Sunday, April 28, 2013

Swimming through the prism of Ironman


The past three days were all about swimming - FAST or at least that was a key objective.

Swim fast and meet the qualifying standards for the FINA 2014 World Masters Championships to be held in Montreal in late July/early August. (The swimming schedule hasn’t yet to be released.)

First, I haven’t YET qualified in any event. Here are the standards.

Second, I am however now closer to qualifying in two events: 50m Free and 100m Free.

At the BC Provincial swimming championships this weekend at the Vancouver Aquatic Centre, I swam 33.29 for the 50m. The qualifying FINA time is 33.0.

I swam the 100m in 1:16.94. The qualifying standard is 1:15:30.

Both of those times are PBs for me.

The 50m one is an incremental one as I swam 33.54 at the Love to Swim meet in February. 

As for the 100m, I swam 1:21.19 at that February meet and 1:24.58 at a meet at the University of British Columbia last November. Great progress.

Both the 50m and the 100m are about red-lining one’s effort from start to finish. I’m confident I achieved that part of the equation and I’m as confident that I can go faster with a bit more focus on a relaxed right arm catch/pull as well as perfecting my dive from the block and flip turning with power.

This weekend I also set meet PBs for the 200m (2:56.64), the 400m (6:13.56) and the 800m (13:10.00). The qualifying times for each are: 2:47, 5:50 and 12:20.

Since November, I’ve knocked 12 seconds off my 200m time, more than half a minute off my 400m time and more than one minute off the 800m.

The 400m time this weekend is the most puzzling for me. In training I now regularly swim slightly below 6 minutes. Last week I swam a 6:02 in the middle of a pyramid session after being out of the pool for about two weeks. I’ll chalk it up to ‘stuff happens when racing’. The dive? Started too fast? A few poorly executed flip turns? A poor finishing reach? 

One competitor said he thought this pool was a slow one. But that doesn’t explain why I swam the 50m and 100m so well. So perhaps that’s fishing too deep!

On Friday, I started the meet with a 25:32.45 time for the 1500m. I wasn’t impressed. In February I had swum six seconds faster. I could point to several ‘life’ reasons but I won’t. I’ll chalk it up to a ‘lower-than-expected energy’ moment.

No decision has been made on going to Montreal. That will be made later, in part based on qualifying!

For now, all of the swimming that I do is through the prism of the 3.8km that I need to ‘race’ on August 25th at Ironman Canada in Whistler. It will be a two-lap course in Alta Lake.

Here’s how I look at where I am now in terms of Ironman swim fitness. It’s Tim’s rough math, so bear with me: 1500m x 2.53 = 3.8km. So my 1.5k effort becomes a 1:04/1:05 Ironman swim.

My 800m time is equivalent to 1:02/1:03.

My 400m time equates to a 59 minute Ironman swim split.

Now obviously, the effort that I put into the 400m - which I have to say felt was the hardest I’d ever swum that distance - is one that I can’t sustain for 3.8km. I couldn’t have sustained it for another 25m. So a Sub 1 hour Ironman swim is - for now - out of reach.

The stats tell me that I’m in the ballpark, fitness wise, for a 1:05-1:10 swim.

At first thought, I’d be depressed. Will I ever get close to the one-hour mark?

There are two huge race-day positives to take into account that will generate speed: my wetsuit and the drafting/two-lap current effect. Most of the training I do is with a pull buoy; all racing this weekend was without it. The wetsuit is my race day pull buoy. Ah, cold open water swims.

When Margreet and I raced in Ironman Australia in Forster, it was a two-lap course in a confined area and there was a superb whirlpool that helped propel everyone on the second lap. I’m hopeful of something similar at Whistler.

Of course the most important component to what I achieve at Ironman Canada is for me to keep swimming relatively fast and to start swimming longer sets. 

I’m a person, an athlete, who is methodical. Perhaps you’ve gathered. And the confidence that I have ahead of a race is directly related to the training I’ve completed. Once a week, every week until August 25th, I will swim one long set with minimal stops to replicate the time in motion and steady effort needed in Alta Lake.

Tomorrow though I’m sleeping in. Coach’s orders.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

April Fool's splits

The numbers tell of a not so flat course. And also of perhaps a slight loss of focus from 15k-17k.

4:23
3:49
3:58
4:18
4:36

5k in 21:06

4:24
4:39
4:04
3:56
4:30

10k in 42:38

4:21
4:19
4:19
4:16
4:48

5:04
4:47
4:17
3:54
3:58
4:41 for the final 1.2k

I was third in the 45-49 age group which is cool given that I'm about to age up. However, I shouldn't rush as I would have been fourth in the 50-54 age group today. Sheesh.


April Fool's half marathon

Well, another half marathon and another solid effort. I ran 1:31:06 today at the Sunshine Coast April Fool's half.


2002 Lake Macquarie 1:31:21 4:21/km

2003 Sydney (Homebush) 1:31:17 4:20.9/km

2005 Sydney ½ marathon 1:32:48 4:25.2/km

2005 Sydney (Opera House) 1:32:57 4:25.7/km

2006 Sydney (Sept) 1:30:15 4:17.9/km

2006 Sydney 1:33:19 4:26.7/km

2006 Lake Mac 1:30.25 4:18.4/km

2007 Sydney (May) 1:31:39 4:21.9/km

2008 Gibsons (April) 1.31.06

2008 Vancouver (June) 1.30.17

2009 Vancouver First Half 1.29.06


2012 First Half half (Feb) 1:33:30

Everson, WA half (Mar) 1:32:09

Gibsons half (Apr) 1:30:10 - 3rd in my age group

2013 First Half half (Feb) 1:31:14

Gibsons half (Apr) 1:31:06  - 3rd in my age group