Archive for June, 2009

Mirror, mirror, what do you see?

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

As professional coaches, we all have certain self-perception of our “coaching personas.”   We built and enhance images we hope to project, and hopefully image and actual reality co-inside.  But once a while, it is refreshing (or depressing, or comforting, or revealing) to see how athlete’s perception varies from our own internal image.

Recently, one of IronTeam athletes shared with us her current visual construct/perception of these three TriLife coaches: Earl, Scott and Ross.

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(Coach Ross note:  I guess I should feel the glory of being in a good company of coaches who in part are considered to be mortal and immortal gods.   But not sure how to take comparison with kids-tormenting haphephobic psycho candy factory owner?..  Honored, horrified, in need to change profession or modify my communication skills?  Do I say anything remotely similar to Willy Wonka’s: “Little girl? Don’t touch that squirrel’s nuts! It’ll make him crazy!”)

Priceless Series

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

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St. Anthony Triathlon race fees – $150

TriLife Coaching training program – $1000

Airfare to Florida – $500

Ability to intrigue race photographer at the finish line – $0 (included in TriLife program).

Being forced to explain forever that time on the finishing clock is from the pro race start – priceless.

There are some things money can’t buy.  For triathlon training, there’s TriLife.

Sharing good race results

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

TriLife coaches are not known for “selling” their services based on their own athletic achievements (overall race and/or age group wins, ironman distance finished, Kona qualifications, or finishing times).   We believe that coaching knowledge and skills COMBINED with personal racing and training successes are needed to provide good advice.   Great results are nice, and even very helpful when coaching certain level of athletes, but they are not something that should sway rational selection criteria in choosing coach or his/her methodology.  We also feel that one must control your own vanity or size of your head might outgrow available helmet sizing. 

Most of TriLife athletes end up following this approach for their race successes – not bragging to the whole world (or even mentioning it to their training partners).  In a way, we are proud of such humble and reserved attitude.  But sometimes coaches wonder if such silent approach is a correct one.  Last couple of month, there were many good and great performances worth indicating but since athletes did not say anything, not all information ended up public.

This week, my cup “runneth over.”   Enough being secretive about good results!  And we, as coaches, should feel proud to mention our athletes successes.  What brought this up – Lenny G. from IronTeam 2009 casually noted that he “was doing just OK” during the long Sunday Brick on River Road, and commented how late he got there since he had to drive from Harriman SP.   Well, the reason for doubled location is that he won Seven Lakes Time Trial road cycling race on June 7, 2009.   Than someone noted Bill W.’s “King of the Mountain” points at the recent MTB race.

Just before that news, I saw USAT “magazine” with 2008 All Americans and Honor Mentioned lists.   I was too lazy and randomly looked into only one age group (I am not revealing it since all our female athletes are so mature but young) but Allyson K. and Aly G. names jumped out.

Before that, Coach Dennis taking second third overall and first in age group (coach note: corrected by Dennis – isn’t he so honest and humble – if I could run that fast, I would be insufferable elitist) at the Hook Mountain half marathon… and Jarod S., Alex DeN., and Cristine T. placing first or second in their age groups…

And this continues probably to some extent…  Lifers, please remind us on on your great performances during “training races.”

Lake Placid Ironman training camps notes

Friday, June 5th, 2009

lpcobblemountainsignMemorial Day weekend training in Lake Placid is getting ever more popular.   This year, besides TriLife athletes, many unaffiliated athletes and large groups from Asphalt Green Triathlon Club (New York City), Ed Zerkle’s Team Z (D.C.), and Todd Wiley’s TWiley Sport (Pennsylvania) were highly visible training on local roads.

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Weather conditions were almost perfect (for meaningful training camp – not triathlon-themed vacation).  Rain clouds and sun and everything in between, precipitation from heavy rain to light sprinkle, air temps from 40′s to 80′s, Mirror Lake water temps of 57 to 60 degrees, tail-, side- and headwind of zero to 20-25 miles per hour.  Still, to be perfect (to satisfy this coach), weather should have presented us with one 100+ degree day and one rain deluge day.

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Race roads conditions were as expected after the hard winter.  The good news that local media just reported that paving of almost four miles of Cascade Lakes (fast downhill) section was approved by local authorities.   The bad news is that nobody said anything about fixing bad road sections after Jay, on Hazelton out-and-back and on Wilmington to Mirror Lake.

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Local drivers habits were also as challenging…  as if TriLife coaches paid certain locals to remind our athletes to re-enforce bike handling and surviving skills.  Seriously, why such luck of consideration?  Do one really need to see how close their over-sized side mirror can be over the road shoulder without braining one of the cyclists?  Does one feel that gentle curve away when passing cyclists has detrimental effect on their vehicle’s fuel economy and as such negatively affects global warming and current and future petrochemical-driven military conflicts?  Or can it be explained by the mood after the long cold winter, or inability to spatially recognize space that their large pickup truck is occupying on a road, or just dislike of annual invasion by triathletes?  Or just ignorance, jealousy, and luck of consideration? (You know, those things that separate human and some other high level animals from beasts.)

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Mirror Lake was in pristine condition – clear and clean.  The first object that greeted coaches on our first visit to the Mirror Lake was a small alligator (no, soft plastic toy type).   Rope lines and buoys were already placed on a lake but offset laterally (i.e., not the exact direction and positioning as during the Ironman) and provided good visual guidance and ability to work on navigation and sighting when swimming. 

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All TriLife coaches maximized their time on the Mirror Lake: some – in the water, some – near the water, some – above it.   Some spent so much in it that strange growth occurred around their head…

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Whiteface Mountain, thank you for asking, was usual “fun.”   What else can “energize” this coach as much as the freezing speed-chill of eight mile descent very early in the morning and than spending next 30 minutes with hands in front of car heater in order to unclasp them from squeezing-the-brakes grip.  It also was soothing to see how certain TriLife coaches still would get joy from inflicting pain and suffering on their colleagues.  Specifically, Coach Scott challenging Adam to climb whole trip up out of saddle (successfully, BTW) or the same Scott carefully selecting routes (wrong word really since route implies road or at least path that had been used before) on slopes of Whiteface to field test how fast running shoes of other coaches and other coaches (excluding apparently charged with helium and bounciness Dennis) can be destroyed by scree, rocks, and snow, and unnatural uphill and downhill gradients.

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Interesting observation from several athletes on their “mental horizon shrinkage” during hard and long sessions – athletes meaningfully discussed “that bungee on a road” section when Nature’s wonders are all around them to provide more glorious markers…  Fatigue levels were fairly high after couple hundreds miles in the saddle and running almost 40 miles, to the point their mental confusion resulted in mixed-up sports training (see wetsuited sand mini-marathon below).

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Wilmington to was a wind tunnel on two days (especially Sunday) and provided good field testing for aero gear and positioning.  More motivated and less fatigued were able to sustain speeds of excess of 7 mph on certain sections ;-)

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Besides the damaged equipment and multiple flats, some injuries, loads of dirty laundry, re-adjusted egos, and flaunting Coach Ross instruction on unnecessary calories (see evidence below), athletes performed very well at the camp.  Congratulations!  Now back to training.

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Perfecting DNF

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Man got to know his limitations…  Monsieur Charlee Girard obviously still unable to determine his.  He was trying (for the second time) to row his boat from Cape Cod to France (about 3,300 miles).  First time in 2007 he folded after 50  miles.  This time he improved by 300% - requesting U.S. Coast Guards to pick him up after 150 miles. 

According to local news, he “became tired of rowing, so he called for help.”  Girard was back to Cape Cod last Friday and said his problem was simply mental.

Don’t be that guy.