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Changsha International Triathlon: My first time racing in China

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— by Daniel Clarke

On Sunday I raced the Changsha International Triathlon. This was a first year event and it was my first time racing in China. Other males on the start line included Craig Alexander, Max Neumann, Jesper Svensson, Timothy Winslow, Andrew Bolton, Frank Sorbara, among others.  (A super strong female field too that included Lauren Goss, Imogen Simmonds, Kelsey Withrow, Kerry Morris, Laurel Wassner, Jenny Fletcher, and Annie Thoren)

I was really happy with my race. I knew I’d be back coming out of the swim but I wanted to lay down a really strong bike, and then deal with the run when I got there.  I felt like I did that, and finished in 6th. Crowie won, followed by Max, and then Jesper.  On the female side, Lauren won, Kelsey 2nd, and Kerry 3rd.
Supporters: Dare2Tri, Skechers Performance Canada, Triathlon Ontario, Saris
Blog (and race reports): http://ifnotyouthenwho.ca/

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Build strength with low cadence intervals

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Lauren Brandon on her Ventum One.

— by Lauren Brandon

Time for another big gear bike workout. One of my favourite aspects of a big gear, or low cadence bike workout, is that it is a great way to build strength in the legs. Big gear intervals can be incorporated into your training all season long, and it can be done on the trainer or out on the road.

You want your cadence to be around 60 RPM during the big gear intervals. Try not to grind on the pedals, but instead think about keeping a smooth pedal stroke. Also, try to do these intervals in your TT position. Think about keeping your upper body relaxed and develop the power from your legs.

Total workout time: 90 minutes

Warm up

20 minutes (10 easy, 5x 1-minute hard/1-minute easy)

Main Set

4x 10 minutes big gear/low cadence (this should be 80-85%) with 5 minutes easy with high cadence

Cool down

10 minutes easy

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A look at what the Canadian pros are up to before Kona

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The 40th Edition of the IRONMAN World Championships is less than a month away, and some of Canada’s top long course triathletes are well into their final preparations for Kona. A few have already made it to the island, while others are on their way. Here’s a look at their training sessions heading into the big race.

Lionel Sanders – In the pool and out on road in Kona

Brent McMahon – Honing his swim with Victoria-based coach Lance Watson

Rachel McBride – Enjoying the view in the Mountains

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Sometimes you have to stop and take in the views because it all just zooms by while aboard this speed demon! Really loving crushing some awesome workouts on my @diamondbackbike #Andean. We are so ready for Kona! Looking forward to finally getting in some heat soon!! . . . #diamondbackbikes #reynoldswheels #AEROadvantage #ridereynolds #wattieink #rocktheW #makeyourstatement #compressport #compressportcanada #topoathletic #movebetternaturally #velofix #savetimeridemore #blueseventy #allfortheswim #pioneerPower #powerisqueen #scicon #packsafetrihard #ismnation #teamzealios #pacificpoke #FieldWorkNutrition #coffeemethod #feedbacksports #ceramicspeedinside #purpletiger #superkitty #roadtokona

A post shared by Rachel McBride (@rachelmcb) on

Jen Annett – Training in Penticton, BC, at the foot of Apex Mountain

 

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Russia’s reinstatement by WADA called “the greatest treachery against clean athletes in Olympic history”

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by Madeleine Kelly from Canadian Running

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has voted to reinstate the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) in a meeting in the Seychelles on Thursday morning.

The CBC reports that Jim Walden, a lawyer for Russian Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov said this morning, “WADA’s decision to reinstate Russia represents the greatest treachery against clean athletes in Olympic history.”

RELATED: Russia’s anti-doping agency recommended for reinstatement

The vote was nine to two in favour of reinstatement, with one abstention. This ends Russia’s three-year ban for suspected state-sponsored doping. The reinstatement follows a WADA key review committee recommendation that the Russian anti-doping agency be reconsidered.

Canadian Olympic gold medallist Beckie Scott reportedly resigned from the WADA Compliance Review Committee. The CBC says that Scott will remain the chair of WADA’s athlete committee.

The CBC reported that Canadian Beckie Scott (Olympic gold medallist), who recently resigned from her position on the WADA Compliance Review Committee said, “I’m profoundly disappointed. I feel this was an opportunity for WADA and they have dealt a devastating blow to clean sport. I’m quite dismayed.”

Scott joined the Canadian Center for Ethics in Sport (CCES) in expressing their concern. The Canadian Olympic Committee Athletes’ Commission wrote to the WADA president, “We strongly urge you and the WADA Executive Committee to vote against the recommendation of the Compliance Review Committee to reinstate the Russian Anti-Doping Agency.”

According to the BBC, WADA President Craig Reedie says the reinstatement is, “subject to strict conditions.” He continues, “This decision provides a clear timeline by which WADA must be given access to the former Moscow laboratory data and samples.”

A version of this story first appeared at runningmagazine.ca.

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Navigating your way through fad diets

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— by Pip Taylor

Athletes are renowned for their attention to detail and desire to gain an edge in that never-ending quest for performance improvement. This can mean a willingness to experiment, innovate and try new things. Whether that be new equipment, new training protocols, recovery techniques, or playing around with diet and nutrition strategies, such experimentation frequently results in valuable personal insights and knowledge about how individuals respond to different stimuli and can spurs innovation that leads to performance gains.

When it comes to diet, triathletes are generally highly aware of the important role that day-to-day food choices play in body composition, fuelling recovery, as well as race-day strategies. However, despite this, or perhaps because of this, triathletes are not immune to using non-scientific methods to gain an edge. This can be partly attributed to the lure of either aggressive marketing by various companies or dietary trends with attractive promises popularized by the press, celebrities or our personal “hero” athletes. Sometimes, this can result in positive changes, but, most often, dietary trends are off-base in terms of value in general health terms, or because they have been intended for sedentary individuals. Issues can crop up when translated to highly active, fit athletes.

Here are some of the current popular diets, and what to pick and what to leave for health and performance gains:

Keto Diet

This involves an extra low-carb diet, with the idea that the body becomes better able to utilize fat as fuel in the absence of glucose. The keto diet is backed by medical research; it can be a useful dietary regime. However, its intended therapeutic use is for controlling epilepsy. The keto diet has risen in mainstream popularity over the last couple of years for its weight-loss effects and is currently the most frequently searched diet term. However, for a triathlete managing large training loads, the keto diet may be one to avoid. While it’s true that low-intensity endurance training relies heavily on fat as a fuel source as opposed to carbohydrates, carbohydrates are nevertheless an important energy source for other aspects of health and performance,

including immune status and hormone production. Compromises to immune status and hormone production can lead to impaired recovery, low testosterone, depression and other mood changes, insomnia, illness and increased risk of injury – effects not conducive to sustainable performance.

TRY THIS INSTEAD: Rather than adopt a keto diet complete with butter- filled coffee, try manipulating your carbohydrate intake to reflect training and body composition goals. Doing some low-intensity training sessions in a fasted state have been shown to help boost the body’s ability to tap into fat stores. Fueling for high-intensity workouts and to support optimal recovery, will mean you are still able to hit the high notes in training to drive adaptations and improvements while maintaining good health and immune status.

Paleo/Primal Diet

These diets/lifestyles have been well established now for many years. There are many positives to them, because they focus on whole, real foods. For athletes of all sports, both health and performance can be easily sustained following this approach, particularly when quality carbohydrates are thrown into the mix at appropriate times, such as around training or before a race. The only potential downside is when athletes take the approach too seriously – forgoing mid-race fuel or avoiding foods when travelling just because they can’t source a truly paleo option.

TRY THIS INSTEAD: Go for it, but be flexible in your approach. Sometimes a gel or swig of a sports drink, or even a pre-race peanut butter and jelly sandwich, isn’t going to hurt. At other times, revert to whole food and nutrient-dense options to optimize health and recovery.

Superfood Diet

Again, in essence, there is nothing much wrong with a diet that encourages quality, real, fresh foods. However, focusing on vast numbers of superfoods, with the allure of special powers and protective properties, can be very expensive.

TRY THIS INSTEAD: Save your pennies and opt for the less sexy, yet still genuine superfoods, such as broccoli, kale, carrots, blueberries and cacao, rather than the expensive yet well-marketed moringa, ginko and maqui berries.

Pip Taylor is a pro triathlete and nutritionist from Australia.

omega 3 fatty acids healthy diet

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A recipe for your weekend breakfast plans

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— by Seanna Thomas

Blueberries are full of fibre and antioxidants such as vitamin C. Pair with juicy lemon and sweet local honey and you’ve got a fresh and bright combination that will wake you up and keep you happy. These power pancakes are the ultimate breakfast before a day of training. They’re full of protein, fibre, healthy fats and, of course, the star of the show: blueberries. Make a batch for the whole family to enjoy.

Makes: 6–8 Pancakes

Ingredients 

  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup plain Greek yogurt
  • 1⁄4 cup fresh lemon juice
  • 1 tbsp lemon zest
  • 3 tbsp coconut oil, melted and cooled
  • 2 tbsp honey
  • 1⁄4 cup milk(any milk will do)
  • 1 1⁄4 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • Pinch sea salt
  • 1⁄2 cup fresh blueberries

Directions

  1. Mix together flour, baking powder and salt in a large bowl. Set aside.
  2. In another bowl, whisk together eggs, yogurt, lemon juice, lemon zest, coconut oil, honey and milk. Add to dry ingredients all at once. Stir until almost combined. Fold in blueberries until everything is mixed together.
  3. Using a non-stick griddle over medium-high heat, add about a 1/4 cup of batter to the pan for each pancake. More for large, less for silver dollar pancakes.
  4. Let cook until pancakes start to bubble and edges are no longer shiny. Flip. Cook another one to two minutes.
  5. Top with fruit and yogurt or real maple syrup and enjoy your all-day energy.

Nutrition Facts – Per Pancake

  • Calories 171
  • Fat 6.8g
  • Cholesterol 47mg
  • Sodium 107mg
  • Potassium 122mg
  • Fibre 2.6g
  • Sugar 7g
  • Protein 8g

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Corey Bellemore: A triathlete in the making?

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— by Madeleine Kelly

Lionel Sanders has a fast running, beer chugging training partner. It’s Corey Bellmore – the beer mile world record holder. But seriously he’s fast. The Canadian has a 1,500m personal best of 3:40 and is a national bronze medalist in the distance.

Anyone who follows Sanders on social media knows he’s been spending a lot of time with Bellemore, doing his Ironman test session and various long runs with the world record holder. The pair is currently in Hawaii together, Bellemore training for cross-country, and Sanders for the 2018 IRONMAN World Championship. Bellemore and Sanders are both Windsor, Ont. natives, that’s where the pair connected. Bellemore describes Sanders as someone he’s always looked up to.

Bellemore says he’s helping Sanders with the run portion of his event, but he’s also jumping into the bikes and swims. Most people know Bellemore for his track accomplishments or beer mile world record.

But, what many people don’t know about Bellemore is that he was a swimmer in high school, and has used cycling as a cross-training method for years during his running career. Combine those two things with an elite running resume, and you’ve got a talented triathlete.

Bellemore would swim in high school from November through the second week of March. He would train four times in the morning and three to four times at the end of the day. The 1,500m runner says, “I did that from grade nine to grade 12, and didn’t run at all through the winter. I strictly swam. I’ve kept it as a cross-training tool for running. If I can’t run, I can still get quality work done in the pool or on the bike.”

Bellemore is currently living the triathlon lifestyle. “We sleep, eat, and train hard. Today I went out for an hour long bike, then I’ll go and do three to four kilometres in the pool, and follow that up with a 25-30 kilometre run. We’ll do that at about 4:10/km pace.”

Is Bellemore looking to give triathlon a try? Turns out yes – eventually. “This is a good opportunity to have fun and live the triathlon lifestyle because I’ve considered possibly doing this one day. My loose plan is to give triathlon a run two years from now. I want to give the 2020 Olympics a shot on the track and then decide.”

A variation of this story is on runningmagazine.ca.

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Lance Armstrong does SwimRun with Simon Whitfield

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Lance Armstrong and Simon Whitfield compete together in San Juan Islands SwimRun event. Photo: @lancearmstrong

Lance Armstrong and Simon Whitfield teamed up at the San Juan Islands SwimRun event on Sunday, September 23rd, in Washington state. The team of Armstrong and Whitfield finished third out of 21 male teams in 6:09:20. They were 34 minutes behind the winners, John Stevens and Matt Hurley.

Armstrong and Whitfield’s team was named “Shower, Shampoo, Blow Dry and Run.” This was inspired by Armstrong and Whitfield’s 2012 Twitter war, where Armstrong referred to the Olympic triathlon as “a shampoo, blow dry, and 10k foot race.”

The SwimRun event featured nearly 30K of trail running and 4K of swimming, broken up over 25 sections – 13 runs and 12 swims. It was a team event where competitors may use floatation devices but must stay together the entire way.

Armstrong is banned for life from competitive cycling events for doping, but he only received a four-year ban for non-cycling events. During his four-year ban, Armstrong was prevented from running the Chicago Marathon in 2012 and participating in a master’s swim competition in 2013. USADA spokesman Ryan Madden told USA Today on August 24, 2016, (four years after Armstrong’s ban was announced), “He can compete in a sanctioned event at a national or regional level in a sport other than cycling that does not qualify him to compete in a national championship or international event.”

Don’t expect Armstrong to be racing much. In 2016, he told USA Today that “my days of competing are past me” and just exercises to stay healthy and sane.

Lance Armstrong and Simon Whitfield competing together. Photo: @lancearmstrong

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Pre-Ironman swim workout

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— by Lauren Brandon

Credit: Barrett Brandon

We are less than three weeks away from the Ironman World Championships. Everyone is gearing up and putting in their last hard training sessions before heading to the big island for what they hope to be an amazing day. I will be sharing some pre-Kona workouts over the next three weeks, beginning with a key swim session that I do a few weeks out from race day.

The following swim session is definitely both physically and mentally taxing, but it will help you feel confident and ready to go for the 3.8K swim on race day. You only need to do this session once, so make sure you are prepared to swim fast.

Total: 5000

Warm up:

400 swim, 300 pull, 200 kick, 100 choice

First set:

12 x 50 – Descend 1-4, 5-8, 9-12 (numbers 4, 8, & 12 are fast) rest 10-15 seconds

100 easy

Main set: 3 x 1000 (Rest 20 seconds in between each 1000)

  1. Cruise – get into a nice rhythm and swim long and strong
  2. First 25 of each 100 is fast, followed by a 75 threshold/steady pace x 10
  3. Fast – this is 1000 for time and should be faster than your Ironman pace

Cooldown: 300 easy

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Why you need to take care of your blisters

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Every triathlete has experienced blisters. When they aren’t appropriately monitored, these small skin abrasions can turn into more significant issues.

Toronto based physiotherapist, Lauren Roberts, has seen many blisters cause bigger injuries. Roberts explains, “Any time our body starts to experience pain, we can interpret that pain in two different ways, positive or negative.”

“Positive pain refers to muscle fibre breakdown or your body’s physiological protective response to exercise. For example, if you’re halfway through a repeat mile, muscle pain can be perceived as positive because it reiterates that you’re doing what you want to be doing. Our body knows that it’s not in danger.”

Roberts continues, “The second category of pain tends to be the injury type of pain. This kind of pain isn’t normally associated with pain from training. This is a different kind of feeling that is associated with trouble.”

Blisters are linked with the second category of pain. The discomfort from a blister can alter a triathlete’s gait pattern, and cause utilization of different muscle groups. Roberts says that “Altering your gait is a common cause of injury.”

Most people don’t consider their blisters as real injuries, but Roberts encourages athletes to take care of skin abrasions, even when they seem like minor issues.

Robert’s recommends getting properly fitted for a shoe, and buying running-specific socks to help avoid blister formation. Socks designed specifically for running have extra padding where blisters typically form.

Example of running sock with padding.

If you feel a blister forming during a run and you can sense your form changing because of it, consider stopping. If you’re on the fence about calling a session, always err on the side of caution. Roberts says that “From a rehab perspective if the patient continues running, the therapist often has to go back and unwind all of the complications that were caused by this silly blister.”

Once a blister has formed, Roberts encourages athletes to try their best to let it drain on its own. Popping a blister means risking infection.

Other suggestions to promote healing are: cover it with a band-aid and wear appropriate shoes that won’t irritate the affected area. Blisters will usually subside within a couple of days. If it isn’t healing, Roberts suggests seeing a doctor to drain it.

A variation of this story is on runningmagazine.ca.

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Enjoy a fruit crumble with the change of seasons

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— by Seanna Thomas

Just because summer has come to the end doesn’t mean you have to let go of all the seasonal produce our wonderful country has to offer. You can squeeze in a barbecue or have people over to sit outside for dinner, even though the kids are back to school and we’re back to the grind. This crumble recipe will keep you socializing with your guests and not stuck in the kitchen all night preparing dessert. Plus, the fresh flavours will keep your summer spirit high. Pick your favourite seasonal fruit – any combination will work.

Seasonal fruit has the best flavour and the most nutrition as it’s usually packaged the same day it’s picked from the farm. Go to your local farmers’ market the day you’re going to make this dessert for the freshest produce available.

Serves 9

Ingredients

4 cups of seasonal fruit (For example, a combination of peaches, nectarines and plums)

1⁄2 cup coconut sugar

1 tbsp arrowroot powder (or cornstarch)

Pinch salt

1⁄2 cup each: rolled oats, oat flour, ground pecans

1⁄4 cup ground flax seed

2 tbsp coconut oil, melted

3 tbsp maple syrup

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 375 F.
  2. Grease an 8×8 baking pan and set aside.
  3. In a medium bowl, mix together rolled oats, oat flour, ground pecans, flax seed, coconut oil and maple syrup. Set aside. Oat flour is just ground up oats.
  4. Place chopped fruit in a bowl.
  5. Add coconut sugar, arrowroot flour and salt. Toss.
  6. Add to baking dish.
  7. Top with oat mixture.
  8. Place in oven and bake for 30 minutes, until bubbly and starting to brown

Nutrition Facts (per serving)

  • Calories – 216
  • Fat – 9.7g
  • Cholesterol – 0
  • Sodium – 1mg
  • Potassium – 187mg
  • Carbohydrates – 32.5g
  • Fibre – 3.7g
  • Sugar – 22g
  • Protein – 3g

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Age group feature: From Latvia with love

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— by Loreen Pindera

It was inevitable that Ann Walling and Genady Balik would eventually figure out they were soulmates. There aren’t a lot of people at the gym at 5 a.m., and for more than a year, they’d nod and wish one another a polite hello on the way to their respective treadmills.

But it wasn’t until Balik, once a national-level weightlifter in his native Latvia, found out from a fellow gym rat that Walling owned the fast lane in the pool that he ventured to tell her that for years, he’d had it on his bucket list to complete a triathlon. The problem was, he couldn’t swim.

“Watching Ann — how effortlessly and easily she glides through the water, it was fascinating,” he recalls, two years later.

Walling gave him a few tips and sent him a link to the Total Immersion swim-coaching site, persuading him to sign up with her for a weekend course early that spring. Like every challenge Balik faces, he tackled learning to swim with a vengeance.

“For four months, all he did was work on his technique,” she says. “He didn’t put any speed into it; he didn’t do anything except work and work on learning to swim properly. Now he’s got the best stroke — better than mine, because mine is filled with mistakes from the past.”

Walling neglects to mention that even with her hard-to-unlearn “old defects,” she is still first out of the water in her age group in every triathlon. The Quebec City native did pre-med studies at University of Miami on a swim scholarship, on track to compete in breaststroke in the 1980 Moscow Olympics until Canada pulled out.

The Montreal cardiologist is humble — and generous. When she left for Mallorca to compete in the May 2016 Ironman 70.3, she lent her new swimming protegé her Cervélo P3 because Balik didn’t own a road bike.

Photo by Finisherpix

“He had to buy bike shoes,” she says. “He’d never pedalled clipped in. He came back from one of his first hilly rides and said to me, ‘Your Garmin says my average watts was 330. Is that OK?’” (That’s pretty impressive pedal power for a trim, compact guy who was still learning how the gears worked.)

By the time Balik struck “triathlon” off his bucket list three months later, completing the long course in Kingston in a respectable 3:52:32, Balik and Walling were romantically involved — and committed training buddies.

Valentine’s Day is behind us, but what I love about their how-we-met tale is the unlikelihood of Cupid’s arrow finding its target, had it not been for those early-morning treadmill sessions and a shared love of new challenges. Balik, who came to Canada as a refugee with his young family in 1989, was close to 18 kilograms overweight a few years ago when he signed up at the neighbourhood Y, determined to get back the six-pack he’d had as a youth after his teenage son bet him he couldn’t do it. By the time he met Walling, Balik was training for a Spartan race on Mont Tremblant.

“He was running on that treadmill on 10, 15 degree inclines,” Walling says. “I said to myself, ‘This guy’s made of steel.’”

Walling has been trudging through predawn darkness to the pool since she was a kid. Now, with rounds at Montreal’s Jewish General Hospital starting at 7:15 a.m., she is up at four o’clock to get in the workout she says she needs to keep her both fit and sane.

Balik’s early morning regimen is the product of the years he spent in military school in Kaliningrad, in what was then the Soviet Union.

“I hated running,” Balik tells me. “Through my entire youth, I’d been forced to run, for judo, for wrestling. In military school, it was the first thing you had to do, every morning.”

Photo by Finisherpix

He might have run through gritted teeth, but it turns out the longer endurance races suited him perfectly. With Walling’s encouragement, he signed up for a half marathon and then for the Philadelphia marathon in the fall of 2016, qualifying for Boston in 3:12:39.

They are each other’s best cheerleaders, and each credits the other with motivation, especially when it comes to putting in the indoor miles they do side by side on their trainers in the offseason.

“Sometimes after a really hard Zwift workout, we admit to each other that we’d both thought about quitting, if only the other would have,” Balik laughs. “You know, when you hit that point and it’s just so hard, I look over at her, and she’s still going. Meanwhile, in her head, she’s thinking, ‘I can’t believe this guy, he’s still pedalling. I have to keep going.’”

Ironically, Walling says she actually spends less time triathlon training these days than when she was working out solo.

“My life is more balanced now,” she says. “I used to use training as an escape.”

Training less but training smarter, with someone who is watching out for her, while he’s making plans for a sit-down meal or some triathlon-free downtime, Walling has been injury-free and healthier than she’s felt in years.

As soon as Balik has Boston behind him in April, they’ll both step up training for Mont Tremblant 70.3 in June, then they’re off to Rügen, Germany in September, hoping to qualify for the 70.3 World Championship in Nice, France in 2019.

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VIDEO: 2018 IRONMAN Chattanooga race recap

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— by Daniel Clarke

I raced IRONMAN Chattanooga over the weekend. I knew my fitness wasn’t going to be there for a great result after my training wasn’t where it needed to be, but I was looking forward to testing liquid nutrition and experiment with pacing in the race.

It was a tough race, especially the last 20K on a relentless run course, but I got some good takeaways. The Ironman was turned into an ‘Iron-Brick’ after the swim had to be cancelled, and we went off in a TT start on the bike.

A big thank you to the volunteers and community of Chattanooga for a great race.

Supporters: Dare2Tri, Skechers Performance Canada, Triathlon Ontario, Saris
Blog (and race reports): http://ifnotyouthenwho.ca/

The post VIDEO: 2018 IRONMAN Chattanooga race recap appeared first on Triathlon Magazine Canada.

Ironman Training: The big brick session

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— by Lauren Brandon

During an Ironman build, you want to do a big bike/run or “brick” session to help simulate race day. Depending on how many weeks your Ironman training is, you will do at least two to three big brick session days. Everyone is different in terms of how much training they can handle and what they want to focus on, but these big brick sessions are essential to add to your schedule. I like to do a long bike workout with a short run after (under an hour). But, you will see some people do a long run off of a long bike ride, this will depend on the training load you can handle and what your other training days look like.

Related: How to train for Kona

This is a session where you can also try out your nutrition for race day. Start out by eating the breakfast you intend on having race morning. During your long bike ride, make sure to have all of the liquid, gels, or other food that you would have during your Ironman bike. If you’re doing a shorter run off of the bike, then there will be no need to bring any calories with you. If you’re doing a longer run off of the bike, then you will want to bring some calories, such as a gel.

Ironman Brick Session

5-hour ride:

  • 45 minute warm up (include 2x 5-minute builds)
  • An hour at Ironman pace
  • 30 minutes easy
  • An hour at Ironman pace
  • 30 minutes easy
  • An hour at Ironman pace
  • 15 minutes easy

Run immediately off the bike (10K total):

  • 5K progressive (get faster each 1k)
  • 1K easy
  • 2K Ironman pace
  • 2K easy

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Antoine Desroches: I am doing another Ironman

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On November 18th, I will be competing in Ironman Arizona. This will be my second Ironman this year, and I hope to end my season with a great performance. Even though I had my best race ever at Ironman Mont-Tremblant this August, there are still a few things that I plan to work on before Arizona.

Swim

The swim is my strength, and I’ve always worked hard to improve my stroke to be more efficient. When I watch the race video of Tremblant and I compare my style to Lauren Brandon’s, it’s evident that I can lengthen my stroke and glide more in the water. I’ve also noticed that I lift my head frequently to see the buoys, and then I keep my head elevated. That means that the rest of my body, especially my legs, tend to be pushed down underwater and I need to work harder to keep my body horizontal.

When you have a few technical points to improve, you should ask a coach to watch your technique or film yourself. Then you should find a few drills that can help you. For instance, swimming with a snorkel will help me to keep my head more underwater. Swimming with a band (an elastic around your ankle) is a great drill to improve your stroke efficiency.

Bike

On the bike, with a limited amount of time, I can’t improve my power by a whole lot. However, I can adjust my position to be faster with the same power. I’m currently doing some testing with Argon 18 and Notio Konect to improve my position and test a few triathlon bars and helmets. At this time of year, I don’t recommend drastic bike fit changes, but a few small changes, such as your elbow and hand position can have a significant impact on air friction. I also need to work on making sure that my head stays low while I’m riding. I’ve noticed that by having a wider elbow position I was able to have a more stable back and a lower head position. Therefore, I could be more comfortable, powerful and at the same time more aerodynamic.

Run

The run is where I can (and need to) improve the most. A sub-three-hour marathon is not enough to perform at a competitive Ironman like Arizona. A 2:50 or even sub 2:50 is required to be truly competitive and have a chance to win. With the new qualification system, you can’t do a lot of Ironman hopping to grab a few points at each race and hopefully qualify for Kona. You need to have a strong race and win an Ironman (or podium at a championship race). That means that sub 2:50 is the goal for next year and I’m looking to get as close as possible at Ironman Arizona. To achieve this goal, patience and consistency are key. I would much rather have many weeks of good run training than only a few weeks of great training.

I prefer to focus on frequency instead of duration. In other words, instead of doing one run of 15-20K per day, I prefer to do a few double runs during the week. That means less stress on my body and less chance of getting injured. I also need to focus on prehab instead of rehab – preventing injuries instead of trying to treat injuries. The tiny details make a huge difference in the long run.

Antoine Desroches racing IRONMAN Mont-Tremblant 2018. Photo by Talbot Cox.

The post Antoine Desroches: I am doing another Ironman appeared first on Triathlon Magazine Canada.


Hilary Brown: Canada’s First Iron Woman

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Hilary on the bike during her first Ironman in 1982.

— by Dan Dakin

Readers of a certain vintage likely have the introductory theme to ABC’s Wide World of Sports seared in their memory.

For 56-year-old Hilary Brown, that classic music brings back memories of 1981, when a broadcast featuring the new sport of triathlon was the catalyst to a six-year career competing at the Ironman World Championship in Hawaii. It was highlighted by Brown becoming the first Canadian woman to complete the race in 1982.

Born and raised in Toronto, Brown grew up near a public pool in North York with a well-established competitive aquatic program. She was always at the pool, training throughout the week and competing on the weekends, often racing a category above because of her athletic abilities. She swam in high school, but also competed in cross-country running, volleyball, basketball and tennis.

She enrolled at the University of Toronto in 1980 and was on both the varsity swimming and running teams in 1981 when a friend suggested she might find it interesting to watch a Wide World of Sports broadcast about the new sport of triathlon.

“I came out of the room and told my mother, ‘I want to do the Ironman,’” said Brown. “I thought it was going to be a fad and I never thought it would end up being an Olympic sport.”

Regardless of what she thought of triathlon’s long-term potential, she threw herself at the sport just like she had with many other sports growing up.

She bought a bike over the winter and joined Toronto’s Queen’s City Bike Club in the spring – training hard with the group of hard-nosed male cyclists from May until the race.

“They were so disciplined. That’s what I loved about it,” she said.

One of only two female cyclists in the club, Brown said she was given the cold shoulder until club member George Stewart helped arrange a century ride for her to train on and she easily completed it while leaving most of the men behind.

As for the other two sports, “There were no brick workouts, no books to learn from. There was nothing,” she said. “I was working

on three separate sports and putting them together.”

But Brown worked hard that summer and arrived in Kona in October ready to go. What she didn’t see coming was that the once-tiny Ironman race, that had jumped to 300 participants in 1981 after a Sports Illustrated article, had ballooned to more than 1,100 in 1982, likely a result of the Wide World of Sports broadcast.

She was nervous (“I cried at the start wondering what I was getting myself into”), but everything fell into place. Out of the 150 women in the field, Brown finished a remarkable 12th and became the first Canadian woman to finish an Ironman race.

1982 Hilary’s first Ironman race in Kona. Elated to have finished what she set out to do with arms raised in triumph and a smile that reflects just that.

“I never felt as awful at an event as I did after that one,” she said. “When I finished, my body seized. I couldn’t walk and the next day I couldn’t bend.”

But she was hooked.

“Everything was so well-organized and I remember on the run there were all these people on the streets calling out your name,” she said.

It was also on the run that Brown briefly stopped to encourage a male German athlete who had slowed to a halt and didn’t want to go on.

“I encouraged him to finish and then, the next year, I was hitting the wall and was struggling to finish and the same guy found me and said ‘Let’s go.’ That’s pretty much the reason I finished in 1983.”

“What I remember the most was the camaraderie of the people. They came from all over the world and it was like they had no idea there were other people also doing this sport,” she said.

Brown went on to compete in Kona for six years, racing her final Ironman in 1987.

She also briefly focused on bike racing, highlighted by competing in the first-ever Women’s Tour de France in 1984.

Brown competed in the 1984 Canadian Olympic Cycling Trials held over eight days in the Niagara region. The top four finishers made the Olympic team, while the next six made up Team Canada for that inaugural Women’s Tour.

“The best went to the Olympics, so we were the B riders. We weren’t the best in the world, but they treated us like royalty,” she said.

The course followed the same route as the men’s Tour that year, only with shorter distances and fewer race days. But each stage ended in the same cities, including the final stage when Brown and the Canadian team rolled across the finish line on the Champs-Élysées.

Suddenly she was a star on the Queen’s City club.

“I was revered after that because I had gone to the Tour de France and they were all these old European riders,” Brown laughed.

She also won a silver medal in the 1984 Canadian road racing championships, but cycling wasn’t a sport she particularly enjoyed, so she stuck to triathlon racing until 1987, when she stopped competing altogether.

“When I was swimming as a kid, it got to the point where it wasn’t fun anymore, and I think that’s what happened,” she said. “I accomplished what I set out to do and I wasn’t headed for a professional career. It just kind of ran its course for me.”

Kona 1983 was Hilary’s second Ironman in Kona. She remembers suffering in the winds before finally finishing

Despite the important role she played in Canada’s Ironman history, Brown says being an athlete is something she did – it doesn’t define who she is.

“I’m 56. I competed for six years, but that’s 50 years of my life that I’ve done other things,” she said.

It has, however, helped her keep focused during a three-decades-long teaching career, that has included coaching just about every sport offered in elementary school while teaching in Ontario.

“I fell in love with teaching and motivating young people,” she said. “I wanted everyone to feel what it’s like to excel.”

Since 2008, Brown has been teaching future teachers. She’s a professor in the Faculty of Education at Brock University, where she won the Faculty’s Excellence in Teaching Award and delivered the Convocation address during Brock’s 2018 spring graduation ceremony.

As for the sport of triathlon today, Brown said she’s encouraged to see how far the sport has come for women.

“There’s more of an acceptance now for women in sport. There are still some issues, but when I see the availability for nutrition, training and everything, it’s different. I think people can really excel in their sport and they’re given the opportunity to do so,” she said. “I live in Grimsby and we have a women’s only triathlon where there are 600 women of all different shapes and sizes taking part. It’s just so cool.”

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Kona 2018: Men’s Preview

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Patrick Lange, the defending Ironman World Champion

Since last year’s race, the 2018 Ironman World Championships in Kona has been hyped as one of the biggest showdowns in history. From Jan Frodeno’s 2018 vengeance tour to Lionel Sanders drive to become world champion, this year’s race is going to be entertaining.

Since 2014, the race on the Big Island of Hawaii has been dominated by the German’s – Sebastian KienleJan Frodeno and Patrick Lange. However, there is a chance that we could see a men’s champion from somewhere outside of Germany for the first time since 2014. A lot of that chance sits with Canadian Lionel Sanders, who was second last year to the sixth different German to claim the Ironman World Championship title, Lange.

Last year it looked as though Sanders could pull off the win with Frodeno forced to walk in the marathon. That was until Lange pulled off his second-straight super marathon (in 2016 he broke Mark Allen’s marathon course record to finish third behind Frodeno and Kienle) to pass Sanders in the final kilometres of the marathon. Lange went on to set a new course record in taking the title.

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Lionel Sanders

Peter Reid, the Canadian who took the Ironman world title three times, always said that the hardest thing to do in the sport is to defend a Kona title. There’s all the media hype. The surge in sponsorship responsibilities. More importantly, though, is the motivation that coming second or third provides to those in the hunt for the world title. Sanders, renowned as one of the most intense and driven athletes in the sport, was already thinking of ways he could improve his run split hours after he finished last year’s race.

“I’m motivated,” he said at the press conference held right after the world championship. “I feel like there’s time on the table, over the marathon. I just have to keep working the nutrition, the electrolytes, working the hydration and, of course, probably better bike pacing would help.”

As Sanders put it during that interview, his “analytical mind wanted to get back to the chopping block tomorrow.”

So, while Lange was celebrating and being feted across Germany as the world champion, Sanders was back in Windsor in his pain cave, honing his skills to go after the title once again.

If you think Sanders was motivated after last year, he had nothing on Frodeno coming out of Kona. The two-time defending world champion was slowed to a walk for much of the marathon on the Big Island. As gutty as it was that he finished, his 70th place finish in 9:15 after a 4:01 marathon – well, it hurt. The rumours were that the next morning Frodeno decided that in 2018 he would take on Sanders at Ironman 70.3 Oceanside, Kienle at Ironman 70.3 Kraichgau (although it is his home-town race, Kienle had to skip Kraichgau to compete at the Challenge Championship) and Lange at the Ironman European Championship as he prepared himself for the world championship. When asked if that was truly the case, Frodeno corrected one aspect of that story. It wasn’t the next morning.

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Jan Frodeno at the Ironman World Championship in 2017

“I may or may not have put down my last beer and said to Felix (Rüdiger), my best buddy and manager, this is what I want to do,” Frodeno said as he prepared for the European Championship in Frankfurt. “He said ‘Thank God you’ve said it, because I’ve thought of nothing else the last three hours.’”

Frodeno has been frightening throughout 2018, “schooling” Sanders (his words, not mine, I assure you) in Oceanside, dominating Lange and a strong German field in Kraichgau, destroying Lange in the marathon in Frankfurt and then running one of the most impressive races in history at the 70.3 World Championship.

Related: Jan Frodeno wins the 2018 70.3 World Championship

“I learned to channel my anger, which has worked in my favour,” Frodeno said in Frankfurt. “It was one of those things, dealing with my results, from a sporting perspective. I’ve turned it into a positive energy.”

It was all positive until a week after the 70.3 World Championship when news broke that Frodeno had a stress fracture. The injury caused him to withdraw from Kona.

With arguably the hands-down favourite for this year’s title out, who are the contenders?

If Sanders was motivated after his runner-up finish in Kona last year, the runner-up finish at Oceanside left him doubly determined to make the changes required to compete for the win on the Big Island. With Frodeno out and Sanders’ attention to detail and making marginal gains, this may be his best chance at the title.

Counting Lange out would be a huge mistake, too. The defending champ was injured for much of the first half of last year, so this year’s build is already well ahead of where he was a year ago. He also now knows exactly what he needs to do to take Frodeno on this October – run better after a fast bike.

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Sebastian Kienle

Then there’s Kienle, who has become the sport’s main legitimizer for the past few years. Sanders became much more of a legitimate star once he beat Kienle on a regular basis, especially after the two ran together for 16 of the 21 km run at the Championship last year. Frodeno’s 2016 win over Kienle in Kona also saw the two running stride for stride for a portion of the marathon and the win elevated Frodeno’s status even more because it came in a tight race over a former champion.

As much as Kienle is one of the sport’s classiest acts, he’d be much happier taking the wins at those big events. The 2014 Kona champ proved he can win when he’s supposed to, with an impressive performance at Challenge Roth. While some might downplay the win because he didn’t face any of the big names in Roth, it’s important to note that Kienle rode much of the bike ride with Cameron Wurf, the Australian former bike pro who has been turning the triathlon cycling world upside down over the last few years. Last year, in Kona, Wurf destroyed the old bike course record, taking Sanders and Kienle along for the ride. Wurf was never a factor on the run last year, while Sanders and Kienle couldn’t run off the bike as well as they needed to in order to take the win, no doubt thanks to the punishing bike pace Wurf provided.

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Cameron Wurf

Kienle’s race in Roth this year provided exactly the kind of test he needed for Kona. Rather than break down after a super-hard bike behind the Aussie speedster, Kienle put together an excellent marathon.

That might just do the trick this year. Wurf adds a wild-card factor to the Kona picture for 2018. He’s been working on his running, following a unique training program that has seen him complete a number of full-distance races this year. A week before he finished fifth in Roth he was third at Ironman France. Wurf will once again look to dominate on the bike and hope that he can gain enough time on the rest of the field to hold on for the win. That’s not likely to happen with so many potential low-2:40 (or even 2:39) marathon runners in the field, but what if Sanders and Kienle can hold their marathon running together that much better this year? What if they choose to follow the Wurf express towards a big win?

Add in the much-anticipated arrival of Javier Gomez to the mix, and the bottom line is we’re in for a very exciting Ironman World Championship men’s race. The last time a Kona rookie (on the men’s side) won the world title was Luc Van Lierde in 1996. Since Van Lierde’s win, almost every men’s champion in Kona has finished in the top three the year before. The only ones that haven’t were previous champions.

Are there other men who could be a factor in Kona later this year? Absolutely. American Tim O’Donnell has finished as high as third in Kona. Another American, Matt Hanson, delivered a scary fast marathon in Texas this year. Last year’s third-place finisher David McNamee has quietly been gearing up for another big day on the Big Island.

In the end, though, its hard to imagine that tradition will change very much. Other than the question mark that Gomez provides, the men most likely to contend for the win are the men who have been contending for the win the last few years. And that list includes a bunch of Germans and one very determined Canadian.

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Four foods to munch on this fall

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A pear a day keeps the doctor away?

“An apple a day keeps the doctor away,” goes the old saying. But it turns out to maintain your summer race weight, it’s a good idea to bite into a pear more often. A recent study in the Journal of Nutrition & Food Sciences found that pear eaters, on average, weighed nearly 8 lbs less and were 35 per cent less likely to be obese than people who did not include the fruit in their diets. One major reason why pears can help in the battle of weight gain is their high fibre levels – almost 30 per cent more than an apple. What’s more, this research discovered pear munchers were found to have higher intakes of vital nutrients such as vitamin C, potassium and magnesium.

To keep your bones strong

This ghostly cousin of the carrot has a nutty flavour and supplies a variety of vital nutrients to help you emerge from the long winter months healthier than ever. Notably, parsnips are a good source of vitamin K, a nutrient shown to play a role in improving bone mineral density. They also supply a bounty of dietary fibre – roughly 7 g in a cup serving. That is about 70 per cent more than a cup of carrots. In an Australian study, people who ate the most fibre daily (37 g on average) were 79 per cent more likely to stave off maladies, such as cancer and heart disease, when compared with people of a similar age who ate the least (18 g).

Give a boost to your heart with cranberries

Native to Canada, tart cranberries are an antioxidant powerhouse. Researchers at Tufts University in Boston, MA, determined that unique proanthocyanidin antioxidants found in the berry are cardio friendly via their power to reduce inflammation, improve blood fat numbers and alleviate artery stiffness. A separate study discovered that a type of carbohydrate in cranberries can act like a prebiotic to help increase the number of beneficial bacteria in your gut. Cranberries are also a good way to infuse your fall diet with more manganese, a mineral that plays a vital role in maintaining proper metabolism.

Fight the flu bug with brussels sprouts

By eating more vitamin C–rich veggies like brussels sprouts, you could help keep the winter sniffles at bay. Eat more of these green bundles, and you’ll also load up on disease-fighting potent antioxidants, potassium and vitamin K, which was recently found to help slash the risk of mortality from heart disease. A large review of studies published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed that higher intakes of vitamin C could help keep blood pressure numbers in the healthy range.

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Kona 2018: Women’s Preview

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Daniela Ryf is the defending Ironman World Champion

As exciting as the men’s race looks to be, the women’s race in Kona could be very boring. We’re all hoping that won’t be the case, but that all depends on Daniela Ryf’s fitness heading into the big day. Two years ago, Ryf shattered the course record, finishing almost 25 minutes up on three-time Kona champ Mirinda Carfrae. There was so much time between Ryf and the rest of the women’s field that the Swiss star could easily have had a shower, a coffee and a decent snack before it was time for her to greet the day’s runner-up.

Related: Kona 2018: Men’s Preview

Last year Ryf defended her title, but having spent much of the early part of the year dealing with back issues, wasn’t nearly as dominant. That is far from the case in 2018. Ryf entered just her second race of 2018 at the Ironman European Championship in Frankfurt. The first was Ironman 70.3 Rapperswil in her home country, where she dominated. The race in Frankfurt went beyond domination – it was frightening. Ryf blasted through the course to set another course record, despite the fact that the bike was five km longer than the last time she’d set the record. She finished seventh overall, just 38-minutes behind men’s champion Jan Frodeno, and was almost 26 minutes ahead of American runner-up, Sarah True.

Daniela Ryf at the 2018 Ironman European Championship in Frankfurt, Germany.

The race provided Ryf and her coach, Brett Sutton, all the important feedback they need to adequately prepare for Kona:

“It was one of the days when I felt like I pushed and pushed and didn’t get tired,” she said after the race. “It was a really amazing feeling. I think coming down from altitude really helps, you really feel your lungs are able to give you more and the muscles also felt strong. I am really happy with my bike performance, it felt like I was flying all along the course. It was good to see that the changes we did with my set up seemed to work and definitely the form – it’s all coming together well. Today it was very nice to see in numbers.”

Related: Daniela Ryf wins her seventh world title

See what I mean about how the race could be boring?

One way we could see some competition for a healthy Ryf is if Lucy Charles, who, in many ways, stole the show in Kona last year, can continue to improve her run split. The former Great Britain national team swimmer is no stranger to high-level sport. Having competed for a spot on Great Britain’s Olympic team as a 17-year-old, she handles pressure well and knows all too well about the hard training required to be a world champion. Charles was a close second out of the water last year, led pretty much the entire bike ride, forcing Ryf to push hard at the end of the ride to lead into T2, and ran well enough last year to keep the Swiss champ honest.

Lucy Charles

Charles continued her impressive Ironman winning ways with a wire-to-wire win at the Ironman African Championship in April, dominated the Challenge Championship in Samorin, Slovakia, and got exactly the kind of motivation she needed to up her game with her finish at Challenge Roth. In Roth, Charles held a huge lead after the swim and was still over four-minutes up into T2, but struggled with stomach issues during the run. A porta- potty stop at 28 km might have got her some relief, but considering she lost the race to Germany’s Daniela Saemmler by nine seconds, turned out to be an expensive pit stop.

Like all those motivated men gunning after Lange this year, though, Charles comes out of the race in Roth suitably motivated. Like so many champions, it didn’t take her long to figure out what could be learned from the Roth experience.

“I feel like it was a big box ticked that I was able to overcome that mental battle of wanting to pull out and carrying on and being able to push at the end,” she said after the race in Roth.

“I’m happy to have that kind of battle. It doesn’t phase me to be running head to head with someone. If it came to that in Kona, I’d be up for that. Bring it on. I think that’s a good thing as well, that mentally I can cope with that.”

And like so many of the men who talk about being motivated after a result that left them wanting, the close loss in Roth might just have provided Charles with some much- needed motivation.

“I find it really hard after I’ve had a good result to go back to training, because you’re on high and it’s hard to settle yourself and get back into training,” she said. “I find it much easier if I’ve had a result that I’m not 100 per cent happy with, because I think that it’s time to knuckle down and get the work done because I never want to feel that again. I think that’s going to help me want to get back to training and work really hard.”

Sarah Crowley

Like Ryf, last year’s third-place finisher in Kona, Australian Sarah Crowley, has raced considerably less than she did a year ago. Crowley was one of the distant competition in Frankfurt and is fully aware that all the women will have their work cut out for them if they are to contend on the Big Island.

“That was a bit of an excaliber bike,” Crowley said of Ryf’s impressive day. “It’s phenomenal. We’ve got some work to do for Kona – I think everybody does.”

If Ryf has another Frankfurt-like day in Hawaii this October, it’s hard to imagine anyone will be close. But if she doesn’t, who other than Crowley and Charles could we expect to see near the front? American Heather Jackson has finished fifth, third and fourth in Kona in her last three appearances. Three-time Ironman World Champion Mirinda Carfrae has returned from last year’s maternity leave and has been biking very well in her come- back races, that include runner-up finishes at Ironman 70.3 Texas and Ironman Cairns. The woman who beat her in Texas, Kaisa Sali, has finished fifth in Kona the last two years and is another fast runner who could run her way to the podium in the right conditions.

Denmark’s Michelle Vesterby has traditionally shone on the Big Island in October, finishing fourth in 2015 and sixth. A strong swimmer and cyclist, she is one of the few who could conceivably be near the front with the likes of Ryf and Charles on the bike – the question is whether she has the run to be able to make the step up to the podium.

Another Dane that will garner lots of attention at this year’s race is Helle Frederiksen, who is making her Kona debut. Fresh off a home-country win at the ITU Long Distance World Championship, Frederiksen was second at Ironman Arizona last year and could certainly be a factor in this year’s race.

As could another Kona rookie, two-time Olympian Sarah True. The American managed to out-run Ryf by four minutes in Frankfurt this year in her full-distance debut, running her way to second.

But when you start the marathon 30 minutes down, gaining four minutes doesn’t exactly provide much excitement if you’re looking for a close finish. Which is why this year’s women’s race at the Ironman World Championship has the potential to provide little suspense. Sure, there will likely be some drama for the other spots on the podium, but if Daniela Ryf continues to race the way she can and has done this year, that spot is taken

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Pierre Heynemand Jr: The stars are aligned for Kona contender

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Pierre Heynemand Jr.

For 30 years now, before every race, Pierre Heynemand Jr. scrawls a heart on the back of his hand in indelible felt marker.

“To show respect for my family,” Heynemand says. “Every time I do a triathlon, I just have to glance at my hand, and I think about them.”

Heynemand’s wife, Christine Bruneau, is his greatest supporter, having realized from the start that life with Pierre would mean early mornings and holidays revolving around races. Their children, Félix and Laurianne, are active, too. Laurianne, 17, is a competitive triathlete on the junior elite circuit.

But when Heynemand, who turns 52 in December, talks about “my family,” he also means the kids with whom he trains at the Jet Club in Joliette, Que., northeast of Montreal; and the staff and students at the high school where he is principal; and everyone he embraces in his wide circle of influence as a mentor and an athlete.

He will be channelling all of them, looking at that heart, as he stands on the beach at Kailua-Kona Bay on October 13, the 40th anniversary of the Ironman World Championship. It will be Heynemand’s eighth time at Kona – and his 50th Ironman.

“All the stars are aligned,” says Heynemand. “For several years now, I’ve circled around that top spot on the podium: fifth, second, and second again last year. What I really want for my 50th Ironman is the best performance I can muster.”

At Kona, that means making no mistakes. “It’s such an intense race, in every way,” he says. “The athletes are so strong. You have to have a good swim, a good bike, a good run. Your nutrition has to be well thought out. You have to have a plan to manage the heat.”

He gave it his best shot in 2017, good enough for a 9:34:29 finish, making him the second-fastest Canadian age-grouper, just over 21 minutes behind fellow Quebecer, 35-year-old Jérôme Bresson.

Pierre Heynemand Jr.

That was the highlight of a particularly arduous season: five Ironman races in which he made the podium in every event; seven sprint and standard-distance races, including the Quebec Olympic distance championship; three duathlons, plus the Canadian long-distance championship at the Montreal Esprit Triathlon, in which he placed fifth overall.

In the midst of all that, he spent several days in the hospital, suffering from an intestinal bug likely picked up during an open-water practice swim early in the season.

In retrospect, Heynemand says, he probably arrived in Hawaii a bit too tired. This season, he will have done only three Ironman races in the lead-up to Kona: Santa Rosa, where he qualified for the World Championship last May; Mont-Tremblant on his home turf; and his favourite race course, Lake Placid.

Heynemand still does sprints, Olympic-distance races and duathlons nearly every weekend. That’s his speed work. Otherwise, his training is all about volume.

“There are two types of athletes,” he says, “racehorses and draft horses. I’m a draft horse. I can handle a lot of mileage. I don’t get hurt. If I only work out 12 hours a week, I don’t perform. I need to do 25 hours weekly all year round, sometimes 35 to 40 hours in the summertime.”

That adds up to 1,200 hours of swimming, biking and running a year, plus eight minutes of stretching, twice a day, religiously. It’s more than most of us could manage, and it’s not a regime Heynemand recommends for everyone.

“Everyone is different,” he says. “It’s what I have to do to get to the mountaintop.”

It means a 5 a.m. wake-up all year long to swim or run before getting behind his desk in the principal’s office, and cycling in the evening with Zwift, in the garage, in the wintertime. After 30 years of racing, he knows his limits intimately. He races without any gadgets. None. “No computer,” he says, with a shrug. “It’sjust a distraction.”

Take cycling into the inevitable wind at Kona.

“The computer tells you you’re going 38 km/h, but you planned on 40 km/h. But 38 is OK. At some point, you’ll have the wind at your back, and instead of 52 km/h, you’ll be hitting 55. I let my legs tell me how hard I’m working. My legs and my head.”

Heynemand says he has no magic recipe for his success as a triathlete, but his zest for life is infectious, and he is an evangelist for the sport and for fitness in general. The night before the Gatineau Triathlon in early July, Heynemand gave a pep talk to a bunch of beginner triathletes about the importance of setting your own goals – and of having a good time while you’re at it.

“The notion of pleasure is so important,” he says. “If it weren’t, I wouldn’t be doing this for 30 years. The kids I swim with are so young, sometimes I add up the ages of three of them, and it doesn’t come to mine. But I have so much fun!”

He’s been on the board of Triathlon Québec for years, boosting the province’s uber-successful elementary school “triathlon scolaire” program and, at his last high school, setting up a sport-study program for aspiring elite triathletes in the region.

At his new school, he has set up a club for students at risk of dropping out, encouraging them to find their own passion – and not to settle for flipping burgers or some other minimum wage job.

He gives talks to anyone in the community who will listen, and he encourages other athlete-role models to do the same.

“My message is: getting in shape changes your life,” he says. “We have to stop talking constantly about the search for cures and talk more about prevention. The biggest gift you can give yourself is to stay in shape.”

As for what he will do next year, after his 50th Ironman is behind him – well, he and his wife did buy a tandem bike in July, and he looks forward to more time for long rides with her and the wind at his back.

But just don’t ask him that question until after Kona. Heynemand is focused on the task at hand.

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