Posts Tagged olympic
Race Report: San Diego Olympic Triathlon 2009
Posted by Adam Ainbinder in Race Reports on October 11, 2009
As sherry main put it in her tweet, I finally put the “tri” in “triadamlete”. Today I finished my first Olympic tri, the San Diego Olympic Tri in Point Loma. It was awesome!
My goal time was 2 hours, 45 minutes. My final time was 2 hours, 22 minutes, 11 seconds. I was stoked. The winning time was 1:51:02 (how would I ever pick up 30 minutes???). They haven’t posted splits yet, but I know I came in about 100th overall and 14th in my age group (30-34, out of 39 people). Out of my goals, I think I accomplished everything I wanted to. I overcame my open water fear and got comfortable with swimming in crowds. Despite my transition mistakes, I learned how to do it quickly. I learned what my strengths and weaknesses were. I learned to eat during the workout. I figured out how to bike in a race (e.g. passing, staying to the right, being vocal). Most importantly, I got hooked on the triathlon and how awesome the tri community is. I had fun!
My splits are below. I was pretty stoked with my numbers, but I do think the run was a little less than 10k distance. I actually didn’t think these times were possible heading into the race, but given my heart rate and how comfortable I was on the run, I think I could do much better. I could probably improve transitions a minute, and I know there is a lot more I can do on the bike.
Here’s a quick synopsis of my race and some of the things I’ve learned about triathlons:
- Pre-Race
- I was nervous: 5 bathroom trips before the race – beat my previous best of four before my second San Francisco marathon
- Transition was on grass, and I used a balloon to mark my place. I was the only one with a balloon. Several athletes around me thanked me for helping them locate their bike J very surprised with how few people do this. Business opportunity at expos?
- I need to drink more water before I race, especially with that many bathroom trips
- Swim (00:24:04)
- T1 (00:02:13)
- Wetsuit half off on the way to bike – slipped right off when I got there. Thanks Rod for the Pam suggestion (spray legs before putting on wetsuit)
- Quick drink of water, grabbed my bike, and I was gone
- Improvement: run faster to bike, don’t take time for water, improve flexibility J
- Bike (1:16:08)
- Slipped feet into clipped in shoes, buckled in during first mile
- Drank a lot on the first leg, especially during the first 2 miles to makeup for my lack of drinking during the swim
- Took a few miles to catch my breath, but I eventually lowered my heart rate and felt comfortable

- .75 miles at about 8% grade – BRUTAL, especially on the second loop
- BEAUTIFUL views through the naval base on top of the cliffs. Downtown San Diego on the left, Pacific Ocean on the right. Advantage of having no headphones: I definitely took in the views more. There was a military graveyard next to the road at the top of one cliff, and it was a bone chilling feeling to ride by that in the overcast weather.
- After the cliff, there were several miles downhill – going about 35 mph in aero. Fun but a little nerve racking
- Ate GU for the first time in a race. No stomach issues
- Making turn near dismount, pulled feet out of shoes to get ready for dismount. Then told that
wasn’t dismount area and had another 3 miles, so I had to put my feet back in. Definitely wasted some time here. I could really feel the loss of power without the clip-ins (riding on top of the shoes) - About 200 feet from dismount, pulled feed out and rode on top of my shoes
- T2 (00:01:06)
- Dismounted barefoot and ran bike to my position (easily discovered by balloon)
- Flipped on running shoes, took off
- Got out of transition and down the straight away and realized my helmet was still on
- Sprinted back and dropped off helmet. Probably lost 30 seconds here. I think this got lumped in with my run time though since I passed the T1 chip reader
- Took off running

- Run (00:38:40 – 5.55 miles, 6:58/mile)
- Average 6:14 miles for 10k – I believe the run was about .3 miles to short, but nice after the marathons I run that are 26.7 miles
- They miscalculated the distance – notified in a follow up email; race distance was 5.55 miles
- Legs felt heavy for first half mile, but great after that
- I’ve been working on my running cadence, taking shorter strides but more of them. It really helped in this race as my legs never really hurt after the first half-mile.
- Didn’t push it all during race except to keep a steady heart rate (155-163) and steady pace. Heart rate was much higher than I expected, but my heart rate on the bike was the highest it has ever been (150-170), so it was tough to bring it down on the run. Plus, I felt good and went with it
- Did not sprint finish to save legs for marathon in a few weeks
That is my first triathlon. I had awesome support from my girlfriend Adrienne and my parents, Mike and Mary (you can see them in my Flickr pictures). It was such a great feeling to complete this race, have fun, and feel good after the race. I’m happy with my level of fitness and training. I realized that the science of sport that I’ve been studying has a lot of value, and I’ll continue to research and work hard at it. Based on my
performance and splits, here are the things I need to work on:
- Swimming endurance
- Bike force
- Bike muscular endurance
- Running cadence
- Expand my triathlon community – everyone I’ve met in this sport is awesome
If you have any tips or questions, please post a comment. I’ll get back to my regular posts this week, especially when it comes to putting together a training schedule and some more on workout impacts and workout variation (volume, intensity and frequency).
Some of my bloopers:
Race Strategy – First Olympic Tri Tomorrow
Posted by Adam Ainbinder in Cycling, Heart Rate Monitoring, Race Strategy, Races, Running, Swimming, Triathlon on October 9, 2009
Sorry for my lack of responses to my previous blog post. I will follow up later with a final list of elements that can impact workouts, but work has just picked up so much lately that I haven’t had a chance to think it through!
Tomorrow is my first triathlon – the San Diego Tri. I’m a bit nervous, and I can really feel it in my stomach today. Had trouble eating breakfast this morning – one of those, I know I’m hungry, must force down food mornings.
I’ve always believed in coming up with a race plan / strategy and goals. I feel like it makes every race meaningful for an individual irrespective of where you place against the competition. This triathlon is a “C-Priority” race for me. I’ve defined priorities as
A-Priority: I expect to peak for this race
B-Priority: This race is a training step for an A priority race
C-Priority: This race is practice to learn and improve
I gave this a C-Priority because it is my first triathlon and I don’t want to obsess over time goals. To be honest, I have no idea what times I could achieve, but I’m going to set some high level time goals based on reviewing the mission viejo triathlon results and my general training. Given this is my first triathlon, my goals are simple:
- Total transition time of less than 4 minutes – thank you Rod Clark
- Overcome open water fear – swimming without vision is a challenge for me, especially with people all around. Plus, I have general fear of the ocean (the “unknown underneath”). I want to be comfortable with this after 7-8 minutes of swimming
- Learn biking in a race – learn the norms and etiquette. This is my limiter and I must learn to improve it
- Finish the race in under 2 hours, 45 minutes (true goal is 2 hour, 30 minutes, but I must be realistic) – split goals: 30 minutes swimming, 1:20 biking, 50 minutes running, 4 minutes transition
Those are my goals. My strategy to achieve those goals are the following:
- Take it easy on the swim. Enter the water on the outside of the pack and slowly with a willingness to lose a minute or two to get comfortable
- Switch to breast stroke when tired on the swim
- Transition quickly
- Eat on bike to avoid eating on the run
- Ease into first two miles of the bike to settle into a low heart rate – small ring, easy gear – high cadence (90-100)
- By mile 5 on the bike, start pushing into higher gears while keeping a high cadence – keep cadence between 85-95
- Settle into my run for two miles at 140 bpm – push to 150 bpm by mile 3. Do not exceed 159 bpm to save legs for marathon in 2 weeks – this is NOT a high priority race
So there are some specifics there, but I want a plan to stick by so I make sure I learn what I need to in this race. I hope to do another tri or two before my half ironman in March, so I will have other opportunities to learn. I know I’m much weaker in swimming and biking than running, so I must expect those two sports to also impact my running performance, which is why I’ve lowered my running goal. These goals assume no hiccups (leg cramps, flats, etc..).
My long run goals for the off season are to improve my cycling force and endurance as well as my swimming technique and endurance. I want to improve my run cadence, but this is third priority. This race will be a good benchmark of a starting point, and I’ll move forward from here.
I have trained enough to survive this race. FYI: in my last 30 days as of yesterday, I’ve run 20 times for 155 miles, biked 12 times for 212 miles, and swam 13 times for 7 hours. I love Garmin Connect! Next time, I won’t put a marathon two weeks after because i know that really limited the amount of time I could put into the bike and swim since I spent so much time running.
T – 2 hours until San Diego departure!
UPDATE: thanks @jpitkin – another goal: have fun





















