Tuesday, November 17, 2015

2015 Kerrville Aquabike Race Recap

Kerrville Triathlon Half Aquabike

The foundation for this race was built on the crushed granite of defeat. A month earlier at the TriRock Austin Olympic distance Aquabike, I got beaten. It was a shock after winning the first four races of the series by good margins. I lost the race in the water. Over the course of just 1500 meters in the swim, someone put over three minutes into me. I never saw him in the water and had no idea anyone was ahead of me.

I’d had a decent day on the bike, averaging 23 mph and returning to an empty T2, thinking I’d sewn things up. What I didn’t know until the results hit me like a sledgehammer later, the winner, Douglas, had started a couple minutes behind me at the time trial start, passed me in the water, and was up the road. I managed to regain 45 seconds in T1, and about two minutes on the bike, but it wasn’t enough, and I’d lost TriRock Austin by 20 seconds.

This ate at me in the weeks leading up to the Kerrville Half Ironman, and I desperately wanted to win the season finale on the way to wrapping up the series title. It was a point of pride. The swim was going to be longer, at 2000 meters, or 1.2 miles. Because he was clearly faster in the water, I was at a disadvantage. It didn’t help that I’d started re-architecting my swim stroke five weeks earlier based on coach’s advice. I felt faster in the water, but not as fast as Douglas was.

I’d have to win the race on the bike, where I held a speed advantage. Another interesting development from TriRock was that Mike McCarty had a slightly faster time on the bike, despite crashing. If he showed up to Kerrville, I’d have to swim fast enough to neutralize him on the bike.

In order to have the best appraisal of the situation, I started the swim two seconds behind Douglas, next spot in the time trial start. I easily slipped onto his feet and caught a draft. The pace felt attainable and I imagined myself in the catbird seat, stepping out of the water right on his heels and easily taking time out on the bike. It was going to be a good day!

Unfortunately, the pace started to wear on my and I lost his feet. I surged to regain the draft, but came to the conclusion that if I blew everything trying to stay with his pace, I might blow up entirely, and not be able to come back on the bike. It took a lot of self-talk to convince myself to let him go, not panic, and just swim my race. He was going to get time on me in the swim, but I had 56 miles to pull back the slack. Since I had started just two seconds behind him, I’d know the margin I’d need very clearly. I settled into my best pace and swam the straightest line around the course, deviating significantly from the majority of the swimmers who didn’t notice that the intermediate buoys traced a longer course that was defined by the tetra buoys that truly defined the course. If you swam the tangents between those, you were swimming less.

I clambered up the ramp at the end of the swim and got a miserable strip from the wetsuit strippers, so lost time there. T2 was no speed clinic and I consciously gave away a little time to make sure my bike computer hooked up to the satellite and started; accurate speed and distance were going to be critical to me. I’d set a goal to reel Douglas in by the halfway point to leave myself plenty of road to put time into him.

The two-lap Kerrville course is challenging as you’ll note from the course profile below:


As you can see, the course climbs most of the back half, with a nasty 12.4% climb, but a bit of a decent coming into the finish. Net climbing per lap was only 900 feet, but what the course profile can’t show is the quality of the roads and how much of an impact on the race the tarmac would have. Heading out from the start and along the bank of the Guadalupe River, the roads are smooth and fast. Immediately at the turnaround, the roads turn to heavy, chip-seal asphalt that feels slow punishing.

I was making good progress through the field throughout the bike as well. The aquabike division swims last because we’ll be done earlier. That meant a steady stream of riders to pass. I picked my way carefully around those who’d started before me. I’d passed plenty in the water, but was really punching tickets now on the road.

I kept the pace modest, knowing that I’d get a look at everything first lap, and if I paced it correctly, my second lap would be faster. From my initial read on the first lap, I’d also have to leave a little more in the tank for the back half of the course to make up for the heavy road conditions and the stinging climb. Beyond the course profile, the course design itself would actually play a big role in my race strategy. As you can see from the course map below, at around mile 20, there’s a short out-and-back section the race organizers were compelled to include to make the full race distance:



This out and back was important the first time through, as I estimated that I’d be able to see Douglas. It’s only about ¾ mile, but a good chance to see those immediately in front of you on the bike. As planned, I caught my first glimpse of his kit on the out-and-back. Time to start reeling him in and then I’d have over a lap to put time in. In theory this would even keep me in the race if I flatted, a very real and frightening possibility fresh in my mind coming off a race-ending flat in the sprint the day before. I’d had to leave the race while in third place overall. A heartbreaker and a real cause of concern for me in the half today.

It took far longer than I thought it should to catch him, which indicated that we were moving at comparable speeds and that this was going to be a tough rundown. I made the actual catch at about mile 23, just before the steep climb. Leading to that climb, there’s a left turn that conceals the climb so I hit it in my big ring alongside a couple other unfortunate souls and we all ground over the summit cross-chaining our big rings and big cogs. I made a mental note not to repeat that on the second lap, while sizing up Douglas about ten bike lengths ahead.

There’s a very sharp right-hander over the top of the climb and a decent downhill section that led toward the second lap, or next time around, the finish. I also had a suspicion that the road surface would improve as I got closer to town.

I decided to hang back and make a really definitive pass on the downhill. I run a 55-tooth chainring, where most of my competitors run a 53-tooth.  That provides me a significant advantage on the downhills, so I decided I’d make my pass there. I wound up the gears on the downslope and made the pass with about a 5-mph speed differential. I wanted the pass to be psychologically damaging.

I settled into a comfortable pace and expected to start piling on the time gap. The run-in to the finish did get smoother and the downhill approach was high speed. There were a couple dangerously sharp turns into the finish and I sized them up in case things went bad and I really had to take some risks to gather seconds in the finale. The turns also gave me a chance to assess the damage behind me and going into the second lap, no sign of my rival.

I started to dial up the pace a little and felt pretty good on the smooth section headed back out to the turnaround. The return to the chip seal was unpleasant and I started to feel like my speed was flagging and fatigue was setting in. I was saving a little for the last climb, so didn’t put too much into the roads leading up to the out-and-back. The number of racers in front of me were getting fewer as well, but I caught a glimpse of my team manager on the out portion of the out-and-back and I knew I’d soon catch her.

I rounded the turnaround and almost shit myself when I spotted the white Tri Amigos jersey no less than 25 seconds behind me. Panic set in! He was going to catch me and I’d have to hang onto him. My mind raced through the rest of the route trying to calculate where I could make up just the two seconds I’d need in the last few corners. It was going to be risky, but this was going to be a tactical finish, just like a one-day road race, down to the sprint.

This didn’t sound good, so I calmed myself, rounded out my pedal stroke as much as I could, getting every ounce of power out of each pedal revolution.  I concentrated on pulling up and over the top of the pedal stroke instead of falling into my default pedal-mashing downstroke that is less efficient.  I set my jaw and put what I could into it, saving a little for the last climb. This was a 12-mile time trial now. 

A few miles later, I arrived at the turn leading to the climb. I downshifted into my lowest gear and spun as best as I could up the climb, knowing I’d need the freshest legs possible for the run-in to the finish. Douglas still hadn’t passed me, and I dared not look back, but I thought I could hear him and feel hot breath on my neck.

The downhill began in earnest and I gave everything I had, straining and pouring sweat. Still no pass, but I thought ahead to the final turns where I’d have to risk everything. I DID NOT want to lose today! I continued to lash myself and fight to keep the pedals turning smoothly, shifting down to a smaller gear in favor of pushing a big gear and bogging down. It hurt more than anything had all year. It was not a flat-out anaerobic effort that taxed the lungs to the limit, but a leg-searing lactic acid grind. It was agony, but still no pass.

I caught and passed my team captain on the run-in, but couldn’t even muster a grunt as I went by. Normally my entire team encourages one another when we see each other on the course. I was so buried in the effort with my nose to my stem that I couldn’t even manage a “good job” to Erin.

I had not looked over my shoulder since the turnaround but I afforded a look back on a right-hander about 1.5 miles from the finish. Remarkably, and thankfully, no sight of the Tri Amigos killer. That meant a sensible last few corners into transition. Whenever I could, I snuck a look over my shoulder after the turns. Still no sight of Douglas.

I busted into T2 breathless and spent. I looked back over the bike finish an started counting one-one thousand… two-one thousand… three-one thousand… four one-thousand and silently said to myself, “that’s enough.” I walked to my rack and sheathed the bike. Still no sign. I put on my shoes, visor, and run number belt.


Then I saw him. I’d actually put about two minutes on him, but man did I pay for it. What a race, and what a satisfying end to the season.