San Diego is always a great place to be, whether it be for a race or vacation, it never disappoints. This time around, it was no different, the weather was ideal (although a tad nippy on race morning), the team was happy, and we were all ready to race! Given that UCSD's Tritonman Triathlon was not a conference race for us, there were no implications on the race results which is surprisingly less stressful. Additionally, given the race is a sprint, and in February, it is a great early test of speed and a good fine-tuning race for the remainder of our season, which is rapidly approaching. Since Pumpkinman, I got a new bike (yay, 2018 Trek Speed Concept), tested my bike-racing skills with a road race and criterium, broke a finger, strained a shoulder, and badly bruised or cracked 2 ribs! But nonetheless, I was excited to get out there and drop some bombs.
smiling cause we were on the way to dinner |
Race morning was status quo with no surprises or anything unexpected to unsettle my nerves. It was a chilly 50 degrees out, with the water of Mission Bay in the low 60s, it was most certainly a wetsuit swim. Luckily, I was drawn into wave 2 (Collegiate A), although it was completely randomized, I was happy to be able to tackle the course with the least amount of people on it. The swim started across the bay, and we 'rectangled' it back to the swim exit, with two right turns and a left. Prior to the gun, I put myself right out in the front line and waited. When the gun went off, elbows were flying and my right eye was lucky enough to catch one! Thankfully my goggles did not fall off nor did fill with water. Getting hit slightly angered me (I don't know why, I should have expected that), but I channeled that energy to get out front into unobstructed water. By the first buoy I was swimming next to another athlete, as we were out front together. A small surge on the short end of the rectangle put me out front alone. Towards the end of the short swim, I began to find a good rhythm and coincidentally I was already at the last buoy. Exiting the swim first, I heard the spectators cheer (in general, not for me) as I reached to begin to take off the top of my wetsuit.
Once in transition, my wetsuit was slightly stuck around my ankles (of course), but once I got that taken care of, my helmet was on and my bike was unracked. After a quick flying mount and inserting my feet into my shoes and tightening them, it was time to get serious. I got onto Fiesta Island and it was definitely game time. With the weather being ideal, despite the cold, there was hardly any wind, which favored fast bike splits, from everyone! The first lap was controlled and the island was still empty, but once lap two hit, the course began to get much more crowded and the third lap would only be worse. Once the second lap began, I was feeling good and began to push some more watts. I was passing people and getting passed all at the same time and was unsure of where I sat overall, but was not concerned with that at all. The third lap was extremely crowded but I did my best to hold a constant pace and turn the cranks as steady as possible. Even though there was hardly any wind this year, a 4 minute improvement over last years bike was nothing to hang my head on. After my three laps, I exited the island and rode back into transition getting ready to run. Strava here.
head down! |
post race |
messin around w/ Tito |
Whats next? Havasu Triathlon for MCTC Championships on March 17th!
See y'all soon, stay sweet!