I have just completed my last race of the year this last
weekend and so this seemed like the ideal time to write a blog reflecting back
on all my sporting endeavours in 2017. It’s going to be an enjoyable blog to
write as it has been a fantastic year. The highlights of which have been:
·
Qualifying for the European Sprint Duathlon
Championships by winning my age group at Clumber Park for the second
consecutive year
·
Winning a silver medal in my age group on my Team GB debut at the European Duathlon Championships in
Soria, Spain
·
Taking my first overall female win at a
triathlon (Dorchester Dash)
·
Going on to win my target triathlon A-race of
the year, The Brutal Half Iron Extreme Triathlon, in North Wales
·
Finishing as first female at all 6 of the
multi-terrain races I entered this year: Weston Friendly 5 Mile, Totnes 10k,
Killerton 10k, Templer 10 mile, Otterton Reindeer Run, The Scrooge.
·
Being largely on top of my injuries throughout
the year, being able to piece together some consistent training and allowing me
to start and finish all of the races I entered in one piece (a miracle in
itself by my previous track record!)
When I read all of that back, it brings a small smile of
satisfaction to my face. There have been some incredible experiences garnered along
the way to achieving all the above, including some excellent bike rides with
some really good friends (you know who you are, coffee buddies!); some fab
training rides with the Honiton Spinners and some (almost) enjoyable sea swims
with my buddy Bishy the Fishy. I participated in my first ever cycling time
trial (10 miles in 26:45), and my first ever hill climb (4th place
at Chineway). There have been sportives completed with friends (The Nello, with
Moira) and alone (Moor to Sea). Parkruns a-plenty have featured, including 9
new venues, in addition to relaxed training runs with my hubby. Humpteen laps
of the pool have been swum, including my longest ever swim of 5k (200 lengths) at
Swimathon (Christ on a bike, that felt like a slog!). I have seen improvements
to my bike and swim times; my run times have actually dropped off a bit over
the shorter stuff, but losing a bit of top end leg speed has been the trade-off
for improving my cycling and my performance overall: something’s gotta give!
I have achieved all of the above by myself, with no
assistance from any coach or even any training plans. Up until now, my training
has all been done to feel and done rather spontaneously without much forward
planning. If I woke up and the weather was nice, I would go out on the bike; if
my legs were aching, I might have opted for an easy swim. My development as a
multisport athlete has all been very organic and, to a more experienced eye,
probably very naïve and amateur. It has brought me some great results, of which
I am extremely proud, but I decided that I was at a point whereby I could go on
playing at being a runner who dabbles in multi-sport by doing a bit of cross
training on the bike and in the pool and probably still do ok because I have a
pretty decent fitness level, or I could try and introduce some proper structure
and triathlon focussed training to my routine and aim to take my multisport
performances to the next level…. I decided upon the latter, so I recently
enlisted the services of a triathlon coach.
For the past 7 weeks I have been coached by my
cousin-in-law, Chris Dominey, of Tri Coach Cornwall. Not gonna lie, it has been
a complete shock to my system and, at first, felt like a bit of a loss of
control and freedom as I have handed over all responsibility for deciding what
training I do and when to him. My previous self-coached approach was rather ad
hoc, and so the jump to having extremely structured and set workouts given to
me 3 weeks in advance that detail explicitly what I will be doing every day for
the next 21 days has been a massive one. It has meant being much more organised
regarding getting kit ready the night before and writing down the workouts in
advance so I don’t forget them once I get to the pool / gym etc. Having a
structure to my swim and indoor bike sessions has been great in terms of me not
needing to think about what to do once I get there, which invariably led to me
doing the same long aerobic swims session after session, or just sitting
aimlessly on the bike for an hour and pedalling at the same intensity, or else
relying on my one go-to bike workout of 1 min off, 1 min off x 30! I have been
using the Watt bike at the gym for most of my indoor bike sets and – following
a ghastly 20 minute all out FTP test – I am now working to power. Again, this
is all new to me. Previously I would just go on feel, or RPE scales, and not
pay any attention to heart rate, cadence, power etc. Previously I would do the
same training all year round and just aim to maintain a high level of fitness.
Chris’ approach, using the Training Peaks software, sees me go through phases
of training and the workouts are tailored according to the phase (I am
currently in Base 3, so starting to increase my strength and endurance with
longer reps on the bike, and more tempo runs). To seasoned triathletes, this
will all seem obvious, but it is all very new for me and I have to trust that I
am doing enough and that the intensity is appropriate for the stage I am at in
my race build-up. One thing I have definitely noticed is that since working
with Chris, I am much less tired; furthermore, – and I am probably putting the
curse of death on myself here – I haven’t been ill at all, whereas before I was
picking up a cough or cold virus every 4 – 6 weeks or so. No doubt this is due
to the sensible scheduling of the workouts, allowing for rest and recovery
between hard sets, but also due to the fact that I have been doing the majority
of the work at a much lesser intensity, so I am not constantly fatigued. The
one thing I do find hard is the lack of flexibility to be able to just do
things on a whim, such as a nice long bike ride with friends because the sun is
out and they invited me, or an extra run because I just feel like it, but that
is the trade off for what will hopefully bring me better performances in the
qualifying races in February and March. It is also a bit of a departure for
Chris, as his background is mainly in coaching long distance triathletes, so
writing training plans for a duathlete is a new challenge for him… as is
reining in a headstrong female athlete with a love of running who wants to race all
the time! Thanks to him for his patience so far! 😉
I will have a slightly lighter week over Christmas but I
can’t afford to back off too much as the qualifier is so early this year (Feb
18th). I certainly can’t afford a 9 week long cough-cold-chest
infection combo like I had at the start of this year as that hampered my
training from Boxing Day right until the end of Feb. As I am also going up to
the standard distance this year, which is 10k run – 40k bike – 5k run (double
everything of the sprint), I need to keep my bike miles up over the winter and
try and get out and ride once a week as I don’t have the luxury of waiting
until spring comes to ride outside. Easier said than done with this cold snap
we’ve had as I am a notorious wimp in the cold conditions and coming off on
black ice is not something I can afford to do at this stage of my
preparations….. or, indeed, ever.
Anyway, to finish off with a few stats, followed by a few
photos, that demonstrate a bit more ably than my waffling how 2017 panned out….
2017 mileage (up until 19th Dec.): 815 miles; 107
hours of running time, 56’000ft elevation gain
5k SB: 19:10 (first run at Clumber Park duathlon,
didn’t actually race any 5k only races in 2017)
10k SB: 40:15 (Ivybridge 10k)
Race performances:
Feb.: Weston Friendly 5 – 1st lady, 3rd
overall
May: Ivybridge 10k: 3rd lady
June: Welsh Castles Relay Stage 16, 8 mile mountain stage in
Brecon Beacons: 3rd lady
August: Totnes 10k, 1st lady
September: Killerton 10k, 1st lady
November: Templer 10 mile, 1st lady
December: Otterton Reindeer Run 6 mile, 1st lady
December: The Scrooge 7.5 mile, 1st lady, 4th
overall
2017 bike mileage: 3240 miles
Longest ride: Moor to Sea Sportive, 64 miles
10 mile T.T.: 26:45
Total swim distance: 190’000mtrs / 190k
Longest swim: 5k
2017 Swim SBs: 200m: 3:22, 400m: 7:02, 600m: 11:18, 1000m:
18:42, 1500m: 28:36
Duathlon Results:
Clumber Park Sprint: 4th lady, 1st age
cat, 1:08:40
Soria ETU Championships Sprint: 11th lady, 2nd
age cat, 1:15:21
Triathlon Results:
Stourhead Mega Sprint: 3rd lady, 1:56:01
Honiton Sprint: 2nd lady, 1:06:03
Dorchester Dash Sprint: 1st lady, 1:14:09
Portishead Sprint: 2nd lady, 1:24:20
The Brutal Half Extreme: 1st lady, 7:15:15Thank yous to:
My physio, Nigel Wilman - this has been the longest stretch I have gone uninjured since Feb 2013!
My coach, Chris, of Tri Coach Cornwall
My training buddies for their encouragement, interest, support, and friendship.
My amazing husband, Matt, without whom none of the above would have been possible.
Weston Friendly Five, February
Welsh Castles Relay, June
Totnes 10k, August
Totnes 10k
Templer 10, November
Templer 10
The Scrooge, December
Portishead Sprint Tri, August
Honiton Sprint Tri, July
Honiton Sprint
Dorchester Dash Sprint tri, July
Immortal Sprint, Stourhead, May
The Brutal, September
The Brutal
The Brutal
ETU Duathlon Champs, Soria, Spain, April
Soria
Soria
Soria
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