Chicago

The Chicago Triathlon was last weekend. I hadn’t been to Chicago since I was very young so I was excited to go back (normally the Chicago airport is just a layover en route to another destination so it was odd to actually leave the airport in a car). Also exciting was my new TT bike (a brand new Orbea Ordu). Thanks to Matt Moss at Florida Bicycle Sports for helping me get this bike and fitting me to a great aero-position. Until Chicago I had never raced on a real TT bike before – I always just changed my trusty road bike into a TT bike with some clip on bars. So, the question is: Does a TT bike make a difference? I’ll get to that a bit later.

As I mentioned in my previous post, I was supposed to go home to Florida last week to get some sweet racing wheels so my bike would look a little bit like this:

However, because of tropical storm Fay I stayed in Colorado all last week and went straight to Chicago on the Friday before the race. I spent most of Saturday trying to find a set of race wheels and a way to carry more water on my bike. Thanks to my friend Aaron Kamnetz for letting me use his race wheels!

Anyways, on to the race: I had an awesome swim, exiting the water in the front pack about 10 seconds back. I bumbled around a bit in T1 and lost about 15 seconds to a group containing Andy Potts, Brent McMahon, Steven Hackett going into the bike. Generally this means I will never see these athletes ever again as my strategy on the bike is usually to just limit my losses. However, I completely surprised myself when I actually caught back up to those guys. I caught the group about 10K in.

At this point I was very excited about how my race was going. So excited that when I took a drink out of my water bottle I dropped it and found myself with not nearly enough liquids to adequately fuel myself for the rest of the race. I rode the rest of the bike with only what was in my aero-drink bottle that I had purchased at the race expo the day before.

Onto the run: I ran the first 4 miles pretty conservatively. I was safely in the top 10 and guaranteed a decent paycheck – I didn’t want to be the guy who collapsed 100 meters from the finish. However, when I tried to ramp it up in the last 2 miles, nothing happened. I wasn’t hurting but my legs refused to go any faster. I think this was from training at altitude for the previous 6 weeks. I had no concept of leg speed but tons of cardio fitness. I crossed the line in 8th place.

Overall this race changed my perspective on non-draft races. It’s nice to know I can stay in the game on the bike and not just wait for the run. And yes, a TT bike does make a difference – just make sure to get fit to the bike by somebody who knows what they’re doing!


The Chicago skyline.

One Reply to “Chicago”

  1. Kevin, glad to have a chance to meet you this AM at the UCF 5 miler. I left you a message on your athlinks profile, just not sure if you still use that or not, it looked “semi up to date”. I like the TT rig! I have the older version of the Ordu with a nice sub-9 disc and an 808 on the front and its a definitely a sweet ride. The new Ordu your riding is a badass looking bike (Craig Alexander won Kona on it last weekend). Anyways, i’ll be pulling for you to make the Olympic team for London in 2012!! Keep racing!
    John

Comments are closed.