Friday, July 28, 2017

"LIFE COMES AT YOU FAST"

My bike accident, like life, "came at me fast".  Now, nearly 18 months since that accident, I am learning to adjust to a "new normal".  In my last post, about 1 year ago, my recovery was progressing as expected, but things didn't continue as planned.

So that you don't have to review my prior blogs, I'll recap the accident;  February 17, 2016,  group ride, fast downhill paceline, tire rub, crash, level 1 trauma center, fractured pelvis, fractured left scapula, fractured ribs, punctured lung, collapsed lung, complete tear and detachment of Supraspinatus and Subscapularis left rotator cuff tendons, partial tear left bicep tendon, bigly left hip bursa, no brain damage, no spinal cord damage, bike totaled, two subsequent surgeries two months later (bursa and left rotator cuff).

By July of 2016 I was working my way through physical therapy and starting to feel some normalcy. But, gradually, I found myself increasingly challenged to perform simple movements, like lifting my legs onto the bed or holding onto a coffee cup. This in spite of religious adherence to the physical therapy routines.  Thinking that I had undiagnosed lower back involvement from the accident, additional back therapy was added to the routine.  I degenerated to the point where I could no longer get up off a chair, without assistance.  Since I had an annual physical previously scheduled for October at MAYO, Rochester,  I delayed a holistic medical assessment until then to give those experts first shot as my malady.  During my October visit to MAYO I required the use of a wheelchair as even walking had become difficult.  After three days of tests they determined that I had Polymyalgia Rhumatica, or PMR.

PMR is not common as evidenced by the lack of TV adds for treatment drugs.  As a disease it falls under the care of Rheumatologists.  Its cause is not well understood and there is no definitive diagnostic test; possibly hereditary, auto immune, or trauma induced.  It basically is massive inflammation of the major large muscle groups. The most definitive diagnostic is whether you respond immediately (I responded within 24 hours) to prednisone, an anti-inflammatory corticosteroid.  Prednisone is a banned substance by USAT.

MAYO was also suspicious of my right (apparently uninjured) shoulder, so upon returning to Arizona I consulted with my shoulder Orthopaedic and he agreed that an MRI of that shoulder would be wise. Turns out that my right rotator cuff also had a complete tear and detachment of the supraspinatus tendon.  Apparently the complete tear combined with the PMR hid my right shoulder rotator cuff tear. Bad news was with the passing of time since the accident and tear, 25% of the muscle was lost forever.  Good news was that enough was left to reattach with expectations of a reasonable result.  I had another surgery in December 2016.

The surgery caused me to have a flare-up of the PMR, an expected possibility.  This meant I had to increase my prednisone to higher levels to get the PMR under control.  Prednisone has numerous side effects the most serious being elevated blood pressure, osteoporosis, weight gain, and diabetes. Fortunately for me, I started very low on all these measures, so the only other drugs I need to take to offset the side effects of prednisone are to combat the osteoporosis impact.

I started prednisone at 15 mg, which is considered a low-medium dose.  The body manufactures its own corticosteroid to combat inflammation, equivalent to about 5 mg, depending on the individual. But, by taking 15 mg of prednisone, more than the body would nominally produce, the body shuts down its own corticosteroid factory.  So, once the prednisone has "cured" the PMR, the plan is to taper the prednisone dosage down to zero and re-engage the body to produce it's own natural level of corticosteroid.  Due to relapses, of which I already had one, it typically takes from 2 to 5 years to wean off prednisone following extended use. I am currently at 6 mg, right in the range of nominal body production.  Monthly reductions by 1 mg are intended to re-engage my body's own corticosteroid factory.

I had previously tried to partake of water exercises in mid-2016, but had to stop due to the PMR and late 2016 surgery.  I have attempted but not biked nor run since the accident.  I have gained the expected weight due to prednisone and lack of exercise.  I can walk but noticed that with the loss of leg strength, my bone-on-bone painful knees are now more painful.  I have taken this exercise time off to try cortisone in the knees with no benefit.  I have had two multiple sessions of viscus fluid with only a slight perceived benefit. My doctor is skeptical of stem-cells (how do you direct them to generate cartilage versus whatever), but maybe I'll try that prior to knee replacement.

This extended time off from training and racing has clearly provided me with time to reflect on life, way too much time for reflection. At a relatively young 71 years old I'm facing the prospects of becoming less active than I'm used to being, and challenged to fill the available time.  However, during my extended recovery, I found that there were a lot of unfinished tasks that I have had the opportunity to finish.  But, the enjoyment of these activities have been bittersweet compared to the multisport activities I enjoyed and felt fulfilled by.  I have not put a "complete by" date on my assessment of what to do once I've exhausted these catch-up activities.  I am positive that by being open to inspiration, and as I wean off this prednisone over the next 6 months, I'll be ready to "have life come at me fast again".

Saturday, May 14, 2016

INDIA EIGHTYTWO -- PAU

I cancelled Kona.  There, I finally acknowledged that this time my recovery from injury is going to follow a normal slow process.  No miracle bounce backs.  No finishing the Arizona Ironman 2 weeks following cracking some ribs and lacerating a hand in a fall in the desert.  No finishing Kona second in my age group 9 months following Achilles tendon repair.  No, this time its different. Finally, 12 weeks following "the accident", 4 weeks following rotator cuff shoulder reconstruction and only 5 months to Kona, I had to admit to the practical.  My healing prowess was average at best and not sufficient to make Kona an option.  I had held out hopes, holding on to the thought of at least participating in Kona, until it was no longer possible to ignore the obvious.

I finally had my shoulder surgery April 13, nearly 8 weeks following "the accident".  The delay was necessary to allow repair of my many other injuries not the least of which was the punctured lung and fractured hip, scapula, and ribs. During that delay I also had a plastic surgeon remove the soup bowl sized hematoma from my left thigh that had formed its own bursa.  The shoulder surgeon found a "mess" in the rotator cuff of my left shoulder including complete tears of the Supraspinatus and Subscapularis muscle   tendons, and a partial tear of the Long bicep muscle tendon.  In less than 2 1/2 hours I had the rotator cuff area cleaned out and anchors implanted in the humerus and the tendons sutured.  Surgery was performed under a general with a nerve blocker and Oxycontin prescribed for after surgery pain relief.  I weaned off the opiate as soon as possible.

5 HOLE SURGERY
Two days after surgery I was in physical therapy.  Why so fast?  I had developed frozen shoulder and the sooner the range of motion is restored to the shoulder the better.  The therapy was, and still is, horribly painful as the arm is moved passively to try to break down the adhesion's that restrict its motion.  Every day I go through two or three sessions of at-home therapy movements.  Three times a week I go visit the physical therapy folks where they manually force the arm further into where normal arm motion should be but mine doesn't go.  It is so painful that I now take Hydrocodone prior to these sessions so that I don't cry and thrash like a baby on the table.

The general level of pain following the surgery has been passable most days until its time to sleep. Then the pain level is enough to result in shallow and interrupted sleep. To try to help this issue, last week I started to walk or stationary bike some days, all low intensity. Unfortunately, with an arm in a sling your balance is off kilter which has led to non-injury related pains elsewhere in my body.

Following shoulder surgery I had my right hand index finger examined by a hand surgeon because the last digit no longer would bend.  Turns out the accident gave me a "jersey finger" injury, so named because it typically happens in football when the tackler tries to hold on to the opponents jersey only to have the finger tendon rupture.  If treated shortly after injury, the tendon can often be reattached. In my situation, the tendon has shriveled up into the palm of the hand and the "tunnel" it had traversed through absorbed.  The most practical options remaining are do nothing and adapt or fuse the last digit into a partial bend. I need to ponder these options a bit.

So there it is. All the literature and medical advice indicate a 6 to 12 month recovery is typical following surgery.  So, from now on its mostly therapy and unfortunately a slow process through recovery.  However, I will be following the Kona race and wishing all the best to the Minnesota and Arizona participants, as well as those friendly competitors in the M70-74 age group.  Mahalo.

Saturday, April 9, 2016

INDIA EIGHTYTWO -- PART TWO

It's 4 am and I'm in the shower but not getting ready for an early morning race.  Instead I'm sitting on my granny shower stool with anti-bacteria soap getting ready for my early morning surgery.  The hematoma formed on my hip from my bicycle accident 5 weeks ago did not re-absorb as hoped. Instead it is forming a pseudo-bursa as the scar tissue encapsulates around it.  Time to remove it so I can get ready in a few weeks for the major surgery on my rotator cuff.

The surgery was performed under a "General" by a Plastic Surgeon, so it must have been a bit more consequential than I originally thought.  I now have another drain and bag and complication to performing life's daily rituals.  I did feel holistically better following the surgery. I had noticed that
the hematoma felt a few degrees warmer to me than the surrounding tissue, so maybe the body was working hard to defend against this unwanted bulge.  Glad it's been removed so I can get on to the bigger issues.

I've also started Physical Therapy to reduce the chance of the dreaded "frozen shoulder" which can follow shoulder trauma, or just occur out of the blue, as a bodies natural protective defense.  It seemed odd to me to be doing PT prior to surgery, but I've been assured it's the right thing to do.  In my case, I do have very restricted range of motion.  I thought it was just due to the fact that some of my muscles are no longer connected to where they are supposed to be connected, and my scapula was broken.  But no, it's due to the rotator cuff capsule clamping down on the ball of my shoulder bone. Adhesion's had developed, but so far they have not called it frozen shoulder.

This rotator cuff PT is range-of-motion only, no physical loading, as all my shoulder parts are not connected or in the correct place.  Already my left arm is about 3/4 the size of my right due to inactivity.  The range-of-motion PT is more painful than anything I have ever experienced even when I pre-load my body with Advil.  Having run marathon's at sub 6 pace, ultras as long at 100K, and numerous Ironman races, I know a bit about pain. Or so I thought.  And, un-reassuring, doing this PT prior to surgery is just a precursor of the pain I'll have with PT following surgery.   The normal recovery time following surgery is 6 months, putting mid-October as my back-to-normal target.

Its now approaching 6 weeks since the accident and the enormity of the emotional and physical constriction is making itself clearly felt.  Only to be able to do any kind of workout, to repair small things around the house, to do anything but read, watch TV, second guess, and try to figure out what to do with the rest of my life.  I am an active person, as most of you reading this are, and this type of long-term confinement is beyond frustrating.  I've had bouts of self-pity and questioned whether being active after 70, at the level of intensity I've carried to this date, was part of god's design for the human body. Quash that thought, quash it, quash it.

I've found that having a race as a goal, I'll train more consistently and focused.  Consequently I'm thinking about what year-end goal I should plan on tackling if I'm to progress out of this mental and physical confinement. Since it's my shoulder that will be the last to heal/recover, triathlons are not realistic racing goals for 2016.  But maybe a running race?  It's not an optimal goal for me as my knees have been my limiting issue in the past 10 years, but it's where I can realistically have a chance of developing fitness given my slate of injuries.  My son has already registered for the Javelina 100 mile desert trail race in late October. It's just 15 miles from my house. They have a concurrent 100K race.  Am I nuts?

......to be continued.....

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

INDIA EIGHTYTWO

INDIA EIGHTYTWO.  That was the name given me by the EMT and put on my wristband prior to me being loaded on the ambulance following my bicycle accident.  At 30+mph a small rub on the rear wheel of the rider in front of me in the pace line and things changed forever.  Never, Never, Never cross wheels in a group ride.  After 40 years of competitive bike riding I made one mistake, and there is no do-over, and it really hurts both physically and mentally.

Broken Scapula, broken hip, broken ribs, collapsed lung, torn rotator cuff, huge hematoma, toe to head road rash.  All on the left side.  As a triathlete, I prided myself on having pretty decent pain management skills.  Exercise induced pain management that is. Trauma pain is another dimension.

The group I was riding with was not into risk taking, we were following all the rules-of-the-road and behaving with courtesy.  On the downhill returning leg of a Saturday morning ride Feb 20th it was pace line time and with the group now down to about 8 riders, not a cumbersome size.  Just a split second of overlap and whoosh.

My helmet did its thing and I had the EMT call my wife from my functioning cell phone and we met at the trauma hospital following my being patched up.  I received the cursory stitches for the gashes that were deeper than road rash and a vacuum hose (it was only about 3/16" in diameter but felt like a garden hose) was inserted through my ribs into my lung to assist in removing as much fluid as possible and aid in re inflation.

I had the normal scans for head and spine injury and passed.  My bone breaks were not dislocated so surgery to align them was not required. The torn rotator cuff would have to wait until later.

It's still settling in, but my 2016 goal of winning my age group at Kona was dashed in the accident.  I had previously qualified with a sub-12 hr race on a tough course and the M70-74 winning time in both 2014 and 2015 was 13+ hrs, so I knew I had a good chance if I stayed healthy.  I cannot have the required surgery to repair my torn rotator cuff until my other trauma injuries have healed in about 2 months. Since recovery from rotator cuff surgery takes 6 to 12 months, the math is indisputable.

I was home from the hospital after 10 days and off pain meds after 14. This week I start the process of follow-up examinations to see how the trauma recovery is going.  I will try to be a good patient and resist the temptation to "over re-hab" thus re-injuring the repairs.

So my blog this year will not be one of race experiences, but rehab and reflection.  Only a fool would not acknowledge that this type of accident in this sport at this age requires serious reflection.  I don't believe I am a fool..........

.........TO BE CONTINUED............

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

MUSKOKA IRONMAN -- ONE TOUGH LOONIE

PROLOGUE


AWARD CEREMONY
I entered Muskoka with the sole intent to win the M65-69 division to qualify for Kona and race in the M70-74 division in 2016.  Trying to qualify in a lower age group and then age-up to race Kona in an older age group is an ideal situation but difficult to accomplish.  As such it was a solo trip with my family following my race online through Ironman Live.  Since Canada is a foreign country and my cell phone would charge outrageous fees for calls, texts were the favored form of communication. Waiting for me upon my return were all the race day text exchanges between my family members, some of them humorous. Consequently this report is in two parts.  The first part contains my Race Report and thoughts as the race unfolded.  The second part is a transcript of the flurry of texts between me (in black), my wife in Minnesota (in red),  my son in Northern California (in blue) and my daughter in Southern California (in green) as they followed my progress.

RACE REPORT        
BALLROOM CHANGING ROOM

SWIM:  Less than 1300 (no pro's, 290 first timers) of us lined up for the swim which had a rolling start based on your volunteered estimate of swim time.  Consequently the race clock would show a different time than your actual race time based on how long it took to get to and cross the swim start timing mat. Clear and smooth water.  Very non-chaotic swim start but I still took a minor kick to the jaw. At about the 2.5 km point I noticed a woman swimmer slowly passing me using a much slower cadence than I.  At that point I remembered that sometimes "slower is faster" and slowed my cadence accordingly and was able to swim faster.  Good learning there. The wetsuit strippers stumbled with wetsuit removal but it was still faster than I could have done by myself. It was a long run around the 18th green of the golf course and up the hill to the resort lodge to the changing room which was in the ballroom of the resort.  In the ballroom you had your own numbered chair with both the bike and run transition bags there for you and assistance if you needed it. Then out the front door and to the bike corral and you're on your way.  PS:  swim time 72 minutes, very good for me.

BIKE:  This being Canada everything was in metric.  I had not driven or ridden a kilometer of the course but the talk and information clearly identified that it was hilly.  At about 2 km I threw my chain into the rear wheel spokes part way up the first 10%+ grade hill on the course.  dismounted and pulled the bike over to the side of the road and was able to free the chain and re-thread it on the rear cog.  Starting on an uphill 10% grade is tough but I got it going. Now the adrenalin was rushing and it was at about 15 km when I scrolled through my garmin display and saw that I was averaging about 220 watts,  way more than my plan. My plan was to take the first of the two loop course in tourist mode as I had no experience with the course. Then I would push the second loop a bit more only if I felt really fresh.  So I throttled myself back, coasted the downhills (coasting sometimes at 45 mph) as I saw that I was in the 250-350 watt range based on the steepness of the uphills.  At about 40 km I threw my chain into the spokes again on another steep uphill. I quickly dragged the bike to the side and reattached the chain again.  Took me a while but I got clipped in and back in the saddle yet again. Now I was nervous, as it appeared the rear derailleur stop was slightly incorrect so I tried to avoid the largest "bailout" gear on all future hills.  Shortly after that the next two largest gears started to chatter with the chain skipping between them uncontrollably.  I continued to fumble along and finally realized that both my front derailleur levers (return to center SRAM) had loosened up. The only way I could now shift was to put sideways pressure on the levers as I shifted.

That was the end of any aggressive shifting and riding for the rest of the day.  At about 95 km my power meter (SRM -- just recently returned from tuneup and new battery -- but they didn't fix the intermittent failure issue) crapped out.  Now power blind on a hilly course with mechanical issues with the rear derailleur and both shifter levers.  OK, just nurse this baby to the bike finish.  At approximately 150 km I no longer trusted my front derailleur lever.  I decided to leave it in the small front ring which meant I had maxed out my speed on flats and downhills well below optimal.  Then at 170 km, in spite of all my precautions, my rear ring derailed yet a third time.  Pull to side of road, dismount, pull chain free and re-thread, try to restart uphill, re-try to restart uphill and finally got going.  Pulled into transition where they took my bike from me.  I had to wonder if it just wasn't meant to be my day.  PS:  Garmin read 6,800 ft elevation climbing.  Some of the relatively short but steep hills dropped my speed to under 5mph even in my sketchy "bailout" gear.  First loop was overcast and relatively mild.  Second loop the sun came out and the heat and humidity appeared. Bike split 5:52.

KNEE SUPPORT
RUN:  I had experimented with knee compression (both the neoprene and compression fabric varieties) the three weeks prior to the race to help manage my knee pains.  I decided to use the fabric compression knee wraps as I thought they were more breathable and less likely to create rash areas. I believe they helped.  I intend to utilize them in my future run training so that I can try to regain better run fitness.  The run course is a two loop course that traverses from the Deerhurst Resort into the town of Huntsville and back, repeat. My run plan was to immediately start a jog/walk routine of 2min/1min duration and lengthen the jog portion as I loosened up.  I found in my training that a 1 minute walk is adequate recovery and that longer walks create stiffness issues upon restarting to jog. I also planned to try to schedule the walk portions through the aid stations and the uphills.  Didn't go as planned.  The course is literally half uphill and half downhill with some sections that might have less than a 1% grade either way, so I ended up walking more than I had planned.  Still, I was able to maintain an 11min/mile pace for most of the run. I was surprised that not that many racers were passing me. There is usually some part on the run where sanity and the will to finish is internally debated, that's what differentiates the full Ironman from other shorter races.  My hurdle was to get past this debate and reach the 30km mark, where I figured I could finish even if I had to walk my way in. This day I didn't have to revert to a full walk-in finish, but I was counting 30 jog steps followed by 20 walk steps, repeat, repeat, repeat.  PS:  Elevation gain 2000ft.  Run split 4:39.   Total Race Time with transitions 11:56.

DOWNTOWN HUNTSVILLE
OBSERVATIONS: Muskoka is a beautiful resort area about a 2.5 hr drive north of Toronto; lakes, rolling hills, resorts, cabins, cute towns, cute restaurants.  I would recommend staying at the Deerhurst Resort (race site) or one of the other nearby resorts in order to minimize family and race day logistics. (I registered late so I ended up in a small motel on the perimeter of Huntsville, co-host of the race).  Coming from Minnesota, I was well acquainted with the term "Minnesota Nice".  Well, there is an equal if not more hospitable attitude called "Canadian Nice" that seemed to be contagious to athletes, volunteers and spectators alike, as everyone I met was courteous and friendly.  For first time Ironman entrants, or anybody else concerned about the toughness of the course, I would recommend entering the "Tough Toonie", which is joint entry into the Muskoka 70.3 (held in early July) and Muskoka Ironman (late August).  For the non-Canadians, Loonie is a $1 Canadian coin, Toonie is a $2 Canadian coin.


TEXTS (me in black, wife in red, son in blue, daughter in green)

Friday: Flew in to Toronto from Minneapolis and drove to race site in Muskoka region of Canada   

In very basic hotel but does have wifi.  Taking short nap and then out for supper and meeting.  Very convoluted course (ie, large hill to climb from swim to transition) so need to go to meeting.  The terrain reminds me of Wisconsin Dells area so I expect very few flat areas on the bike or run.
Oh No
I'm not excessively worried
OK

Saturday:  Picked up bike from Tri Bike Transport, put bike in transition, and turned in bike and run bags

Sounds like WI IM - take first bike lap easy and don't attack the short hills - use small ring on bike.  I think a hilly run plays into your strength as u have practiced walking on your long runs
they have streaming video footage at finish - we will be looking for u - so smile
good luck Papa
just hate the day before.  Nana talked me into bringing a trashy spy novel so I'm sitting inside drinking Gatorade eating mac n cheese n reading.  Cool damp and overcast here.  Don't have much excitement for this race, probably cause I'm a bit nervous about it.  It doesn't get any easier for these long ones no matter how prepared.  Just one small chink in the armour gets magnified.

Sunday:  Race Day

Right now projected to be off bike in 7:20, 2nd place projected in 8:18 - but only splits through 64k of bike - 40 miles
I can't seem to get any info other than total bike.  Whose in front of him?
Or is he in first? I'm a nervous wreck.  Please keep me filled in.
Looks like Dad is in first.  Is he trying to qualify for Kona?
Yes for next year when he is 70
He is in first.  Kona slot for 2016 is what he's after
OK, got it
Benj u seem to know what's going on.  I can only get total bike split which is showing nothing.  Just text when u get info.  Bike should be OK but issue is run.  If he can get a huge lead on 2nd then he should be able to hold if no cramps injuries etc.  thanks Mom
I am headed out for a bike ride but I have site on my phone - will check for updates
Thanks  its going to be a long day
Nana, if you click on papas name, it showed you the bike splits.  Looks like he has made it through 39 km (2nd split) and averaging about 30 km/hr
OK let me try  hate being blind.  I got it.  How did u know that?  Thanks!!!!
I just started clicking on stuff
Wow that is so much better!!!! Otherwise it was going to be a stressful long day.  I would have never figured that out
3rd bile split looks good.  Putting 1-1.5 mph into 2nd place guy
He needs as much time as he can get bc of run.  Assuming the guy is good runner bc Dad beat him is swim and looks like the bike.  Thanks for update!!!
They are all slow runners at that age!!
I know.  Should I worry that dad's speed on bike has slowed to 26k.  Is it the course?
He did say that it would be hilly and curvy in sections.  Maybe that's why?
Need to wait for 2nd place guy and see - that is slow -
Top 45-49 male slowed down 1kph from 3rd split to 4th.  Dad slowed .8 kph - guessing it is course.
OK  that makes sense thanks for checking
FYI they have live video of run out and finish
Where do I get that   I'm on the site   Live coverage?
I don't see it on mobile device - look on top left menu for video
OK
2nd place guy holding strong.  I am guessing dad starts run with 40-50 min lead.  He just would need to average 11 on run even if guy is a strong runner
Nana, did u find the live coverage of the run out?  I see it.
Yes thanks
5:52 for bike!  great time.  His transitions R fast
Go Papa Ben
He started run 35 min ahead.  Just needs 11 min miles
First 5 miles he was doing 10, hope he slows a bit down - just needs 11.  We can see how 2nd place guy does in 1st 5 miles
he is on 11:40ish pace.  anything under 12 hrs would almost guarantee 1st.  Even 12:30 most likely would qualify
I am back in land of coverage - anyone see dad leave T2?
No I was making lunch
I think u can scroll back on the video    dad put additional 15 min into 2nd place in first 5 miles of run.  now ~ 50 min ahead.  Could walk last 18 miles and win!  hope he realizes that!
I don't think he realizes that bc the numbering system so squirrelly    hope he doesn't blow up
Because there isn't a lot of racers he might figure it out
Ur right.  He said it was like a Mn race in terms of number of participants.  Hope so
He put another 10 min into 2nd place!  All he has to do is walk in!!
Oh I hope he knows that.  I thought 2nd place guy was going to be a stellar runner
3rd run split in.  Dad is crushing it - super consistent!  1/2 way done with run
Yea.  Hope he can hold it
Not slowing down much!  1 more hour!  I think he is going to beat all the 60-64 group too.
U think he's going to make it ok.  He seems to be going strong
Should finish around 11:45 - finish like video has clock time.  Start time looking at 11:40
Ok thanks.  Wow he's actually going to do this.
He would win 60-64 and been 2nd in 55-59 age groups
Wow hope he can finish with no injuries.  Benja does he have just 6 miles left?
Yes.  should finish in 10-20 min!! Look at finish camera video.  It shows race time, he should be finishing when that says 11:45-11:55
Ok I'm going to try to turn it on
He could roll on his side the last miles and qualify!
Ur funny!  Where is the live feed on the site
Upper left where it says video.  Then scroll down to finish line video and click  Look for the hobbling old man
Ok  I got it.  Ur funny.  Do you think next 20 min?  Hey it's all young guys
Earliest will be 11:45  If he keeps last few miles pace it will be 11:48  I am guessing he slows down on purpose but tries to go under 12.  
This feed is cool.  Will it stay on     
Should stay on - u can set it to full screen - helps a bit
Oh   they all look young   How do u get full screen   Ok just got it much better  This is even hard to wait
If he walked last 6 miles he would come in 12:10  What is he wearing?
White shirt or One team kit.  Was it sunny, looks overcast    What's the latest   Should I worry
No - after 12:15 worry
Could he have crashed
No
I'm officially worried
Well he could be walking in
Ok   then when would he get in
12:20
Oh will other guy catch him  It would be so hard to lose.  Over 900 still on course.   Wow
No - the other guy is over an hour behind
He's in!!!!!   Thanks Benj I was worried.  Did u hear that they said Dad was 65-69 and anything was possible.  Kinda cool.  Could u tell how he looked?
Did u see him?  U can scroll back and watch again.  He looked fine - must have walked a lot the last 6!!
I thought he looked good at least didn't collapse.  Yea
The race clock was off - his time was 11:56 not 12:07  That was the difference.  He didn't slow down that much the last 6
How do u know  I can't rewind but it's ok  Just looked up his results 11:56:34.  That's good isn't it?
Super good   Very tough course
Thanks for all the help.  It's stressful even if u r not there!  I guess he's going to Hawaii in 2016!   

Sunday, July 19, 2015

LIFETIME TRI, MINNEAPOLIS, JULY 11 2015

TRANSITION PRE-RACE
VENUE:  Perhaps the largest, most heavily promoted, competitive triathlon in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis/St Paul.  Almost 1500 finishers in 7 separate categories in 3 distances: super sprint, sprint, international. An urban triathlon where you swim in Lake Nokomis, bike on city parkways, and run on city park paths.  Weather was near perfect, but was humid which is typical for Minnesota in the summer.

PRE-RACE:  I was entered in the sprint race because I wanted to get an assessment of my condition and did not want a longish run as I was gingerly improving my run fitness in spite of my cranky knees. Sprint races are not my forte (I'm 85 % slow twitch as measured by muscle biopsy) but I did not want to get an injury setback from a long run. To make a distinction from the super sprint swim, the sprint distance swim was increased to .47 miles, while the bike was slightly over 15 miles and the run a 5K.  I had perused the entry list within my age category and noticed that the prior year winners were entered, as well as Duane Millslagle, a local fast athlete, who had aged-up into the 65-69 age group.  Since the prior winning times were not impressive, I imagined that Duane would be my main threat.  He is a faster swimmer than I and had a faster run pace at the USAT National Duathlon Championships three weeks earlier. However, he raced the sprint with shorter runs while I raced the standard distance.  My strategy was to catch and pass him on the bike and build a cushion prior to the run.

RACE: Because of the numerous races within a race, and with only one transition area, everyone had to vacate the transition at the same time resulting in some long waits for various wave starts.  Because the weather was benign, this was not a big issue. But, for example, my wave didn't start until 8:15 while we had to exit the transition at 6:30. The start was a blend of wave and time trial.  Age groups were clumped into the same wave, and two athletes from each wave were sent off in 3 second intervals first passing over a timing mat.  This worked well to ease the swim frenzy that would normally exist compared to a 1500 athlete short distance triathlon with either a large wave or mass start.

SWIM FINISH
I positioned myself near the back of my wave so that if it came down to a sprint run finish, I most likely would have some start seconds on whoever I was sprinting against.  I swam what I thought was a decent pace but still saw a few swim caps come out of the water ahead of me.  Since our wave included all males over 60, I was not sure exactly how many I had to catch on the bike segment.


BIKE START
The biking surface was a mixed bag, with some new pavement and some of the old patched pot-holed pavement that had discouraged me from racing this venue in the past.  I did not need a bike crash and the parkway roads are serpentine and narrow as they follow Minnehaha creek through residential Minneapolis.  I finally caught Duane at about mile 5, passed him, only to be re-passed, only to pass, only to be re-passed, etc.  I knew that I did not want this to be a 5K run race so I upped my power at about mile 10 and finally was able to create a gap that I held into transition.

I was running scared, had forgotten to tighten my speed laces on my shoes, but did not want to stop and waste valuable seconds so I ran in somewhat floppy shoes.  At the turnaround on a short out-n-back I saw that I had what I estimated to be less than a 30 second lead with 2 miles to go.  By this point I was soaked in sweat from running in the humid air but did not want to take any water at the aid stations for fear of losing valuable seconds.  After all, this was just over an hour event and the body, if properly pre-race hydrated, can put out that long without additional fluids.

DUANE and BEN
RESULT: I finished with Duane someplace behind me and after checking with the timing tent saw that I had finished first in the 65-69 age group by about 1 minute.  Overall 26th out of 648 finishers.  Checking my bike computer afterwards I saw that I averaged 233 watts and 23 mph, on a serpentine, pot-holed, but relatively flat course on a calm day. According to the official results,  my run and swim were so-so: 7:30/mile run pace, 1:50/100yd swim pace.  My overall time was 1:20:09.  Winning time 1:12:31.

Now I'm trying to refocus on some more serious endurance training for my next race, an Ironman.  Only a few of those left in me both mentally and physically. I've raced at Kona 6 times, reaching the podium twice (5th and 2nd), trying to get there for lucky seven.....

Thursday, June 11, 2015

USAT NATIONAL DUATHALON CHAMPIONSHIP , 3RD PLACE

TRANSITION
I could not come up with an angle for this race, so my post can be condensed to this:   Great Venue, Great Day, Great Competition.

I raced this National Championship primarily because it was held in St Paul, Minnesota, 20 miles from my summer home. Since I was 69 years old in the 65-69 age group I did not have illusions of winning unless some bad luck occurred to some of the other competitors.  I ended up 3rd to two great athletes and was very satisfied with my effort.

The course was a 5K run, 34K bike, 5K run format, with both runs being a repetitive 2 looper and the bike a repetitive 3 looper with a 320 ft hill at the start of the loop.  JP Bacle, who just aged-up to 65, won the 65-69 M age group in 1:44:03 followed by Kerry Mayer in 1:45:54 with me coming home 3rd in 1:47:38.

My runs were 21:31 and 22:57 while the bike was 1:01:05.  Generally, I was pleased with my effort relative to my training commitments.  I keep experimenting with how to manage my complaining knees which primarily hinder my ability to run train as much as is required to maintain competitiveness.  Right now I'm taking Niacin amide which has some anecdotal reports regarding its ability to reduce the pain caused by arthritis.  I'm also following my swim sessions with shallow water pool running as the water partially supports my body weight and thus reduces the compression impact on the knees.  Since I only started both of these changes last month, its too early to know if they will be beneficial.  In the meantime I continue to jog between 10 and 20 miles/week using a 4min/1min jog/walk routine.

I have entered a race later this year that I have only shared with my family as it relates to a longer term goal that will not be achievable unless I can successfully resolve my complaining knees issue. Before the year is out I will share, for better or worse.