Wrists from left to right: Jürgen Metzler, Tim Stutzer, Julia Ertmer |
Jürgen as the One-Eyed-Racer |
Friday and
Saturday saw us going through the usual pre race routines and meet what felt
like hundreds of familiar faces. Familiar faces not only from over here in
Germany but also from the US. Here we spotted Mr. Slowtwitch Herbert Krabel,
there was Bob Babbit of Competitor/Triathlete Magazine and many, many more. It
seemed as if Challenge had picked up on the media thing quite a bit this year. We
had a great Saturday with an early morning swim in the Rhein-Main-Donau-Canal
and a delicious breakfast at Café Schmitt, Hilpolstein and one of us made it into Herbert's "The Lava Java of Roth" picture gallery on Slowtwitch.
We then hung out with the
German Quintana Roo crew and chatted a bit with ABG’s Steve Dunn at
their expo booth.
Stopping by at the Quintana Roo booth before heading off to the bike check in |
When race
day came all three of us got a little nervous because Julia had never swum
3,8km in a race, I was a little unsure of my bike legs and Jürgen had increased
the run training volume only after we had registered some five weeks ago. Our
team started in the last wave of the day at 8:50am. After high fiving Julia one
last time the only thing we could do was wait for her to keep her promise of
swimming sub 1:06h. And that she did. When she arrived at my and my noble steed
in transition no more than 1:05h had passed and off I was. Little did we know
that her performance would be the only one that was delivered as promised. I
went off in what I perceived a solid effort but still the numbers were telling
me something different. As always the adrenalin and little taper does miracles
to how you feel in the first hour on the bike. I thus reached the first waypoint
of the day – the foot of Kalvarienberg hill in just over 56min which was more
than 3min faster than last year when I had posted my best time here yet in
4:26h. It was the wind I thought and took on the longest ascent of the course
deliberately easy the first time. From then on I was only looking forward to
the Alpe d’Huez of triathlon, my first ascent of Solar Hill. And it delivered!
Reports say never have there been as many people as this year and they are
right. When I looked up the hill all I saw was a wall of people. And they
parted for us athletes like the sea parted for Moses. It gives me goose bumps every
time. Full of adrenalin again I continued at what felt like warp speed. So I was
still more than three minutes ahead of last year’s split after lap one and
began to get a little worried of what would happen. And then it happened: the second
ascent of Kalvarienberg hill did not feel at all comfortable and the watts were
significantly lower than the first time. Well, temperatures were now in the high
20s on the Celsius grade and that usually weakens me a bit and so I slowly lost
the time I had on my time from last year. And I was neither thirsty nor hungry
also a sign of the heat effecting me a bit. One thing pushed me though as there
were very few spectators when I passed Solar Hill on my second lap in the last
years. This year though even when I went up there the second time there were
many, many spectators and gave me a final push. Regrettably the wind did not
help me this year for those last 10k back to Roth and I lost some time there,
too. Bottom line was a net time of 4:28:30h compared to 4:26:38h in 2012.
Dismounting my bike I
ran into transition and screamed “Jürgen, Jürgen!” just like last year. Strangely
of all first names, my of 2012 and 2013 runners shared first names. We had
calculated that a time of 8:30h might be enough to podium in the mixed category
and so Jürgen took off like a rocket. With Julias 1:04h swim and my 4:28h bike
we were down four minutes on our race plan and Jürgen tried to make up some
time. The risk being to blow up badly later on the run. His motto at the time “Pokal
oder Spital” (Podium or the ER). He went through 10k at 41 minutes flat and
passed the half marathon mark after 1:29h. Even then though he showed signs of
trouble. When I saw him at the 22km mark he said something about his heart rate
being all too high for the effort he was running at. We waited from him at 36km
next and it was clear that he was in serious trouble when he arrived there some
15 minutes down on the 3h marathon splits he wanted to run. He was able to tell
us that he had some strange kind of cramps and that running was not at all possible
any more. He had to stop several times at that point to stretch his calfs. But
when he did this his quads started to cramp. He was in serious trouble for sure
but there was nothing we could really do other than to encourage him to “Keep
it up!”. When Jürgen went on the final section inth the city of Roth Julia and
I headed for the stadium where they have a relay meeting point some 300m from
the finish line in order for the relays to be able to run those last meters
together. And there we waited and waited and there was no sign of Jürgen. When
he finally came around the corner some 150 meters away he was walking or rather
limping and obviously in pain. When he reached us he was just barely able to
communicate that almost every muscle in his body was cramping up. Thus we
trotted along the last 200 meters to the stadium single file and were passed by
a lot of athletes as Jürgen had to stop another two times to stretch his calfes.
When you enter the stadium to finish your race in Roth this usually wipes away
any and all pain you might be in ant the crowds just overwhelm you. You can see
from the following picture that this was the case for Julia and I but regrettably
not for Jürgen.
Power file overview. |
Two thirds are overwhelmed by the finishline! |
He collapsed right after the finish line after what was “The
hardest thing I’ve ever done!”. This hardest thing came to an end after 3:43h
and a total time of 9:20h for our relay which was still good enough for 16th
place among the mixed relays.
Right
behind the finish line he tried to figure out what had gone wrong. He has some
12 marathons under his belt, six of them in between 3:02 and 3:07h and has even
run 3:23h in an Ironman. But never had anything like this happened. After some thinking
and the obvious signs of a salt deficit we think to have found the reason: A
less than sufficient salt intake in the 24 hours before the race. IF you run a
marathon on its own your whole weekend is geared towards this thing. If you run
the marathon as part of a relay you “only” do one part and perhaps this got us
all carried away a bit in those crucial 24 hours pre race. Race day especially
was far, far away from an optimal preparation for a marathon. We got up at 5am
prepared the swim and the bike, did not have a decent breakfast and for Jürgen
the race started right in the heat of the afternoon at 2:30pm. In between
breakfast and the start of the run he might not have taken enough salt & water
and thus have already started the run in a dehydrated state. That backfired
badly. And other than a 3,8k swim or even a 180k bike ride a marathon by itself
remains a serious challenge not to be underestimated.
But even
though the race did not go according to plan the weekend was just great! Sunday
came to an end with some great fireworks celebrating the last finishers of the
day and Monday saw one of the most emotional award ceremonies I have ever been
to.
Bottom
line: We were at the heart of triathlon and will be back in 2014!
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