Is
it better to lose the championship game by 1 point in heartbreaking fashion or
lose by 30 where you never really had a chance?
Would you rather have dated the hottest girl and have her dump you or
never had the opportunity to be with her at all? Should I be happy about finishing in the top
17% of a Sprint Triathlon this past weekend or upset that I barely missed finishing
top 15% and achieving another one of my 35 goals?
That
last question has been on my mind since crossing the finish line and seeing the
results last Sunday. When I did the
first Triathlon of my life a few short months ago, I didn’t even finish in the
top 50%. On Sunday, I finished 24th
out of 136 (top 17%) in my first Sprint Tri of 2012. I was just 4 places away from one of my 35for35
goals of top 15%. It was a significant
improvement for sure but I didn’t meet my goal.
To
finish in the top 15%, I needed to finish 20th or better out of the
136 people who competed. 20th
place (top 14.7% for the Math majors reading) came in at 1 hour, 2 minutes, and
24 seconds. I finished a measly 18
seconds behind. That means I needed to
go 0.5% faster and I would have placed top 15%. If that wasn’t bad enough, I went the wrong
way on the run course which cost me a full minute. How’d that happen? Great question. It was just one issue in a long line of
things that screwed me on my time and left me wondering what might have
been. Here’s how it went all went down:
2
days before the race, I was doing some light swimming and I got a shooting pain
on the right side of my lower back. I
immediately stopped, got out of the pool, and stretched for a good 20
minutes. The next morning (1 day before
the race), I could barely get out of bed.
For those of you who haven’t noticed, I’m a freaking walking injury
these days. I’ve had knee problems since
starting Schmeis35for35 and now my back gave out on a light swim…not exactly a
good sign.
I
spent the day icing and attempting to set the world record for number of Advil
taken in a 24 hour period without overdosing.
That combination worked well enough that I got up on race morning and
decided to give it a go.
The
race started with a 300 yard swim. All
participants had to submit their 100 yard swim pace in order to be seeded for
the start. Triathlon pool swims are notoriously
difficult as people inevitably swim at drastically different speeds which can
create logjams. The seeding is supposed to
help because it places you around people who swim close to your pace. I was seeded 14th overall so that
was my starting position.
The
top seed started at 8:00am and then every 15 seconds another person was
released. At 8:03:30, the starter sent
me off. I definitely didn’t feel great
during the swim. My back never got loose
and each stroke didn’t seem to have much power.
I exited the pool thinking my time was very slow. I looked down at my watch and was shocked
when I saw it still said 00:00:00. I
assumed I hadn’t done the swim in 0 seconds, so realized my watch didn’t start
for some reason. I hit start again so I
could at least know my time for the rest of the race.
There
was a long run from the pool to the transition area where I had my bike set up
and ready to rock. It was about 60
degrees that morning which sounds pleasant until you run out basically naked
from the pool and feel the wind hit you.
I threw on my bike shoes and helmet, grabbed my bike, and ran to the
mounting line. As I was getting on my
bike, a race volunteer yelled at me that my helmet wasn’t strapped (automatic
disqualification if you mount the bike with helmet not fastened). I tried to snap it with one hand as I was
checking my watch again….it still said 00:00:00. WTF?
Now
I knew something was messed up. While I
was simultaneously trying to snap my helmet and fix my watch, I ended up
dropping my bike. This wasn’t exactly
the smoothest swim to bike transition I could have imagined. After restarting my watch and seeing it still
wasn’t working, I decided I didn’t have any more time to waste fixing it and
just took off.
Not
having my watch may not seem like a big deal but it tells me the distance I’ve
gone as well as the time. I’d never been
on this bike course so I had no idea at any point how close I was to the end. My watch would have told me how many miles I
had left which obviously helps for pacing.
I
was so upset with my terrible transition that I went into kill mode on the
bike. I hammered it and was chasing down
and picking off people one by one in front of me. The course was extremely hilly and I found
myself to be much stronger on the climbs than others. Apparently all the work I’ve done with spin
classes was paying off. I ended up
passing 6 people and didn’t get passed by anyone.
After
10 miles of rolling hills, I heard the crowd and music playing around the
corner so knew I was coming to the finish of the bike. I pulled in, threw off my bike shoes and
helmet, threw on my running shoes, grabbed my race belt with bib number and off
I went on the final leg of the race…a 5k run to the finish.
The
first .5 miles of the run I couldn’t feel my legs. It felt like I was barely moving. If you haven’t ever done it, try going really
hard on a stationary bike at the gym for 30 minutes and then immediately jump
off and hop on the treadmill for a few mile run. If you don’t want to try that, you can just
take my word for it…it sucks.
I
had never run the course before but typically tri courses have the turns very
clearly marked and volunteers are usually at every turn to help. Even if the course isn’t marked well and
there aren’t volunteers, you can usually see someone in front of you and follow
them. Of course, none of this was true
for me when I approached a fork in the road with arrows literally pointed exactly
in between both directions.
Awesome. I looked for volunteers
and there were none around. I looked for
other racers in front of me and I couldn’t see any in either direction.
I
ended up taking a wild guess and then I heard a racer behind me yell “other
way.” I quickly turned back and went the
other direction. After about 30 seconds
going that way, more racers appeared from behind and they were all yelling that
I was going the wrong way. It turns out,
the way I originally chose was correct but the guy behind me was wrong. In any event, this cost me a full minute of
time. I didn’t know it while I was out
there, but this would come back to haunt me.
After
about 2.5 miles, I actually started feeling pretty good with my cardio and leg
strength. My knee was starting to really
hurt but I was pleasantly surprised that my back loosened up and wasn’t an
issue at all. I kicked into high gear
for the last ~1/2 mile and crossed the finish line with a full race time of 1:02:42. It was faster than I would have guessed, but
I didn’t yet know how that would stack up against the rest of the field.
Remember, with a staggered start in the pool,
you could cross the finish line behind someone else but actually have a faster
overall time than them depending on when you started.
I
waited for the preliminary results and knew I was going to be close to my
goal. I kept going through “what ifs” in
my head about my watch not working, dropping my bike at transition, going the
wrong way on the run, etc. I knew all
those things cost me time but wasn’t sure if I’d still make my goal of top 15%.
The
race official posted the results and my heart sank. I was 24th. The guy that finished 23rd (5
seconds ahead of me), was the one who had yelled at me to go the other way on
the run. 20th, 21st,
and 22nd were all just a few seconds in front of me as well. So painful.
I ended up finishing 15th in the swim, 13th on the
bike and 30th on the run…good enough for 24th
overall. Here is a pic of me right after
finishing…
The
first thing that went through my head is I actually achieved my goal after
factoring in my run issues. I mean, what
if the guy behind me hadn’t yelled “other way!?” I lost a full minute from going the wrong
direction and was only 18 seconds from finishing top 15%. That has to count, right?
Wrong. There was no way I was counting this goal as
complete. I don’t want asterisks by any
of the 35. I need to do as many as I can…100%
officially. Triathlons are very physical
but there is a gigantic mental component as well. The race course was posted online and I could
have studied it before the race. I
didn’t prepare mentally and it cost me.
In
football, a kicker can miss a last second
field goal and that can be the difference between a quarterback being regarded as
someone who comes through in the clutch or someone who doesn’t have what it
takes.
In
golf, a ball staying 1 inch away from the water vs. turning one more revolution
into the creek allowed Fred Couples to win the Masters 20 years ago. If the ball goes in the water, life is a lot different for him.
The
point is this: there is an enormous
amount of randomness/luck/unfairness in life and an infinite amount of “what-ifs” you can ask
yourself. We’ve all heard the phrase
“woulda, coulda, shoulda.” In other words, nobody cares about the nuances of a
story…people want results.
One
of the best pieces of advice I’ve ever heard is “focus on what you can
control.” So, instead of dwelling on all
of “what-ifs” from my race, I’m going to use them as motivation to get better. Next time, there will be no doubt.
Plus,
if that isn’t motivation enough, I found out that another triathlon was
happening 1000 miles away in Carmel, Indiana that same day and my brother
competed. How’d he do? Well, he pretty much dominated…24th out of
more than 800 (~top 3%).
Obviously,
he doesn’t need to spend several pages explaining those results and dwelling on
what-ifs like I do.
Schmeis
8 comments:
I am going to answer your first two questions in your post with examples from your own life. Third answer will be pretty clear after that, but I have included it as well:
1. Your basketball teams have won by 30
2. You not only dated the hottest girl, you married her
3. You get so upset by top 17 percent that you get top 10 next time you try
We all learn from each experience and this one taught you lots! Glad you had this "practice" run to get you in the mental part of the race. As to answering your questions, i will let you know after Saturday.
Great picture.
I am SO motivated by you and your experience, Michael.
All those setbacks and the lack of support and you finished pretty well, but I know you don't care for soothing and mediocrity so I'll just say you learned a lot from what could go wrong and now you're armed and dangerous.
Contingency plans. A second watch strapped on the bike?
Sue - LOVED your comment!!!
I'm proud at how far you have come considering you never did any of the three sports before last summer. It should give you great confidence to know that you probably beat people that have been doing this stuff for years.
I'm also glad you figured out the importance of mental preparation on your own, I didn't want to bring it up. ;-)
See you in 2 weeks.
Thanks all for the great comments. It motivates me when people actually write comments. I still get a ton of email from people about each post but only a select few seem to want to write a comment here. It is definitely appreciated.
Schmeis
Wow! Congratulations!
As long as you do your very best (Every Time) you win.
My math is rusty, but that sounds like 100%
Sam
I think the bigger question is why can't the Schmeiser brothers afford a shirt?
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