Monday, February 25, 2013

First thoughts: Pearl Izumi E Motion N1 Run

So I know this is a brand new shoe and there are some people out there excited to get reaction to it and possibly get their hands on a pair, so I will give my initial thoughts on this shoe even though I have only worn it once. I will begin by saying, that like many other things (nutrition, bike saddles, etc), running shoes are highly personalized so this is just my take on this piece of equipment.
 
The shape of the midsole in the entire E Motion line is what sets it apart from most other running shoes. It has a slightly curved sole... Think "Skechers Shape Ups", but only to about 1/1000 of that degree. This idea was first introduced to me in the Scott T2, and I found it to work quite well. When running, it basically forces the midfoot to contact the ground first and then throws the runner up on his/her toes. I find it to be an even greater help the more my legs are fatigued, say after a hard bike ride - triathlon!? When you first put on a shoe that employs this style of sole, the first reaction is almost always one of discomfort. The shoes feel horrible when standing still and very awkward to walk in. It isn't till you get up to speed that the technology can be appreciated.
 
With the PI's in particular, I find then to have a firm sole and they are fairly stiff. This is, of course, compared to the uber flexible, minimal shoes that are so popular right now.  I really noticed the stiffness when I first held them in my hand, but I didn't notice it near as much in use.  These shoes definitely threw me up on my forefoot and I really had to make a concious effort to land flat footed.  I naturally have a midfoot to forefoot strike when I'm fresh, so I had to relax my lower leg in the beginning, but found it much more natural as the miles ticked off and my body adjusted.  One note: this shoe likes to go fast... seriously.  It really begs to be strided out and when you slow it down with a quick chop step, it sends negative feedback straight up the legs by making the prounounced midfoot much more noticeable.
 
The listed weight of the shoe (in size 9) is 7.7 oz, although my size 12's are certainly heavier.  I would list this at the top end of the weight range of a shoe I would call race worthy.  The redeeming quality of its slightly bloated mass is that the shoe wears well and therefore doesn't feel heavy.  It is snug in the heel and midfoot, but with plenty of room in the toe box.  It rides pretty low to the ground and gave a decent amount of road feel for what I would look for in a long course shoe.  Even though it is the lightest (and therefore fastest) shoe in the EM lineup, it is definitely not a race flat.
 
I would love to see PI come out with a much more minimal version of this shoe and keep the EM styled sole, only thinner.  I'm not ready to declare this as my race shoe for San Juan, but it is definitely in the rotation and being considered.  That is saying something!  If it weighed about 2 oz less, I think I would have a winner.
 
My early verdict:  I really like this shoe.  I haven't quite figured out the best way (which distance and what conditions) to use it.  Stay tuned!

Everyone Loves Free Samples! Sample Training Week

Part of why I wanted to start this blog is to give back to the tri community that has given me so much.  I know that starting out in this sport can be somewhat intimidating as there are so many little details to cover - and very tight clothing to wear!  When I was new, I was so information hungry that it is a miracle that I graduated college given my ratio of triathon to pharmacy research.  Anyways, I wanted to write this post as a sample of what I do in a given training week.

One should note that one man's successful training plan could be another's recipe for disaster, so use this for entertainment purposes only.  Also know that even though I perform the sessions, I consider them to be property of my coach, Rich Laidlow, and I won't go into the exact specifics of each workout.

This week is taken approximately 4 weeks out from a half iron which I consider an "A" race and coming right out of a run endurance block.

Monday: 4800m swim consisting of repeats of increasing distance and speed with an all out 800m time trial.  Also included some drill work.  Beast of a session...

Recovery Bike of an hour that has high cadence repeats and one leg drills.

Tuesday: Interval run with 2000m repeats and 400m recoveries

Recovery/Technique swim of 2800m.  Worked mainly on streamline position.

Wednesday: 5k bike repeats on the trainer at over race power. 

4200m swim of 400m repeats breathing every 5th stroke and some sprint work.

Thursday:  7 mile tempo run with 10K and 70.3 pace pieces.

Friday: One hour Fartlek bike session on the trainer.  (If you're unfamiliar with Fartlek, go ahead and giggle... and then Google it.)  This is a killer session!

Saturday:  4 hour free ride on the bike.  Emphasis on time over effort.  On the trainer, due to weather :(

Sunday:  Race prep bike/run brick.  3 hours of race power extended intervals on the trainer and then straight into an hour of high intensity one mile run repeats.

Well, there you have it!  Big week with some big gains and another deposit in the bank of fitness!

Friday, February 22, 2013

Pearl Izumi E Motion in hand!

Pearl Izumi E Motion shoes have arrived. I have followed the progress of this line since it was announced at last year's Outdoor Retailer show and thought it would be a good shoe for me. I have the run series N1 and N2 here and I will have my thoughts on them in the next week after I have a chance to put some miles in them. Stay tuned!

Thursday, February 21, 2013

New "My Gear" Page - Read All About It!!

You will now find a page dedicated to my training and racing gear on the right column of this page.  This will be updated with information of the equipment I use on a daily basis.  While I do have some companies that support me in my racing, I can tell you that I was a user and purchaser of all my equipment prior to any sponsorship.

Now GO read about Stella!! My Gear

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

My Journey

I figure it would be good to give some background on how I got to where I am so that where I am going might make a little more sense!

I grew up in Dublin, Ohio and graduated from Dublin Coffman High School.  In the seventh grade I began playing lacrosse.  Prior to that, I was like most Dublin kids and played a myriad of sports, but I never got too serious about any of them.  Lacrosse was different.  It was a newer sport in this area, so no one was super good at it and I wouldn't stand out as the kid that just bought my first stick last night.  Our team needed a goalie and I quickly volunteered because I figured it wouldn't require too much running - funny now, huh?  It turned out that I was a pretty good goalie!  To be honest, I think the reason I enjoyed playing lacrosse so much, besides being decent and getting a lot of playing time, was my middle school coach, Mike Kinney.  He was the perfect balance of tough and caring, intimidator and cheer leader

Once I reached high school, I continued playing and dressed for several varsity games as a freshman, but it just wasn't as much fun without Coach Kinney.  During my Sophomore year, I was hit by a drunk driver.  The result was a broken right ankle and a destroyed left foot.  This was the end of my lacrosse playing and the beginning of many unhealthy lifestyle habits.  From that time until I was nearly 23 years old, I payed little attention to dietary choices and exercise was never a priority.  I do not know how much I weighed at my heaviest, but I do remember being weighed at one point (not by choice) and the scale reading 280 lbs.  At 6-4, I probably wore it better than most, but I was overweight and very unhealthy.


"Lola"
 A little bike porn for your viewing enjoyment during this boring stuff.  
"Stella"
 
I'm not sure what spurred my decision to make some serious life changes, but one day I knew that something had to give.  I began with small changes; Subway instead of Wendy's, trying to ride my old bicycle around my apartment complex (which was brutal in the beginning), and picking the low calorie versions of foods I commonly ate at home.  After a few weeks of this I wanted more.  I bought and read Body For Life by Bill Phillips and immediately began a 12 week challenge.  At the end of those 12 weeks I had brought my weight down to under 200 lbs and was immensely more healthy both mentally and physically.  It was at that point the prospect of military boot camp no longer looked so intimidating, so I began my pursuit of enlisting in the United States Navy.

After spending time in Great Lakes, Illinois, Whidbey Island, Washington, and deploying to the Western Pacific aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln during my enlistment, I wound up near Memphis, Tennessee in Horn Lake, Mississippi.  I wanted to use my GI Bill to go to college, but needed to figure out how to maximize my benefits.  After going to community college for 2 years, I made the transfer to the University of Mississippi in Oxford.  This is where I found my love for multisport.  Ole Miss hosts an annual sprint triathlon called the Rebel Man.  It was my second year there that I finally committed to doing the event despite having never swam a single stroke of freestyle (or any other competitive stroke for that matter) or never riding a skinny tire bicycle.  Being me, I went out and bought a tri bike and figured out how to survive a 400 meter pool swim.  The week in advance of the Rebel Man, I went up to the Natchez Trace State Park and competed in a triathlon that was turned into a duathlon due to weather.  I won the Clydesdale division and I was hooked!  That first season I competed in nearly 50 running, cycling, and multisport events.  Definitely a race junkie!  Egged on by my best friend, Sean, we went to Wilmington, NC that fall to complete our first iron distance race at the 2010 Beach2Battleship Triathlon.  It was my first marathon, my first century ride, and my first swim over 2000 meters.  Hell of a day!



The following season, I focused heavily on ultra distances.  It began with the 2011 Sunset to Sunrise running relay across Florida where I found three other morons to run it as a four man team, the Fantastic Four Lokos.  After that I went on to complete three iron distance tri's (Ironman Texas, Rev3 Cedar Point, and Ironman Florida) and the Newton 24 Hours of Triathlon where I was the Solo Male 24 Hour Champion.  Despite having some good results and logging some major race miles, it took its toll on my body and wound up with a femoral neck stress fracture at the end of the season.


After letting my injury heal over the winter, I knew it was time to find some guidance for my training and racing.  With the advice of my friend and competitor, Ivan O'Gorman, I hooked up with Rich Laidlow as my triathlon coach in January 2012.  This is one of the best decisions I have ever made.  I told him that I wanted to go shorter and get much faster!  He never once told me that my goals were out of reach and we went to work almost immediately. With his help, I qualified to race as an elite amateur at the 5150 National Chamionship and earned a slot on the starting line of the 2012 Ironman World Championship 70.3 in Las Vegas, NV.  This was huge for me.... and then tragedy struck.

On August 5, 2012 at the end of a rainy 80 mile training ride, I lost control of my bike and went down on a left hand turn.  My left hip took nearly all the impact and I knew nearly immediately that something wasn't right.  I think denial took over for a little while and I rode the three miles home from the crash site, but on my way up the two flights of stairs with my bike on my shoulder I conceded that I needed help.  I was diagnosed with an intertrochanteric fracture in my left femur and was told I would have surgery the next day to stabilize the break.  I was devastated.  I had worked so hard and had so many things go right and now it was all taken away from me. 

I came out of surgery with this interoperative image laying on the table next to my hospital bed

 
Since my trip to Vegas had been fully paid for the week prior to the wreck, I figured I would make the flight out and sit poolside instead of sitting on my couch.  I arrived to Lake Las Vegas and was overwhelmed by emotion.  I was so happy to know that I had earned the privledge to race against these people and so destroyed to know that I couldn't.  The Friday before the race, I took a van tour of the bike course through the Lake Mead Recreation Area.  I knew at that moment that I wanted to attempt completion of the event.  Before I left home, I had been cleared to swim because my incision had healed, I could finally make a full pedal stroke and had been doing very light cycling on the the exercise bike, and I had been encouraged to walk ever since the surgery.  So that became my plan: I would swim, pedal the bike, and walk.  I had serious doubts if I would make it 70.3 miles in the crazy desert heat, but I knew I couldn't stand the thought of not trying.  I went to a local bike shop on Saturday to rent a bike, helmet, and pedals, and I bought some cheap cycling shoes.  I checked my things into T1 and T2 and tried to rest.  On race morning I was luckily having a good day, pain wise.  I swam in the hot, dark water very slowly, but made it out.  I then got on my rental road bike and began the climb out of Lake Las Vegas.  I felt good and was thrilled to be participating.  At a little past mile 40 on the climb out of the Lake Mead Recreation Area, I slammed the wall.  My body told me that I had no business being out there and I definitely weighed my options of pulling over and waiting to be picked up or to just keep riding.  I kept riding figuring that it would probably be the faster route to shade, calories, and an IV.  When I finally got to T2 in Henderson, I was so thrilled and pumped full of adrenaline that I told myself that I would put on my running shoes and begin walking.  As humbling as it would be, that was my only option as running was never a thought.  So walk is what I did... for the next four hours up and down the hills of Henderson.  I crossed the finish line just a hair short of 8 hours.  It was the best and worst race of my life.  I knew I had taken a gamble by participating and I had been fully prepared to pull the ejection handle if the leg pain was too much or I thought I was risking further injury, but I had made it. It was certainly the passionate decision, not the logical one.



Following Vegas, I began some sport specific training with Rich and he was very gentle and patient with me.  Very, very proportionately heavy on swim and bike and virtually no running except in the pool for a long time.  We set a goal of racing the Bone Island Iron Distance Tri in Key West on January 12, 2013 since I had registered for that event nearly a year earlier.  I had many days of doubt and discouragement, but Rich never gave up.  Between his workouts, ongoing physical therapy, a return to work, and trying to not rely so heavily on prescriptions to get me through the day, I thought it might be hopeless.  With the company of my friend, Colleen, and her family, I headed down to Florida and stayed optimistic.  During race week, I performed my longest solid training run (no walk breaks) of 45 minutes - what a joke, right!?  In a Skype call the day before the race, Rich laid out the race plan and gave me the confidence to give it hell.

Along with the daunting task of racing an Ironman five months post dynamic hip screw surgery, Mother Nature decided we needed sustained winds of 20+ mph and gusts well over 30 mph.  This made for nasty surf and frustrating bike conditions.  I stuck to my race plan, trusted my training, and listened to my body.  This resulted in an iron distance PR and a 4th place overall finish.  I was overjoyed!


That basically brings you up to date!  As of right now, I have my sights set on Ironman San Juan 70.3 on March 17, 2013 and hope to come home with a qualifying certificate for Vegas 2013.  Updates will certainly follow!

For all of you still reading, thank you!  Blue skies and tailwinds!

Cheers,
Ryno

It's all about time.

Well, I knew for a long time that I needed to get on board with a personal site, I just put it off for as long as I could find other things to occupy my time.  Well, that time has come. (See how many times I used the word "time" there!?)

Anyways,  this will be the home of my various ramblings, race reports, gear reviews, announcements, pictures, links to supporters, and anything else I can figure out how to do on here!  Thanks for stopping by!