31 October 2016

XTERRA Dominican Republic



Race Details:
Bike: Pro Cycling Epic with SRAM XX1 156Q SRM Crank
     Antiflat Protection: 90ml of Effetto Mariposa Caffelatex, 21.5psi Front, 24psi Rear, 2.2 Fast Trak 
     Helmet: Rudy Project Windmax Helmet
     Glasses: Rudy Project Tralyx 
Run: Colorado Running Company X-Talon 212
     Glasses: Rudy Project Tralyx
Race Nutrition: +First Endurance Triathlon Nutrition Plan
     Pre-Race: 24oz of EFS Pro mix of Lemon and Cumber Flavors, 20 oz bottle of water
                      3 Capsules of PreRace
     Bike: 2 - 24oz bottles with 1.5 packets of EFS Pro Lemon in each,
               3 servings of Vanilla EFS Liquid Shot
     Run: 1 servings of Vanilla EFS Liquid Shot and on course hydration.
     Post Race: 1 Serving of Cappuccino Ultragen

XTERRA Dominican Republic

When I saw the new races on the XTERRA Pan American circuit, Dominican Republic really stood out as one that I wanted to do and I can’t recommend enough that you go and race as well.  For a first year race it was well run at a spectacular venue of the Casa Bonita Tropical Eco-Lodge.  The staff and management did everything they could to provide the best experience possible for the racers and I know it will only continue to get better the more the race goes on.
As a first year race we didn’t know what to expect going in but the XTERRA DR crew did a fantastic job using what they had at their disposal for the course, most importantly they have the vision and desire to continue to keep adding more trails and keep improving the race experience.
No pictures do the waves justice, but this does show how rocky the beach is.

The race is a beast, with the ocean swim you never know what you will get and on race day it was better for surfing than for swimming that is for sure, as guys were tearing up the waves 200m down the beach from the swim start.  It swells were huge and I was very grateful that we were not having to swim through to many breaking waves.  The start was brutal on a rocky beach as the waves tossed rocks around and you just had to commit and get in to the water.  Once you were past the beach break it was not smooth sailing though as there was probably a 15 foot difference between the bottom and top of the swell so it was very tricky to sight the buoy and the currents made it very difficult as well.  I tried a couple times to surge and get ahead but I was only putting out more effort with no noticeable gain.  I stayed tucked in the front group and did what was necessary to not loose the group.

Once out of the water I got a good sense of who was around me; and it was two local guys, and Rom Akerson.  We hit the bike and my plan was to work with Rom and try to stay out front as long as possible.  That plan went quickly out the window with the surprise of Josiah going by 400m into the bike; he swam well and was only just off of our feet.  It was a quick change in mindset and the only thought was getting on his wheel.  The 3 of us rode together to a steep staircase that is ride able 
We rode the staircase in the pre-ride but not in the race
it is steep and there is no slowing down.
but for the safety of the entire field of competitors the right call was made that we would have to dismount and run/walk down the steps.  There was a grass siding that I knew the bike shoes would get better traction on and planned on running down that, Josiah had the same idea and was a bit more fearless about it and managed to open a gap running down, leaving Rom and I chasing.  We managed to close the gap a little bit since Josiah had to stop to open up a gate but then we reached the hill he really started to open things up.  The hill is brutally steep, you gain about 1000ft in less than 2 miles, everyone is really crawling along up the hill, and many had to walk.  One saving grace was the cloud cover otherwise it would have been even tougher with the sun beating down as you were going 3-4 mph up hill.  To make things a bit tougher there was after a short downhill section it was then a steep hike-a-bike to zap the legs a bit more before you finally go to head downhill.
Rom dropped me chasing Josiah and tried to keep him in sight and worked to stay ahead of Kieran McPherson, as I knew I needed time on him heading into the run.  The couple river crossings on the bike were great to help stay cool.  The good and bad thing about the course is that is two loops, you get great encouragement from everyone coming back through near transition but at the same time you have to go up the hill again.  The second time is always a bit tougher but I mentally used the short sprint athletes that had started later as little carrots to catch as I was riding, I felt like I rode the climb stronger and hit the downhill hard.  About half way down I saw Josiah stopped with a flat, he asked for Co2 
but unfortunately on the first lap my Caffélatex Espresso (a Co2 and sealant that I carry to fix flats) had shaken loose and I didn’t have it any thing else with me.  I was lucky not to flat after I lost that, flats and mechanicals are part of racing and it can happen to anyone you just have to make the best of it and in my case I had to use that to try to gap Josiah so he wouldn’t run my down.


The reward after the climb, you can see the Caffelatex Espresso right when I lost it below my right foot (leftside)
I came in to transition a few minutes down on Rom and didn’t know how quickly Josiah would have gotten going I just pushed on.  The run course is the “easy” part if you want to call it that, though there is not much climbing it is still a gradual climb for 5k and it grinds a way at you before coming back in.  I focused on staying hydrated and was very happy that the run was well shaded in the trees, there were a few times I still considered jumping in the crystal clear cool water of the river that we run besides.   I managed to keep things together well and held my position and finished 2nd behind Rom.
SRM Powerfile and elevation file from XTERRA Dominican Republic (not sure why the elevation isn't symmetrical)


The post race party at the finish line with the wood fired pizza oven and barbecue was great to get refreshed.  The awards were back up at Casa Bonita were we got to sit and relax at the infinity pool for the awards.  This is truly a brilliant place for a racecation.

5-Ryan Ignatz, 3 Kieran McPherson, 1 Rom Akerson, 2 Me, 3 Josiah Middaugh






15 August 2016

XTERRA Beaver Creek

Race Details:
Bike: Pro Cycling Epic with SRAM XX1 156Q SRM Crank
     Antiflat Protection: 90ml of Effetto Mariposa Caffelatex, 21psi Front, 25psi Rear, 2.2 Fast Trak
     Helmet: Rudy Project Windmax Helmet
     Glasses: Rudy Project Tralyx
Run: Colorado Running Company X-Talon 212
     Glasses: Rudy Project Noyz
Race Nutrition: +First Endurance Triathlon Nutrition Plan
     Pre-Race: 24oz Bottle of 1 Single serve packet of EFS Pro mix of Lemon and Cumber Flavors
                      3 Capsules of PreRace
     Bike: 2 - 20oz bottles with 1.5 packets of EFS Pro Lemon in each,
               2 servings of Kona Mocha/Vanilla EFS Liquid Shot
     Run: 1 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot and on course hydration.
     Post Race Cappuccino Ultragen

XTERRA Beaver Creek
A couple weeks later I was on to the closest thing I can call a hometown race being in Colorado.  It also starts the beginning of the mountain courses with all the remaining courses on the Pan-American series all have a lot of climbing involved.  Being that Colorado is a training hotbed for triathlon in general, racers come out of the woodwork and race Beaver Creek since it is an easy drive.  This year was no exception with some very top name road guys racing their first XTERRA and a few guys that do 1-2 XTERRA’s a year that are very talented.   This also changed the dynamic of the race a bit over the XTERRA in Alabama and Milton where there was a group of 2-3 of us in the swim to now a very solid group of 7-8 guys to push the pace from the gun.

Not a great effort in the swim but when nobody else wants to lead. PC: Jesse Peters/Backlight Photo
More Photos from XTERRA Beaver Creek
 Leave it to the roadies showing up to do a gradual forward drift of the start line during the countdown to the gun, I took my normal position and got away clean on the side with Brad Zoller and happily slid back to draft him after clearing the dock.  Normally I take 10-20 hard strokes then settle in but I couldn’t get comfortable and find my stroke and breathing was difficult.  Brad built a small gap and it stayed steady through the swim.  I knew I wasn’t swimming fast but no one behind me wanted to take the lead and catch Brad so I just cruised at what was comfortable.

At switchbacks to the road, with Sam Long on my wheel, he surprised us all, great race from him
PC: Backlight/Jesse Peters


I headed out on the bike in second and passed Brad shortly there after and was joined by Ben Hoffman, Rom Akerson and Leon Griffin.  I think all of us were feeling a bit off as I knew I was not 100% on my game but they were not accelerating away from me at all and it was a very slow gap to open.  Just before the cross over point of the bike Josiah rolled up to me with someone else in tow and continued to roll away.  Once on the short road section I got a gauge on Ben, Rom and Leon and knew I needed to overtake Leon before we started the downhill to start gaining time on him and by the top of the climb I managed to catch him and took off downhill.  It is not very technical but you can still open up some time on the switchbacks down Arrowhead.  I pressed on hoping to keep close to the 4 guys up the trail on the traverse on Village to Village trail trying to not let Leon catch back up.  Everything remained the same through the end of the bike and I headed off in fifth knowing it would be a tough task to catch anyone ahead but also wanting to preserve a top 5.


The decent down Corkscrew PC Backlight/Jesse Peters

SRM PC8 Powerfile from XTERRA Beaver Creek
Top of the Aspen Glade climb PC:Backlight

I managed to preserve things for about a mile before Leon rolled by, I kept things in check for the first 5k and the legs were feeling good on the downhill and was hoping for a stronger 2nd half of the run.   The legs would not respond as well as hoped on the second climb and he opened up the gap more.  I was glad to have gapped the other guys behind on the bike as I needed the time over guys like Greg Bennett and was able keep things rolling and finished 6th



In to the finish in 6th

More photos of XTERRA Beaver Creek from Backlight/Jesse Peters

XTERRA Mine over Matter

Need to get a little caught up, so a few race reports will be coming over the next couple days, first up XTERRA Mine Over Matter in Milton, Ontario (that is Canada for those geographically challenged)

Race Details:
Bike: Pro Cycling Epic with SRAM XX1 156Q SRM Crank
     Antiflat Protection: 90ml of Effetto Mariposa Caffelatex, 22.5psi Front, 26psi Rear, 2.2 Fast Trak 
     Helmet: Rudy Project Windmax Helmet
     Glasses: Rudy Project Tralyx 
Run: Colorado Running Company X-Talon 212
     Glasses: Rudy Project Noyz
Race Nutrition: +First Endurance Triathlon Nutrition Plan
     Pre-Race: 24oz Bottle of 1 Single serve packet of EFS Pro mix of Lemon and Cumber Flavors
                      3 Capsules of PreRace
     Bike: 1 - 24oz bottle with 1.5 packets of EFS Pro Lemon in each,
               2 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot
     Run: 1 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot and on course hydration.
     Post Race: 1 Serving of Cappuccino Ultragen

XTERRA Mine over Matter
This is very late but want to still get the word out about XTERRA Mine over Matter. It is a bit different as it is a very fast race with a slightly shorter swim like Richmond as well, but the bike is shorter as well the roots and rocks and powdery dirt in dry conditions were very much like Richmond.  Then you have the full length run to top things off.  Keep in mind for anyone who should venture up there in the future they do not follow the XTERRA rules that the US series races are run under.  In Canada they more closely follow the ITU rulebook.  Keep this in mind in the event of a non-wetsuit swim as swimskin/speedsuits are not allowed unless you are willing to wear it for the entirety of the race, this may affect your choice of race kit!  I was wishing that this was more public announced and decided upon well in advance of the race instead of the Wednesday before when many of us had travelled to Milton.  I mention this because it did affect me, but thanks to Karsten Madsen and it being his hometown race he was gracious enough to loan me an old one piece suit that is quicker in the swim than my two-piece kit.

The swim is in a quarry pond and was a 1 loop, 1000m affair and it was fast and furious, I knew Karsten was going to be gunning to take the win as there was some added pressure being his home course and his family and friends were out in force supporting him.  He took it out fast and an old racing buddy Sean Bechtel and followed on his feet.   Sean let a gap open up and I never had a chance to close it down and just tried to keep the damage to a minimum.  I did until it seemed like the last stretch when all of a sudden the gap went from what I was holding to 10 sec jumped to over 20 when I got on the bike.

Karsten knows these trails better than anyone and so I knew going in that I needed to do 1 of two things, either get on the trails ahead of Karsten and hold him off as long as possible or be right with him and try to hold on as long as possible.  The gap he created in the swim didn’t let either of these things happen and I was left to do my best to not loose to much time and try to maintain second.  I felt like I was riding pretty well but about ¾ of the way through Sean who is a local boy as well caught me and I used him to help guide me through the rest of the bike.
SRM.de PC8 Course Profile from XTERRA Mine Over Matter
We came off together and headed out on the run.  I was happy to quickly assume 2nd and felt good running but knew that I had to keep the pressure on; not to catch Karsten as he had built a lead that would only be lost with an epic meltdown, but to hold off Chris Ganter.  I felt good and was steadily rolling through the run but he ran me down at about 7k.  I pushed to stay with him as best as I could and was holding strong only just a bit back from him, until things flattened out a bit more on a lap around the lake and he opened things up a bit and I finished off the day in 3rd Not to bad of a day, some small mistake were made but overall it was another solid race.
Top 5 Women - 5 Debby, 3 Maia, 1 Suzie, 2 Joanna, 4 Katharine
Top 5 Men, 5 Sean, 3 Me, 1 Karsten, 2 Chris, 4 Alex

24 June 2016

Boulder 70.3

Race Details:
Bike: Pro Cycling SHIV with QARV Rotor 3D+ SRM Crank
Antiflat Protection: 30ml of Effetto Mariposa Caffelatex in each tire 
Helmet: Rudy Project Wing57 Helmet
Glasses: Rudy Project Tralyx 
Run: Colorado Running Company  NB 1400
First Endurance Triathlon Nutrition Plan
     Pre-Race: 24oz Bottle of 4 scoops of EFS Pro mix of Lemon and Cumber Flavors
                      3 Capsules of PreRace
     Bike: 2 - 24oz bottles with 5 scoops of EFS Pro Lemon in each
             2 Bottles of watter
               3 servings of Kona Mocha EFS Liquid Shot
               Enduro Bite Dark Chocolate Espresso Bar
     Run: 2 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot
             2-3 Cups of water or on course hydration per aid station.
     Post Race: 1 Serving of Cappuccino Ultragen

Well to keep things updated before my next XTERRA here is a little recap of Boulder 70.3.  Some times I don’t have to travel very far sometimes to race against some of the best athletes in the sport and the men’s roster for Boulder is always strong with it being a very popular spot for the roadies.  I prefer a location where you can have better access to mountain bike trails though.  The race is at the infamous Boulder Reservoir.  I have raced there on numerous times at the Boulder Peak Triathlon that was a great Olympic distance non-drafting tri when under the directorship of Paul Karlsson and later Barry Siff.  Barry as well started the 5430 Half, which is now this race, Boulder 70.3.  There are a few things about the res that are constant, it is flat, there are minimal trees to provide shade and without fail it is always hot.  The benefit to it being warm is that the water warmed up just enough for it to be a non-wetsuit swim, which I was thankful for.

I chose to start a bit further to the left, which may not put me in the middle of the bunch to get a faster pair of feet at the start, but I do get cleaner water and less fighting with other athletes off the line.  I was sitting at the tail end of the front pack and felt that the group had settled in but someone a few people in front of me let a gap open up and there was no closing it back down.   As has typically been my style in the swims this year, I steadily got stronger through the swim and moved my way forward and lead the chase pack of the swim and ended up about a minute and fifteen down from the main front group.

Each race is a learning experience and I have really learned that the first part of the bike in any half distance race always starts very hard before people settle in, it was something I had been working on and put into play.  Unlike racing Galveston 70.3 and at Wildflower I maintained contact with the other guys and helped push the pace and found myself riding with Leon Griffin and Justin Metzler.  There were a few guys that were riding stronger and we could not stay with but others we were catching through the course of the bike. With the steadily rising temperature I was sure to keep well hydrated and went through my standard two bottles of First Endurance on the bike as well as two bottles of water instead of the usual 1.  I lost contact with Justin and Leon on the climb on Nelson road but was stronger on the last quarter of the ride and closed the gap back down as we entered transition. 

It was nice and toasty by the time I was starting the run and felt bad for those amateurs that were just heading out onto the bike course as I was coming in.  I spent some extra time in transition grabbing ice, a cooling towel, a frozen bottle of water and a frozen flask of First Endurance Liquid Shot to help me stay cool during the run.  The legs responded great at the beginning of the run and it made me question if I was running too fast to start and that I would blow up later.  I knew I had to trust the training Derick and I had been building through the year and kept the pressure on.  I was sure to grab 2-3 cups on water or electrolyte drink at each aid station to help cool down and stay hydrated.  I was steady and maintained my pace and picked a few people off over the first lap of the run.  The lack of shade became more and more evident on the second lap but I was managing the heat well keeping cool though I know my pace had slowed some I know everyone else was in the same situation.  Once in the last 5k of the run I needed to just keep the pressure on and try to pick up the pace, I gained extra momentum when I could see that I was closing down on a few guys ahead and picked off a couple more guys before the finish and had only been passed by 1 guy during the run.  I finished in 15th and it was definitely the most solid 70.3/half iron distance race I had put together and gives me a boost of confidence that I can race that distance.  After a few recovery days and some quick opener workouts I am outside Toronto for some more fun racing at XTERRA Mine Over Matter tomorrow.

30 May 2016

XTERRA Oak Mountain

We are all friends before the gun goes.  A few of the great friends I get to race against, missing a few that have moved on.

Race Details:
Bike: Pro Cycling Epic with SRAM XX1 156Q SRM Crank
     Antiflat Protection: 90ml of Effetto Mariposa Caffelatex, 22.5psi Front, 26psi Rear, 2.2 Fast Trak
     Helmet: Rudy Project Windmax Helmet
     Glasses: Rudy Project Tralyx
Run: Colorado Running Company X-Talon 212
     Glasses: Rudy Project Noyz
Race Nutrition: +First Endurance Triathlon Nutrition Plan
     Pre-Race: 24oz Bottle of 1 Single serve packet of EFS Pro mix of Lemon and Cumber Flavors
                      3 Capsules of PreRace
     Bike: 2 - 20oz bottles with 1.5 packets of EFS Pro Lemon in each,
               2 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot
     Run: 1 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot and on course hydration.
     Post Race: 1 Serving of Cappuccino Ultragen

This is one of the must do races in off-road triathlon, now XTERRA Oak Mountain with the new XTERRA Pan-American Series.  It is an honest course and a lot of fun and there are 3 different distance races to allow you sample what off road triathlon is all about.  I promise it will put a smile on your face during and after the race.

Great to be back at XTERRA with the Paul Mitchell Cut-a-Thons, all proceeds were donated to the Desantis 16 in 16 in which benefits the Challenged Athletes Foundation. PC:Jesse Peters/Backlight/XTERRA
Some of the joys of off road racing the weather and trail conditions can drastically affect the race, on an pre-ride on Wednesday we started in dry conditions and ended up in a rainstorm.  This took the trails from dry and a bit loose to tacky dirt with slick roots, rocks and bridges, and the way you ride loose dirt compared to slick roots is entirely different.  It was a wait an see game to see if more rain would come and keep things slick or if it would stay dry.  We have raced in the rain here a few times and I knew that I would have a bit of an advantage over some other guys as I had gained confidence riding the Oak Mountain trails in wet conditions.  Over the next couple days the weather evened out and the trails turned to hero dirt, where the dirt is perfectly tacky, not to dry but not to wet, it’s just right.


Exiting the water between laps on the swim. PC: Jesse Peters/Backlight
The swim was ideal, calm flat lake with no wetsuits; my plan was to get out fast with Mauricio Mendez and Karsten Madsen and then settled into a good hard pace.  Things started well but Mauricio never settle he just held the same pace from start to finish and with Karsten and I trying to work in to his draft he got a gap and slowly opened things up.  I pushed the chase but Mau was to strong and kept edging away.

Karsten and I hitting the trails in chase of Mauricio, basically the way the bike looked through the entire leg.


Exiting the water about 40 seconds down, my thoughts were to just chip away at his lead due to the technical nature of the course.  Karsten and I hit the trails and were riding well until I bumbled up things on a rooty corner and a gap opened between us. Being just that bit separating us help both of us keep pushing on the bike but as we kept getting further along with no sight of Mau, I was apparent he upped his technical skills an it would be that much harder and less likely we would catch him.    On the main climb Josiah caught us and cruised through in the hunt for Mau but there was little I could do to try to keep pace with him.  Through the rest of the bike Karsten and I continued to push still with a 10-20 second yo-yoing gap between us through the rest of the bike and entered transition a little less than 3min down from the leading duo.

You do not get to have this much fun in any road triathlon.  PC: Jesse Peters

On the run I worked to try to keep an even gap behind Karsten but he gradually edged away and I was running scared.  I was very happy to have kept a good gap on Chris Ganter and Cody Waite through the bike but had to hold through the run, this is where the mental part of racing comes.  I had to keep focus forward and not worry about what was going on behind me, as I started the 2nd lap of the run a fast amateur started his run with me and I was able to use him as  a carrot to help push me through the second lap.  With about ¼ mile to go I managed to sneak a look back and see that Kieran McPherson was flying and I really had to push the last bit in.

Happy to put a solid race behind me after a couple tough ones on the road.
I managed to find that little extra gear and hold my 4th position through the finish.  Though I wanted a little higher finish it, I really could hold my head high walking away from the race as it is the most complete race I had put together in Alabama and overall and will help in building into the next few races.


Poppin Bottles, congrats to Josiah Middaugh and Suzie Snyder for their respective wins. PC Jesse Peters.

Check out more photos from XTERRA Oak Mountain

19 May 2016

Wildflower Long Course

Race Details:
Antiflat Protection: 30ml of Effetto Mariposa Caffelatex in each tire 
Run: Colorado Running Company TrailRoc 245 and NB 1400
     Pre-Race: 24oz Bottle of 4 scoops of EFS Pro mix of Lemon and Cumber Flavors
                      3 Capsules of PreRace
     Bike: 2 - 24oz bottles with 5 scoops of EFS Pro Lemon in each,
               3 servings of Kona Mocha EFS Liquid Shot
     Run: 2 servings of Mountain Huckleberry EFS Liquid Shot and on course hydration.
     Post Race: 1 Serving of Cappuccino Ultragen

It is always a blast heading back to a race you have not done in a while, the memories of past experiences, seeing the changes within the race and getting to catch up with friends you may not have seen in a while.  That was certainly the case heading back to race at the Wildflower Triathlon.  The experience of racing at Wildflower is like no other triathlon and it is something that you really need to experience and I regret not heading back to race since my last time there in 2006.
Getting instructions and trying to remember which set of non-drafting rules we were racing under.  KAORIPHOTO.COM 


























Wouldn't be right if I didn't have one pre race issue, thank you +Effetto Mariposa for the #Carogna tape, making tubular tire set up a breeze, installed a new tubular in 10min, and was set and ready to ride the next day. 
The biggest change due to the drought the last few years is the necessary change to a swim, run, bike, run format due to having to move the swim from the Lynch camp area to Harris Creek where there is actually water.  It was a bit of a shock driving down Lynch Hill when I arrived at the venue and seeing what looked more like a pasture than a lake bed.  All I can say is that Tri-California, the event organizers, have done a fantastic job in working with the conditions they are presented with and still put on the best half distance triathlon out there.  I was a very unsure how I would react to the swim, run, bike, run style of the race but in the end I very much enjoyed it.  It is nice to have things changed up now and again and racing this format certainly provided that.
The start between the docks, silver cap on left side, didn't even realize it but was given correct cap then told needed other cap in pro meeting.  KAORIPHOTO.COM

One thing that has not changed is the tight swim start between the boat docks, it causes a bit of a melee at the beginning but once past the end of the docks it opens up and you are able to get in to a rhythm and that is what I was able to do.  I found a comfortable position in the pack and was able to cruise along and found myself feeling stronger and stronger and slowly moved up the pack.  About halfway on the way back in I found myself leading the main pack, not far from two guys that had gotten off the front.
Coming out of the water behind Matty Reed and Ben Collins just to my side.  KAORIPHOTO.COM
Towards the end of the first 2 mile run to the bike

Once out of the water I had a great quick transition and lead the charge up the boat ramp but I had company quickly with the likes of Jesse Thomas, Matty Reed, Terenzo Bozzone, and Ben Collins coming up quickly behind me.  I felt great running and maintained a good position in the pack and felt like I was set up well headed on to the bike.

Across the bridge before heading up....  KAORIPHOTO.COM

Though I felt like I was moving well, it was never good enough and one after another guys passed me.   I kept asking for more power from my legs but it never happened.  The course is an honest one which is something I really enjoy about it, there is no place to really hide or just sit in the pack and cruise along, unfortunately it was showing that I did not have what it took that day.
....Nasty Grade, had no idea that there were that many people not far off from me. KAORIPHOTO.COM























































T2 on to suffer more on the run. KAORIPHOTO.COM
Once on to the run I was hoping the legs would respond well and I would feel as good as I had during the 2-mile run from the swim to the bike transition.  I certainly had glimpses of that but overall things felt a bit flat.  I was definitely happy that the run was only 11miles at the end instead of the normal 13.1 as the last couple miles the legs started to tighten and I started to slow.   The last mile running down Lynch Hill is painful when you can’t run as fast as you would really like but I made it down and crossed the line in 17th.  Not the result I was planning on and I definitely have some unfinished business at Wildflower and look forward to heading back and racing again.
SRM PC8 Data File - Avg Power 280, NP 292