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Ironman Vitoria 2019 - 2nd place with Josh Amberger

Wed, Jul 24, 19 . Heath Wright

The Warm up

, and the first athlete to finish to miss out on a Kona spot. Don’t try and understand that, it’s not worth your time. The new system is a little funny, though strictly requires performance. I didn’t meet my expectations for performance in South Africa, so I was okay to miss out. Thus, a new plan had to be made.

but I got the Kona spot, and had an amazing experience doing so with the most amazing crowd support you could possibly imagine.

In the two months leading to the race, there were two extended periods where I was unable to run, dealing with sudden onset niggles that made my attempt at the race look doubtful. The first one was a bike crash at home in Australia that interrupted other race plans. I had to withdraw from two events, Chattanooga 70.3 & LA Triathlon. It was a blow, but was soon back running and resumed volume training for Vitoria. I still managed to race twice (Alcatraz & Coeur d’Alene 70.3) leading into Vitoria, but I took on-board another niggle in between these events. Again, I had overwhelming doubt that a race in Vitoria was looking like it wouldn’t materialise. I had some really weird problems with the meniscus in my left knee, leading to pain in tibial tuberosity area. Somehow I was able to get through the race in Coeur d’Alene without injuring it further, and the path was then ‘kind of’ cleared for a rapid 2 week prep into Vitoria. I had caught a break.

Because the period into Vitoria was race heavy and with interruptions, I basically trained at full volume up to a few days before the event, and dropped down as if I was training through a short course event. This presented a challenging lack freshness on race day, but has also given me an advantage for recovery. I’ve pulled up the best I ever have from a full distance race with no soreness. Just that sudden tiredness that hits you at any moment during the day, followed up with blissful naps. With championship season not too far away, I hope to get back into full training pretty soon. All the experiences of the last few years; injuries, failures, victories, tapers, non-tapers etc are adding up for me and giving me a growing sense of athletic understanding that I’ve most often lacked at a younger age. Sometimes it’s hard to make sense of endurance sport, because it’s so imperfect. There’s a thousand different way to get ready for races. But as long as you have a way of reading performances based on your preparation, you can bank the experiences as they happen, move forward and learn from them.

The Race

to Eneko Llanos, who had already qualified by winning Ironman Arizona in 2019.

Swim

One lap freshwater, L shape. 21c water temp and wetsuit legal. I attacked the swim as normal. Hard from the gun to limit any traffic directly behind me. I had a really good feeling in the swim and was able to hold a consistent high stroke rate the whole course. As we got out into the deeper water though, we had to navigate a persistent chop coming from the side. The interesting part was as we turned the first buoy, we then swam with the tailwind, which was actually a very noticeable and awesome feeling. It felt super fast for that stretch, and then slow again as we took another left and tackled the cross wind again, and then into the head wind. I’d never felt this wind element in open water swimming before as strong as it was in this race. It was kind of cool and kept me engaged mentally the whole way as the conditions were always changing. It’s sometimes easy to switch off swimming because there so little going on. You can’t see anything, you can’t hear anything. It makes perfect sense that I’d sometimes get distracted. But nevertheless, I could see at the turns that I had a little bit of time on my sleeve, but even after a great exit time in 46:41, I only had 75 seconds up my sleeve. The three guys behind me would continue to make the race hard the whole way.

I’d never really bothered to work this out, but my total swim time equated to a 1:14 per 100m average. This was on the money for my prep sessions. I did 20x200’s long course the week before the race coming in mostly on 2:27-2:30 average, at no more than IM race effort. That’s valuable & interesting information. Swimming is so variable though. I’ve had almost 2 minutes advantage in Kona swimming no harder than here, but here is vastly less competitive race, and I only have 75 seconds. A good reminder that so much varies race to race, and to never try too hard to understand certain outcomes or you’ll only just send yourself crazy.

Bike

I’ll break this up into 60km segments, because that’s kind of how things happened.

lap amateurs, and you can just really put the head down and find your rhythm without any interruption. I’d trained extensively on these roads in ’13, ’15, ’17 & ’18, and was having a blast taking them on under race conditions. It’s mostly perfect asphalt the whole way, rolling hills and crosswind for the most part. There were two out and back sections at 45km and 55km approx, where I could gauge that my lead was coming down. My ambition was never to come off the bike with a solo lead, so I was okay to see the time come down. It was still three guys in the pack; Eneko, Costes and another athlete I couldn’t identify. Costes would have been riding hard to chase me down, as we were taking eachother on for the Kona spot. Eneko surely would of used this information to his advantage to let Costes do a bulk of the work.

wheel, and I could see moments where he had some weakness holding the pace in the pack. Not wanting to risk him joining us for much longer, I let him lose the 12m gap, let it blow out to 100m, and then surge around him. Costes saw this gap extend behind him and attacked at that moment to try and lose both of us. I had to burn a pretty big match to ride around Peru, and ride down the gap back to Eneko & Costes, but I succeeding in dispatching Peru. Peru came almost within 1 minute of me by the end of the run, so this was a good move. Something he’ll probably learn from in the future as well. I had a pretty good feeling for the rest of this segment, but I was happy to sit in and let Costes stay in control of the ride.

60km. Both Costes and Eneko by this point were starting to get frustrated to my lack of participation at the front of the race. This was very much international, because we weren’t really fending of any attacks from the rear, and I’ve more or less moved on from pointless time at the front of the race to the detriment of my run (until maybe I get too excited in Kona again). But around 120km I stated to fatigue quite a bit, and it became necessary to plant myself at the rear. Both men were clearly on fine bike form, and for me it just became about getting to the run.

Run

During my last Ironman in South Africa, I got off the bike totally rooted, but felt fantastic once I put my running shoes on. I felt so good I went out at like 2:30 marathon pace, and burned myself pretty soon thereafter. Part of the magic of triathlon is the fact it’s so unpredictable. I felt better getting off the bike in Vitoria, but was useless once I hit the run. I was expecting to feel much better than I did hitting the run, because I feel like I’m in goof run shape, but I was just really blunt.  I could still start the run at a modest 2:48 pace, but was forced to watch on as Eneko took the race straight up the road, and I didn’t see him again until the finish line.

Performance aside, the run course in Vitoria was like nothing I’d ever done before. From a crowd participation point, there’s probably no other race like it. On a 4 lap course, there were spectators lining the course most of the way. It was so loud I reckon I had a headache because of it most of the way. It was absolutely crazy, but obviously in a very motivating way. You never felt alone. To be honest, I would of preferred to of done the run with earplugs! The other point of note about the run is the technicality of it. Each lap, we had to negotiate 36 corners and 7 u-turns. Times that by 4 laps, and this becomes one massively tough rhythm breaking marathon. It was hard to gauge expected run times because of how different the course was. I almost went crazy before the race trying to go over and remember every detail of the course, but it ended up so much fun and really the most amazing experience. We were either running through old-world alley ways, wide tree lined footpaths, shady parks or cobbled streets for the whole marathon. Epic stuff.

 fastest run in 2:47, which is simply phenomenal on a course of that layout. Home advantage for the Spanish guys, for sure.  Eneko won with a 2:46 marathon and in my opinion a flawless race. At 42, it seems like he’s only getting better and is well and truly back from a few years in the wilderness.

place finish and a rolldown for the Kona spot, my job was done. It wasn’t a stunning performance, but all that was necessary. An 8:06 race time on hard course is still a noteworthy day, and it was also a race experience to remember. Hopefully the peak for the 2019 season is still ahead of me!

 

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