Monthly Archives: April 2014

50-Mile Whiskey MTB, Zane Grey 50-mile ultra run, RAGNAR Trail Zion Relay, Pat’s Run, West Duathlon, CO, Rat Race 10K, OH, St. Anthony’s Tri, FL

RAGNAR Trail Zion Relay Marianna Heon 2014What a fun weekend for racing! It gets boring if every race is under calm winds and blue skies 🙂 . We want to especially recognize Darren West, Sheri Anne Nelson, and Marianna Heon. All three raced events held in brutal conditions and did well to finish.

Darren West raced the 50 Mile Whiskey 50 MTB race. The day started with freezing temperatures and hail and only got worse from there. Darren finished in 6:23. The DNF rate was over 50%.

Sheri Anne Nelson took on the Zane Grey 50Mile ultra run. The ZG is known as one of the hardest ultra runs around but the conditions this weekend made it so tough that the organizers had to shorter the 50 miler to a 53K. Sheri Anne finished strong in 8:16 and took 6th female and 57thoverall.

And finally, Marianna Heon ran the RAGNAR Trail Zion Relay in Utah. The picture with this post is from that race. Epic conditions or what?? Her team earned their medals and then some for this race!

Great guts Sheri Anne, Darren, and Marianna!

We also had athletes participate in Pat’s Run here in Tempe, the West Duathlon in Colorado, the Rat Race 10k in Ohio, and the classic, St. Anthony’s in Florida.

Pat’s Run

Steve Sharp – 43:25 – PR by over 11 min!

Sue Ann Perkinson – 41:50 – PR

Justin Roylance – 25:03

Kyrsten Sinema – 37:36

Dana Kennedy – 37:37

Mike Wallace – 26:54

Randy Shivers – 37:18 – PR!

West Duathlon, CO

Dorothy Waterhouse – 1:36 1st in AG – Dorothy is raving IM Boulder later this summer.

Rat Race 10k, OH

Frank Smith – Frank decided not to race a marathon this weekend and instead busted out a 50 min 10K and took 4th in his AG.

St. Anthony’s, FL

Ken Mantay – 3:11 – 13th in the Clydesdale division

Boston Marathon, Kentucky Derby Marathon

Boston MarathonA weekend of marathons!

At the Boston Marathon, six Camelback Coaching athletes crossed the line on an energy-packed and emotional day. Special note goes to CJ Ketterer who was inside of a mile from the finish last year when the bombs went off. He went back got to finish what he started!

CJ Ketterer – 3:50
Laura Miles – 3:52 PR!!
Kyrsten Sinema – 4:48
Lindsey Buckman – 6:26
Dana Kennedy – 5:13
Caroline Sekaquaptewa – 3:24 PR!!

In addition to the Boston Marathon, Frank Smith ran the Kentucky Derby Marathon which finished with one lap of the famous horse racing track! Frank finished in 4:35.

Nice running everyone!!!

 

Marquee, Leadman, Rage, European Triathlon Union Long Course Duathlon World Championships, Alcatraz swim

MarqueeWe have results to report from the European Triathlon Union Long Course Duathlon World Championships in The Netherlands, the Rage Triathlon in Las Vegas, the F.A.S.T. Alcatraz Swim, and yes, Marquee and Leadman.

A huge congratulations to Matt Green,  who represented Great Britain in the ETU Long Course Duathlon World Championships! He finished 15th in his age group!

Between the Marquee, Leadman and Rage Triathlons, we counted 15 podium finishers, including 2 age group winners! By all counts, it was an amazing weekend for everyone.

And remember, no matter how you did, there’s always something—and for most of us, many things—you can take away from the race experience that will help you in the future!

ETU Long Course Duathlon World Championships 15km Run, 60Km Bike, 7.5km run

Matt Green                              15th in AG       3:57

Rage Triathlon – Half Ironman

Colton Van Wagoner 1st 5:43 –  1st in AG

Riley Wardrop 2nd 6:31-  2nd in AG

Colton and Riley are both 18 years old and will be racing IM Texas next month.

Rage Triathlon – Olympic Distance

Cortney Ellish 2nd in AG –  2:54

Leadman

Dwight Lundell 1st in AG –  6:19

Sharon Johnston 2nd in AG –  5:59

Peter Ney 6th in AG –  4:48 –  13th overall!

Patrick Lynch 23rd in AG –  5:55

Marquee Olympic

Justin Roylance 1st in AG –  2:21 –  10th overall!

Kirk Lacko 2nd in AG –  2:28

Sally Borg 3rd in AG –  3:09

Bruce Baldwin 6th in AG –  3:01

Beth Lofquist 10th in AG –  3:14

Susy Signa 11th in AG –  3:23

Dana Price 14th in AG –  3:15

Kevin La Ra 15th in AG –  2:41

Daniel Efune 19th in AG – 2:56

Eric Courtney 25th in AG –  3:06

Tom Thompson 28th in AG –  3:28

Jeremiah Herrman 55th in AG 4:06

Marquee Sprint Para Triathlon

Jacob Pruett 2nd in Category –  1:43 3rd overall! Jake is a 17 year old above the knee amputee who is aiming at racing the National Championships and World Championships in Paratriathlon later this summer!

Marquee Sprint

Gabi Wasserman 2nd in AG – 1:09 5th overall!

Jona Davis 2nd in AG –  1:19 9th overall!

Kathy Stanley 2nd in AG – 1:28

Laura Miles 2nd in AG – 1:28

Preston Miller 2nd in AG –  1:46

Joan McGue 3rd in AG –  1:52

Galina Kelly 4th in AG –  1:27

Dana Kennedy 5th in AG –  1:29

Russell Vanbeber 7th in AG –  1:23

Kyrsten Sinema 13th in AG –  1:50

Michelle Alore 15th in AG –  2:02

Eric Montgomery 16th in AG –  1:30

Steve Sharp 17th in AG –  2:00

Bo Micek 25th in AG –  1:45

F.A.S.T. Alcatraz Swim

John Levy – first time swimming the Alcatraz swim. One of endurance sports great events!

Triathlete Psychology 101: Managing Inflated Race Expectations

finish lineFirst, a few “technical” definitions:

    • The clunker race – a dramatic under-performance based on capabilities predicted from training
    • The mean racea performance at or near, just above or below, a level that training indicates
    • The breakthrough race a performance at a peak level, above and beyond what training indicates

The math doesn’t lie. Think about your races over the last few years. In fact, go grab your logbooks or open whatever you need to find your race results. Please, go do this now. I’ll wait. . . .

Ok, now that you’re back, let’s look at your data. You will see that a small percentage of your races were clunkers. A small percentage were breakthroughs. But the vast majority were means.

Admit that you’re seeing this. Internalize it.

Now my question is this: Why do we view breakthrough races as the expectation, the norm, yet dismiss the clunkers as exceptions or one-offs?

We all do it, right? We have that stellar race, that breakthrough performance, and yet, we expect the next one to be off the charts, too. And the one after that. And the one after that. Giant leap after giant leap. Phenomenal PR after phenomenal PR.

But is this realistic?

The answer, of course, is no.

Most of our races are mean races, or dare I say, average. Oh! That word! Average. We spit it out like cod liver oil.

“How was your race this weekend?”

“It was average. Thanks for asking.”

“Dude, I’m so sorry. That’s rough. Really.”

The average race, which I’ll heretofore refer as the mean race to protect the sensitive psyches reading this article, is a race where the athlete performs reasonably well based on the results they see in training.

Reasonably well often includes measurable improvements, but unless it’s a drastic improvement, we tend to be disappointed.

To be fair, we’re set up to view the mean race as a disappointment partly because we expect the rapid improvement we enjoyed early in our careers. When we first jump into the sport, every race is a breakthrough. We might have started in a relatively healthy, yet untrained state. Or perhaps we came from a single-sport specialty with little experience in the other two disciplines. With the addition of consistent training, we drop huge chunks of time race to race.

But as we become more fit and we tuck more race experiences under our belts, the improvements become more and more marginal. Ouch. This is another hard word to stomach. Worse than average, even.

A marginal improvement is still an improvement. You ran a 3:15 at the P. F. Chang’s Marathon last year. You ran a 3:14 this year. Outstanding. Congratulations. Based on your consistent, structured training, you enjoyed an improvement that fell right in line with where your metrics said you should have fallen.

“But Coach, my best time the year prior to the 3:15 was a 3:45. So logically, I should have run a 2:45 this year, right?”

“Uh, well, no. The 3:45 was your first attempt ever at the distance and that was completed with spotty training at best.”

The 2:45 would be a ridiculous expectation, right? Unless you possess world class DNA, it’s not going to happen. And yet, we still expect it.

In reality, a high-performing athlete who is well-trained, highly motivated and races in reasonable environmental conditions, is doing quite well to find most results falling in the mean category.

The truth is, we become numb to the fact that we’re super fit. We enjoy improvements of a minute here and a minute there and we’re dejected. I mean, we could do this with our eyes closed, right?

But you’re ignoring the years of training you’ve put in and how fit you actually are.

It’s not until we go through a period of being untrained due to injury, or have to deal with a stress-inducing personal situation, or just get old, fat and lazy that we realize at just how high a level we were performing in these “disappointing” mean races.

So going forward, how do we address the clunkers and the breakthroughs? First, let’s remind ourselves why these races happen.

      • Clunkers are generally a result of severe environmental conditions, a lack of motivation, a poorly executed race or nutrition strategy, or some other external factor—personal stress, etc.
      • Breakthrough races are typically a result of favorable environmental conditions, extreme motivation, and a lack of personal stress.

It is important to understand that the same training routine can result in both of these races. In other words, the training did not change to produce the results, only the factors on race day did.

The common reaction to a clunker is that I need to train harder or differently. The common reaction to a breakthrough race is that I should expect that performance every time. Both of these reactions are misguided.

As you evaluate your races, be realistic. Some races are going to be clunkers. Some are going to be breakthroughs and most are going to be means. Your training is the same for all three.

So instead of reacting to the race result and adjusting training, the successful athlete sticks with the routine and knows that the breakthrough race they so crave will eventually come, even if they are few and far between. The key is to recognize when a breakthrough race is in progress and take advantage of it and enjoy it.

Having a healthy mental outlook when considering your race results will grant you the freedom to take your clunkers and breakthroughs in stride, and ultimately, allow you to more fully appreciate and enjoy your mean races. The next time someone asks how your race went, smile when you tell them that you enjoyed an average race.

USAT Collegiate Nationals, Senior Olympics, Tour de Mesa, Tri Family Sprint, Prague Half Marathon, Phoenix 10K

A wide range of events to report on from this weekend!

Congratulations to Gabi Wasserman who placed 129th out of 650 racers in the USAT Collegiate Nationals with a time of 2:01. A great performance in such a competitive field. Gabi is racing IMAZ later this year.

Jim Rassi and LouAnn Brennnan qualified for Nationals in the Senior Olympics with Jim taking first in his age group and Lou Ann taking second in hers. Jim also raced in the Tour de Mesa and finished in 4:35.  Also at TDM, Sue Frome finished in a great time of 3:43.

We had an overall winner in Mike Wallace at the Tri Family Sprint Race. He won in a time of 57:07. Mike averaged 24.9 mph on the bike and capped his day with a 19 minute 5k. Mike will be racing the Wildflower Olympic in May the day after riding the Long Course bike leg as part of a relay.

In Prague, Czechoslovakia, Kim Essendrup PR’d by 8 minutes in the Prague Half Marathon with a time of 1:55. This was Kim’s firs time breaking 2 hours in the ½ marathon. Way to go, Kim!

And finally, Kyrsten Sinema and Dana Kennedy ran the Phoenix Pride 10k. Dana took 3rd in her age group while Kyrsten took 5th. Kyrsten ran a 58:38 and Dana ran a 59:58. Boston is on the horizon J! Super job, guys!

Oceanside 70.3, IM Los Cabos, Badger Mountain 100-miler

SheriAnne Nelson Oceanside 70.3 Mar 2014We had some amazing race performances over the weekend. Congratulations to SheriAnne Nelson who took 2nd in the 35-39 age group at Oceanside 70.3 and earned a spot for the 70.3 World Championships in Mont-Tremblant, Quebec, Canada in September. She turned in a stellar time of 4:56! Congratulations, SheriAnne!

Also, Todd Silva completed his first 100-mile endurance run, the Badger Mountain Challenge 100. In an impressive first performance, he turned in a time of 23:53, placing 3rd in his age group and 5th overall. Just completing a 100-mile run is flat amazing, but to do so in under 24 hours is truly remarkable. Todd obviously has a talent for ultra-running. He did this race just two months after running his first 50 miler in January. And Todd finished in style, too. He held 7-minute miles over the last 3 miles!

Congratulations to all of our racers!!

Oceanside 70.3

SheriAnne Nelson                   2nd      4:56

Scott Cooper                           237th   6:48

Daniel Efune                           80th     6:19

Matt Green                              33rd     5:50

Pat Haenel                               7th       5:26 – First Half IM!

Preston Miller                          7th       7:05

John Misner                             56th     6:33

Russell Vanbeber                  158th     5:57

IM Los Cabos

Will Rossiter                           17th     10:35

G. Parekh                                51st     15:43 – First IM!

Badger Mountain 100

Todd Silva                              3rd                   23:53 – 1st 100-miler, 5th overall!