THE FINISH LINE - St Pete Mad Dogs Triathlon Club
Transcription
THE FINISH LINE - St Pete Mad Dogs Triathlon Club
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 1 THE FINISH LINE Vincent Mania Strikes! Gail Norman, Gail Lohman and Linda Musante surround Vincent Reib, Trirock Winner! Join Us For A Fun Run Every Wednesday Night @ Bayboro Tavern 6:30 Like us on Facebook! Training Calendar - Page 3 New Mad Dogs Page 4 Mad Dog News Page 5 Upcoming Races - Page 6 Race Results Page 7 Birthdays Page 8 Mad Dog Pix Pages 9 - 11 Articles Pages 12 - 19 Ads Pages 20 -22 1 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Established on November 6, 1993, the St Pete Mad Dogs Triathlon Club is a not for profit organization designed to promote the sport of triathlon. The club is comprised of fun loving triathletes who train, race and howl together, with members of all levels of experience and expertise. The Finish Line is a medium for communicating the latest club news, as well as an informal source for what’s happening in the sport of triathlon as it affects us. Articles published in The Finish Line may contain opinions of the author, not necessarily the club. ST. PETE MAD DOGS BOARD OF DIRECTORS [email protected] PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT/MEMBERSHIP TREASURER SECRETARY EDITOR BOARD MEMBER BOARD MEMBER BOARD MEMBER BOARD MEMBER AMBASSADOR AMBASSADOR TIM HUDSON CAROLYN KIPER DAVE PROFFITT BOB MACDONALD CHUCK LOHMAN ALLEN JERNIGAN PEPIR JERNIGAN JIM CUNNINGHAM GAIL LOHMAN RUE MORGAN KATHY MORGAN Club Contact Information: Website: www.stpetemaddogs.com E-mail: [email protected] Articles, or photos may be submitted to the Editor @ [email protected]. Items should be sent by the 15th of the month preceding the issue. Advertising requests should be submitted to Chuck Lohman @ [email protected]. For questions, please e-mail him. Advertising rates are as follows: Space 1/2 page Full Page Width x Height 7 1/2” x 5” 7 1/2” x 10” Cost per Issue $30 $50 Advertising checks should be mailed to: St Pete Mad Dog Triathlon Club, P.O. Box 635 St Petersburg, FL 33731-0635. Please make check payable to St Pete Mad Dogs. Note: Payment is due on the 15th of the month prior to publication. Payment for five consecutive issues of advertising entitles the advertiser to a FREE sixth month. FROM THE PRESIDENT I’m sure everyone agrees that this year’s Anniversary Party combined with early and discounted entry for St. Anthonys Triathlon was a huge success. We had numerous extensions and 8 new members join the Mad Dogs. Thanks to Mimi and Susan for their help in providing support for the party! We hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving Holiday. Now it’s time to get serious about Holiday shopping! Our next big event will be the New Year’s party and informal triathlon at North Beach at Ft. DeSoto. It starts at 12:00 PM. Bring something to share and enjoy a great start to the New Year. (please see page 4) 2 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 TRAINING CALENDAR Upcoming Training Sessions (all show and go) SWIMMING Local Bike Shop Events Every Tuesday & Thursday 6:30 - 8PM Northshore Pool w/ Coach Joe Biondi $9 per session Every Friday 8AM Group Swim at Sunset Beach. Meet at Larry and JackieYost’s, 143 91st Ave S (727) 367-2504 Every Sunday 9AM Group Swim at Pass-a-Grill led by Jack Shuten From the Central Ave. Store (727) 345-5391 Every Saturday 8AM Women only ride. 10-30 miles Also: www.stpetemasters.org for Masters Swimming BIKING see www.stpetecycling.com for daily rides Mon - Fri 8:00AM Group Ride from USFSP crosswalk 16 miles at 20-21 MPH Wed is official Mad Dog ride - wear your colors! From the Palm Harbor Store (727) 786-6889 Every Saturday 8AM - 3 ability groups - about 40 miles Every Saturday 8:30AM Group Rides based on speed from Northshore Pool South Parking Lot Every Sunday 8:30AM St Pete Library Advanced Training Ride 9th Ave N and 37th RUNNING Every Monday 6PM Individual/Partnered Run (6 miles) Northshore Pool South Parking Lot 1st and 3rd Thursday 7:30 AM Running Drills at Field south of Northshore Pool (45-55 min)https://www.facebook.com/groups/254578011396466/ led by Ben Carlson Every Wednesday 6PM Fun run and social @ The Tavern at Bayboro 120 6th Avenue South St. Pete From the Clearwater Store (727) 723-2453 Every Friday - 5:30 AM 17 mile Clearwater Bridge Ride. Group #1 at 20-22 MPH. Group #2 at 22-25 MPH. Lights required. From the Tampa Store (813) 831-1414 Tuesday and Thursday - 5:00 AM Training Bike Ride about 90 minutes at 22-30 MPH. Lights required. Saturday - 7:30 AM 20 mile no drop bike ride at 15-20 MPH depending on abilities. Some instruction provided. 3 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 WELCOME NEW MAD DOGS! #3685 - Carrie Cleveland St. Pete #3586 - Ben Royster #3587 - Dance Street #3688 - Bill Wiley #3689 - Jenn Olvedy #3690 - John Sheehan #3691 - Joan Simmons #3692 - Peter Angood St. Pete St. Pete St. Pete St. Pete St. Pete St. Pete St. Pete FROM THE PRESIDENT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2) Remember that this is an untimed, fun triathlon and all events are optional. Don’t forget to sign up for the Mad Dog Grand Prix for 2016. Bob MacDonald has done great work getting this organized. Just a reminder - Rose Marie Ray is still collecting donations to assist Roger and Barbara Burke. Finally, in the spirit of the Holidays, I would urge all Mad Dogs to be generous in their support of other tri clubs in the area. Many Mad Dog triathletes are members of more than one club. We are all in this together! Chuck Lohman, Editor By direction of the President 4 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 MAD DOG NEWS I’ve noticed a strange phenomenon sweeping the Tampa Bay Area - Vincent Mania! Austrian Pro Triathlete Vincent Reib, visiting St. Petersburg until early December to prepare for IM Cozumel, is an incredibly talented and handsome young athlete. It seems that every female triathlete at the recent Trirock Clearwater competition either wanted to date him or adopt him! The male competitors just wanted to be him, as he was the overall race winner. He is a protege of Rene Vallant, and we hope to see more of Vincent in the future. I don’t think we’ll have a problem finding a homestay for him. Good luck to both Vincent and David Fraser in Cozumel! Late update: Congratulations to David for placing 3rd in his Age Group in Ironman Cozumel! 5 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 UPCOMING RACES 5 Dec - Key West Triathlon Key West, FL Olympic & Sprint Distance www.multirace.com 9-10 Jan - HITS Naples Naples, FL Sprint to Full Distance www.hitstriathlonseries.com 13 Dec - FL Holiday Halfathon Madeira Beach, FL 1/2 Marathon www.active.com 15-17 Jan - St Pete Beach Classic 5k to Half Marathon St. Pete Beach, FL www.stpetebeachclassic.com 1 Jan 15 Hair of the Dog Party and Untimed Fun Tri Ft. DeSoto, FL www.stpetemaddogs.org 31 Jan - IM 70.3 Panama Half Ironman Panama City, Panama www.ironman.com 6 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Race Results IM Florida - 07 Nov 4th Place - Richard Weinbrandt 5th Place - John Macedo Finishers Carol McKenna Nema Runyon Sandy Weiss Clermont Triathlon - 07 Nov 5th Place - Bo Webster Challenge Venice - 08 Nov 1st Place - Kitty Myers Ironman Arizona - 15 Nov Finishers Carl Allison Jennifer Hutchinson Fred Rzymek IM Cozumel - 29 Nov 3rd Place - David Frazer Trirock Clearwater - 07 Nov 1st Place Yova Carlson (OA) Vincent Riess (OA) Sofia Bereza David Frazer Roger Little Linda Musante Art Singleton 2nd Place Danny Hicks Gail Lohman Charles Sexton 5th Place Kelsey Balzan Owen Deckinga 7 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 DECEMBER BIRTHDAYS Edward Aguilu Jo Fosse Margie Moore King Smith Kristin Cason Andrew Halttunen Rue Morgan Herb Burdett Michael Kerutis Karen Kolinski Ted Bennett Barbara Burke Chris Braunagel Jim Cunningham Lisa Pablos Zusana Blackwood Tom Stevenson Jan Thompson David Culp Allen Jernigan Keith Nelson Randall brown Cathy deHaan Valerie Meya John Thee Omar Malic Olita Layton Anna Massanari Mark Nicely Kip Vosburgh Paul Graus Pamela Montanari Robert Ruth 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 5th 6th 6th 6th 6th 7th 7th 7th 7th 7th 8th 8th 14th 16th 18th 21st 22nd 22nd 26th 26th 27th 28th 28th 29th 29th 31st 31st 31st 8 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Chili Cook Off and Last Swim of 2015 New Mad Dog Carrie Royster @ last swim 8000 bike in transition for Noosa Tri in Australia - from Don Ardell Jennifer Hutchison in Skyler (l) sprinting last 1/4 mile to qualify for state! 9 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 MAD DOG PICTURES Vincent Reib (C) and Chad Siple (R) @ David Frazer’s rear @ Trirock Gail Lohman @ Trirock Gail Norman, Linda Musante & Gail Lohman @ Trirock Leo @ Trirock Don’t you wish you could drive this? Randall Brown Grand Masters winner @ Longleaf Yova on top @ Trirock 10 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 MAD DOG PICTURES Celia Dubey is a bit excited on Veteran’s Day Nick “Bigmouth” Chase For Runners in Everglades Nat’l Park Fred Rzymek’s pre-race meal @ IM Arizona Surfing Rhino in downtown St. Pete 11 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Thought this article from Outside Magazine might interest some. A Scientific Solution to (Finally) Stop Muscle Cramps You’d think that after completing 13 Ironman Triathlons, running across the country in 14 days as part of a nine-member relay team, and clocking a sub-three-hour marathon, Casey Boren would have his training and raceday nutrition and hydration strategy dialed. But throughout his endurancesports career, he’s been unable to escape painful muscle cramps. “I’ve endured cramping in every Ironman I’ve done,” says the 44-year-old, “to the point that I know if I don’t finish the swim leg in under an hour, my hamstrings will cramp up. On the bike, my quads and hamstrings usually seize up around mile 40.” He often battles the condition during the run, as well. At a half-Ironman in Knoxville two years ago, his hamstring cramps were so painful that, after he crossed the finish line, he stopped for a second and couldn’t move again. “They told me to leave the area, and I couldn’t,” he says. Over the decades, Boren has tried everything from sodium tablets to sports drinks. In his experience, “nothing works except slowing down and massaging the tight area and waiting for the cramping to go away, and then hope it doesn’t come back.” But by then, he points out, months of intense training are effectively tossed in the trash. “Once I start cramping, the race stops being about my best performance and is reduced to simply finishing.” That an experienced and highly trained athlete such as Boren can’t prevent debilitating muscle cramps speaks to their insidiousness and pervasiveness. And he’s not alone. Talk to just about any serious endurance athlete and you’ll hear the same story: When overworked muscles seize up painfully and stop doing what the brain tells them to do, there’s no real fix. To make matters worse, cramps often strike at the worst possible moment. (Exhibit A: LeBron James pulling himself out of the first game of the 2014 NBA Finals due to leg cramps.) The most popular protocol for battling muscle cramps is to rehydrate using electrolyte-infused fluids. But despite sports nutritionists’ and sports 12 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 scientists’ best efforts, cramping in athletes has persisted without an effective answer until a turning point in the science took root off the coast of Cape Cod. During a kayaking trip five years ago, a Nobel Prize–winning neuroscientist experienced a painful and potentially disastrous case of muscle cramps. While paddling well offshore, Dr. Rod MacKinnon felt his arms seize up. The chemical-biology professor at The Rockefeller University wasn’t alone in his agony, either. His kayaking partner, Dr. Bruce Bean, a neurobiologist at Harvard, was suffering the same cramping. Both are fit and experienced paddlers who had been paying careful attention to their nutrition and hydration the whole way. They both eventually made it back to shore, but the ordeal drove them to find out what went wrong. For MacKinnon, a serious athlete who had spent the bulk of his career investigating ion channels, his two worlds collided. And when he found out how little we truly understood about cramping, he became obsessed. MacKinnon’s research started with a look at traditional sports drinks and other electrolyte solutions. His take: They were predicated on replacing what people believed the body lost through sweat—if the body is losing salt or potassium, then restore those levels. But he also came across stories of marathon runners stirring mustard into water and cyclists downing pickle juice to end muscle cramps. He was curious and asked himself, "What's the story here?" The more he learned, the more he began to suspect that it wasn’t the muscle that needed help (electrolytes, fluid, carbs), but a short circuit in the ion channels—the system that carries messages among the brain, the nervous system, and the muscle. What the body needed was some sort of stimulation to tell the motor neurons in the spinal cord to, essentially, stop freaking out. With that realization, MacKinnon spent the next four years in his lab zeroing in on what would eventually become the first clinically proven formula to treat and prevent muscle cramps. By early 2015, he’d arrived at a spicy proprietary blend of ingredients. Here’s how it works: Right before or during a workout, an athlete downs a shot of MacKinnon’s performance cocktail. 13 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Ion receptors in the mouth, esophagus, and stomach spring to life, sending signals to the spinal cord, which then shoots out messages throughout the body’s nervous system to keep everything operating normally. Almost everyone has felt this mouth-to-spine-to-body connection when eating ice cream too fast, causing “brain freeze.” Ingesting icecold beverages or frosty foods results in a rapid cooling of a cluster of nerves adjacent to the roof of the mouth. For similar reasons, the right formula of spices can trigger a response to cramping. If MacKinnon and Bean have their way, their research will formally launch a new direction in sports science—one they’re calling neuromuscular performance. Put simply, it’s understanding how the nervous system responds to stress and then manipulating it in such a way that it stays in optimal working order. It’s not mind over matter. It’s not nutrition and energy management. It’s about the nerves, which deliver information throughout the body. The premise is simple: If the pathways are out of whack, cramping happens. Trick them into staying in line, and it doesn’t. This summer, MacKinnon and his team, who have been working with a select group of unnamed professional and world-class athletes, are wrapping up their research with more trials. (The owners of the New England Patriots and Boston Celtics were early investors in Flex Pharma, the company MacKinnon and Bean set up to research and market their super juice.) If all goes according to plan, Flex Pharma will bring their product to market in 2016. For Boren, the day can’t come fast enough: “I train and race with a power meter on my bike, and I know that when I’m cramping, it’s not from muscle fatigue—my power is right where it’s supposed to be. And I know it can’t be from dehydration and electrolyte issues, because I follow a strict protocol during a race to stay hydrated. If there’s a theory out there to get rid of muscle cramps, you bet I’m going to try it.” 14 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 P.R.E.P.A.R.E. to Avoid Triathlon Disasters By Paul N. Bloom and David K. Williams Having competed in hundreds of triathlons over the years, my colleague, Dave Williams, and I have experienced and observed an amazing array of race-day ‘disasters.’ Indeed, I had such discouraging mishaps in my first three triathlons that I came close to quitting the sport. ! In my first sprint triathlon with a 750-meter swim in a pond, I swam in the wrong direction and crashed head on into the fast swimmers who were finishing the swim leg. Hurt and embarrassed, I dropped out of the race. Not to be deterred, I came back to the same race the next year and promptly had a panic attack at the start of the swim, leading me to drop out again. Trying to improve my chances of making it beyond the swim start, I made my third attempt a race that had a pool swim using a time-trial start. I completed the swim leg in that race, only to take off on the bike and hit a speed bump about 200 yards into the course. I was thrown from the bike onto my shoulder, but in my disoriented and injured state I remounted the bike, took off again, and hit another speed bump 200 yards down the road and ended up battered on the ground. I had multiple injuries, including a broken clavicle, and was taken to an emergency room at the same hospital where my mother had just died a few weeks earlier. Could anything be more of a disaster than that? 15 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Dave has had more than his share of disasters too. He has gotten lost and delayed traveling to races, gotten punched in the face during an open water swim, had his shoes disappear in T1, had flat tires and crashes during the bike leg, had someone take his race belt and number in T2, and fainted at the end of several runs. Moreover, we have seen a friend miss a race start because of falling asleep in a porta-john and others have had problems because of borrowed swim goggles, stuck wetsuit zippers, broken pedals, slipping aerobars, malfunctioning gears and awful gastrointestinal issues. In most situations, people do bounce back from these missteps, trying to learn from their mistakes so that they can do better the next time. We have been able to minimize and manage disasters in our own races and those of our clients through application of an approach we label PREPARE. This is an acronym for: Plan: Think through every single aspect of the race, from packing and pre-race travel to post-race cooldown and recovery. Rehearse: It really helps to simulate or test race experiences before you are actually in the midst of a race. The obverse of this advice is even more important: Never try anything brand new during a race! Execute: Stick to the plan and don’t change your mind about how to do something at the last minute – unless an unusual or unexpected race situation requires you to think fast and adapt to this situation. Persist: Don’t get frustrated and give up. If something happens that costs you significant time, just become determined to make up the time gradually later in the race. Or just enjoy the bliss of being able to do this wonderful sport and soak everything in. Analyze: Always conduct a post-race analysis, especially when a mistake or disaster occurs, so that you can determine why it happened and figure out how it can be avoided or how you could limit its impact in the future. Revise: Take the parts of the plan that went wrong and modify them before using the plan in another race with similar distances and conditions. Enjoy: Don’t beat yourself up and keep obsessing about mistakes. No matter what, keep triathlon fun – something that keeps a smile on your face and gives you loads of pleasure through helping you feel fit, healthy, and enjoying the camaraderie of other multisport athletes! Paul N. Bloom and David K. Williams are USA Triathlon Certified Coaches with Triangle Multisport in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. They recently published the book, “Triathlon Disasters & How to Avoid Them,” which contains dozens of humorous stories and sound coaching advice. It is available at amazon.com. They can be reached at [email protected] and [email protected]. 16 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 Due to several medical issues this year I have been unable to race since April. Therefore, I have been unable to author any race reports. Looking back over the archives, I found one from Eagleman in 2011. Hope you enjoy it! Chuck Lohman Eagleman! Doesn't that have a patriotic ring to it? Since the race venue is the Blackwater Preserve and the swim takes place in the Choptank River, one can imagine why Race Director Bob Vigorito (MD # 92) skipped over these names. Gail and I used to trek over to Cambridge, Maryland every year when we lived near Washington, DC. Since we both have family and friends in the area, 2011 seemed like a good time for a “working vacation.” We learned that not only would a number of our old friends be racing, but local Mad Dogs Jessica Koelsch and John Atkins would be joining us. Since the swim is usually choppy like St. Anthonyʼs, we tracked the water temperatures in the days leading up to the race. The Choptank is normally about 74 degrees in mid-June, but we grimaced as the reports neared 80 degrees. Must be something to this global warming thing. To make up for the always challenging swim, both the bike course and the run venue at Eagleman are totally flat -- flatter than Ironman Florida. This is one of several Half-IM races that have slots to both the 70.3 and Ironman World Championships. As you might guess, the serious Big Dogs target this race. Race week weather didn't look encouraging. Wednesday was a record 99 degrees; Thursday was a record 102 degrees. Forget the wetsuits! Prediction for race day was 70% chance of thunderstorms. Ominous, but strangely compelling to tri-masochists. The tougher the day, the greater the glory. We rolled into Cambridge Saturday for packet pickup and saw Jessica, John and many old friends from the DC area. Then the stress started. We drove to the nearby motel where we had made reservations last August (and reconfirmed last month) only to learn that they were overbooked and that the only room available was 30 miles away in Salisbury, Maryland. Gail took the opportunity to tell the manager how pleased she was with the situation 17 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 and how much she looked forward to setting the alarm for 3:30. Then about 8 PM I noticed that, despite a detailed checklist, I had forgotten my tri suit for the race. The only option was a pair of running shorts and Gailʼs extra Mad Dog tri top. It was my first crossdressing experience and, I hope, my last. I'm trying to figure out away to pre- erase pictures on the internet. Race morning we found more old friends in the transition area. Surprising, the Choptank was calm -- Yes! “Senior men and women” left just after the pros at 6:50. Although uneventful, everyone felt the swim was 5 to 10 minutes slower than expected in the 82 degrees water. My race was pretty routine: middle of the pack swim, decent bike, bad cramps on the long, hot run. I didn't make the podium, but sixth place was my best showing at Eagleman. Gailʼs race was more dramatic, featuring a four minute penalty for excessive talking on the bike. I should explain. Barbara Johns, last years winner in her age group, overtook her on the bike about mile 32. The conversation, as was reported, “ Are you going for the slot? Are you? What's your name? Gail. Oh, you're Gail Lohman from the St. Pete Mad Dogs who coaches in St. Pete.” About this time a motorcycle referee rolled up and waved a red flag at Gail, and marked her number. As she served her 4 minute penalty in the 40 mile tent, she stayed focused -- stretching, drinking and gathering mental energy for the effort to come. She was able to catch her competitor at mile 7 on the run and finished strongly to win her age group and the Kona Slot. We'll both be cheering for Barbara Johns when she races at Lake Placid on July 24th. Possible rematch in the future? Super kudos to Jessica, who goes to the first 70.3 Worlds in Las Vegas! We can't wait to hear about that. Although a massive thunderstorm cancelled the awards ceremony, it was a great competition in a great venue. The number of people at distant races who recognize the Mad Dog colors and cheer us on is truly remarkable. Finally, I would be remiss if I didn't mention the emotional component to triathlon racing. A young man in his 40ʼs passed me on the run and took time to point his finger at me and simply say, “Respect.” Classy, don't you think? —Chuck Lohman, Mad Dog #2027 18 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 19 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 20 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 YOUR REAL ESTATE & MORTGAGE EXPERTS t'3&&Consultation & Property Evaluation t'3&&Marketing Consultation t'3&&Initial Legal Consultation tNo Upfront Fees tRelocation Assistance Call today for your FREE, no obligation consultation DIRECT: 727-641-3466 Stephen Sexauer, GRI,CIPS,CDPE,SFR,BPOR,CNE,RSPS,REPM Licensed Real Estate Broker / Licensed Loan Originator 21 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 12 DEC - 2015 1700 1st Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 22