second round 7th overall. 
                         Third round    6th overall.

As the year progressed I decided that I was getting fitter and faster by breaking my training  down into 3  disciplines being - running, cycling and swimming. This gave me another plan....Triathlon....

I entered my first sprint distance Tri and after a hopeless swim managed to pull a large amount of time back on the bike and set a blisteringly fast 5k run time. This got me my first Tri finish of 25th.
Next on my list was a Mass start open water swim, here once again I didn't exit the water with any fast times but once again showed that my bike and run skills could  carry me to the finish in a respectable time. I finished this race 12th overall.

So as you can see I've now got the Bug and am enjoying this kind of racing. 
During February I was lucky enough to meet 2 X Iron man Lanzarote winner Estonian born Ain-Alar Juhanson, I worked with him at the TCR show at Sandown race course. He invited me to his home town to race  the Tri-Star Estonia111 middle distance Triathlon.

I took this offer very seriously and  begun my 6 month training plan. I will be honest - it had its up's and down's but overall I enjoyed the longer rides and runs.

On the Friday 5th August my 29th birthday there was a charity 5k race which I decided to enter as it was for many great causes. To my shock I crossed the line first, feeling 100% fresh and ready for my first long distance Tri.
As Sunday approached I began getting all my kit ready, with lots of help from a good friend Ben Ward, who has done this long distance racing for many years. He helped to calm my nerves, get me ready and reassure me I would be fine.

As I'm sure you will know by now my swim wasn't the best but I was far from last. The race for me begun when I exited the water in a little over 20 minutes. T1 went very smoothly in little over a minute and I was out on the rolling roads of Estonia, the bike course was far from flat but I enjoyed the 100k loop and entered T2 with a bike time of 2:41. As I left T2 I followed the advice my friend and coach had given me: start slow and finish strong. 
The run was a 10k which was also far from flat, but I managed a time of 40:40, very impressive after 101k of racing.

Its wasn't until the awards evening and my name being called did it actually sink in that my first race went very well, I managed 40th overall and 3rd in my Age group claiming Bronze.


1 comment:

  1. hi just read your read your blog and it make me want to get involved so I have descided to take a year out too and travel the world with you and the boy of course handing you bottles (of becks) tending to you bike and supplying you with the bike parts you will need from my trusted supplier also arranging your flights accomodation and nitelife destinations just like a wing man would do x "fin"

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