Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Smith Falls Race Report and Other Stuff

Its been a few weeks since I last blogged so I thought I'd better give a little update.

On Sunday I was in the Smith Falls Classic Triathlon, a sprint tri with a 500m swim, 26km bike and a 5km run. This is Canada's oldest triathlon in its 29th year. Last year I did this as my very first tri, and I did the try-a tri and I won. Smith falls is home to a Hershey's chocolate factory and the winners in each group received a 5lb bag of chocolate. Other than my kids being born and meeting my wife, getting 5lbs of chocolate for winning was one of the happiest moments of my life. Smith Falls is a nice course, fairly flat bike with a nice 5km run portion.

I'll start my excuse right now before I get in too deep. On Tuesday I was doing a brick workout and had my bike on the trainer to do some overgear work and as soon as I went out on the run my knee started to hurt. It was in a spot that I hadn't had trouble with before so I kept on and thought it was more of a cramp than anything. About 3km out I had to stop and couldn't run at all, walking was tough and a 3km run isn't that far, but walking it with a sore leg seems like a marathon. I took it easy the next couple of days and things got better, so much that I did an 80km ride on Saturday and had no problems. I was already registered for the tri and didn't want to miss out on my shirt so I headed up to Smith Falls, alone, as my son had his championship ball hockey game at the same time in the morning, which they won! OK, back to me, I did a little pre-race warm-up run with a co-worker and everything felt great, no worries. I had an OK swim, about what I was capable of doing and a decent transition and got on the bike and gave it all I could. My HR was in the 150's and I was going about 25-26 MPH on the flats. I kept this up until we hit a corner and hit a pretty good head wind, it was all I could do to push 20mph. About 20km into the bike I felt a little discomfort in my knee but not enough to slow me down. I had passed a few people in my age group so I knew that I had made up some time on the better swimmers, but I wasn't sure of my time as I have lost my watch and was going "naked". My bike computer has a HR monitor so this was the only time that I knew what my bpm's were. As soon as I got off the bike at transition I knew that something was wrong. I decided to try and run anyways to see if was the same problem as before or just something else. I got about 2km in of poor running before it really got bad. I stopped and tried to rub my knee but that didn't help so I knew I was done. I tried to walk but that hurt even more than running and I knew I had another 3km to get back to transition so I did a kind of run/limp/hobble back to the end. My fitness was excellent and I was ready to lay it out there to see how fast I could run after giving my best on the bike so it was very disappointing to have this happen but the best part was having people cheering for you to just hold on and finish. The cheers of "You can do it", "It's just a little farther", "You're doing great, just keep going" were starting to drive me nuts. I was running like a person in a three legged race, but with no partner. I appreciate their enthusiasm but at this point I was not in the mood, my knee hurt really bad and I knew I shouldn't have run so I was a little pissy. I did finish with a time of 1:19:01 and good for 6th place in my age group. I couldn't believe that I still finished fairly well. Coming into T2 I was right beside the guy who finished 2nd in our age group and was still able to hold on to 6th. I knew I had a good bike split but I still thought that the good swimmers were still ahead of me so I really wanted to run hard and try to catch them. This wasn't possible but it wasn't until about 3-4 km in that I began to get passed by other guys in my group. I still finished the run in 25:54 when I thought I would be around 30 min so apparently I hobble pretty quick. When I checked the results and realized that I was racing for second, that perked me up a bit. I know that if I could have run properly I would have been on the podium. The winner in our age group would have kicked my butt even if I had my best day, but I would have been happy with second. Oh well, I did get the shirt though.

I went to therapy on Monday and found out it is a problem with my knee cap and it moves around a bit too much. I hobbled in and after 20 min of rehab and laser treatment I was able to put pressure on my leg and walk out almost normal. Its still sore, but way better than it was. I'm going to take it easy for a bit to make sure it's completely healed before trying anything too strenuous.

This leads me into the Online voting for the 2 spots at Lake Placid. I wasn't one of the two chosen, Ccongratulations to James an Mary Lou!! I must admit that I am a bit relieved that I don't have to train like a madman for the next 4 weeks to get ready for an Ironman. I know I could have done it, but I also know that I need to let this knee problem work itself out and it might not have been pretty. Both James and Mary Lou will do great and hopefully I will get to go down and watch. I've heard that its a good to watch one before actually doing one. Thanks to everyone who sent in a vote for me, it is greatly appreciated!

Well thats about it.

Cheers,
Scott

2 comments:

James said...

Scott,

Sorry to hear that you have been in the wars with your knee and more importantly that you didn't get any chocolate this time around. Nice that you remembered to put your marriage and kids in front of the candy but would it have been the same story if the prize were 10lbs of chocolate.

If you can make it to Lake Placid it would be really great to see you all again.

Hope you have a speedy recovery and I will be thinking about you with your leg up as do the final few weeks of prep for Placid.

Take care of yourself,

James

Scott Sharpe said...

James,

It was really, really good chocolate! I'll have those memories for a lifetime. We are planning on coming down to LP, maybe just for the day. Hope to see everyone if we can.

Train hard,
Scott