Our race season kicked off this morning up in Maine with the
Polar Bear Triathlon (ME Against Myeloma's season was started a few months ago with Nate's run up the
Empire State Building). The weather is still way too cold for open water swimming so the swim portion was in the pool at
Bowdoin College (interesting side note: 3 or 4 of the pool records are held by
Hamilton, our alma mater).
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Pre-race selfie |
Swim: Originally I was scheduled to be in Wave 11 with an expected start time of 10:20am - about two hours after the start of the race. Because the transition area was closed at 8:15, this meant I had about two hours to sit around and wait. Thankfully there was an opening in Wave 4 and I managed to start closer to 8:45/9am. The pool swim was only 525 yards but it got off to a rough start for me. That said, I still managed to do the swim in about the time I thought, though I know I could have gone faster.
T1: After the swim it was a quick dash to the transition area for T1. While my transition was quite a bit faster than in
my tri last year, it was still pretty slow. I need to get some tri specific bike shoes and get used to wearing them without socks.
Bike:
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Excited about my (early) Father's Day present |
The bike was going to be interesting no matter what. It was chilly; I was wet, a potentially interesting combination. Also, and more importantly, I was on a new bike. They say to never tryout new equipment during a race, which is why I went for a 5 mile or so ride yesterday. That said, the tri was really the first time I got to take my new tri bike for a real ride. Three words: "It was fun." While I am definitely not in the best shape for riding (this has been the winter that never ends), it was still a decent bike split and a good experience getting used to the tri bike.
T2: The second transition went much smoother than the first, in part because I didn't need to put socks on and I didn't need to mess with getting a helmet on, just off.
Run: Of all the events I was worried about the run the most. Not because it's a real weak spot or because the course was really tough. No, I was worried about it because earlier in the week I had managed to tweak my ankle a bit. Not a sprain, but something wasn't 100%. Thankfully I didn't really actually feel the twinge in my ankle the entire run. Once again, my time wasn't the greatest, but I'm satisfied with the result.
Results: My final time was 1:09:57.1 which was good enough for 72th place out of a field of 258. I didn't fare as well in my age category (8th out of 13).
Post race: After the race I got home and got to hang out with the family. Both kids talked about how they were going to do their own triathlon on the driveway. That alone makes the triathlon a success, regardless of how fast I actually was.
Pictures from the race will follow once the race organizers get them online.
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Post-race ice cream with the family |