The Upward Spiral (see below for deatils) |
I had
never been there since and wondered whether I’d recognize anything. I would
not. Nothing looked remotely familiar when I arrived on race day. Luckily the
race started at 12:30 and so I could sleep in an only had to leave home at 8am.
Registration went through without problems and they were even able to get me
into the first wave of elite competitors which only had some 70 athletes.
Swim - perfect!
The bad parts
The gun went
off and I was too slow. Too slow to catch any group worth to speak of as I am
just not one of those that can go all out for those critical 150-200m after which
the speed settles down. So I was almost alone but that was not too bad. The
swim venue is a lake specifically designed for rowing races and has buoys every
10m connected with a rope just about one meter below the surface. You can
follow this rope all the time you never have to look up. That made for an
acceptable swim time of 28min flat and no brawl to speak of at the turn around.
I arrived at my bike and the race was finally on.
Bike - out of gas after 60k
I had made
the swim exit in the middle of the 70 athletes of my wave and was silently hoping
for bike ride that would see me enter T2 in the top 10. This plan worked quite
well for the first of two laps where we passed by all of the sights Cologne has
to offer including the impressive cathedral – which I did not look at once I
noticed after the race. By the end of the first lap I was all too busy getting
rid of about six athletes that had tried to stay with me when I overtook them
at around the 30k mark. It took me some 15k and some effort to get rid of them but
in the headwind section at the northern end of the course they finally gave up.
At the end
of the first lap turn around I counted about six athletes in front of my.
Exactly how many I could not be sure as there were some athletes of the other
waves and the full distance also on the course. The second, shorter, loop of
25k was real work though. I had started the bike at an effort more fitting a race
that I would have tapered for and so slowed down quite a bit on those after
65k. The wattage dropped significantly from around 290 Watts to something like250 watts by the end of the bike. Nonetheless I entered T2 in safely in the top
10 overall with a net bike time of 2:12h for the 90k. Race time when I hit the
run course: 2h 44min. So I had about 1h 30min left for the half marathon if I
wanted to get my entry fee back. Really it was my mind that wanted to get the
race in for training purposes and not for any result. Thus the priority was to
get to the finish line in under 4:25h not to fight everyone that would come up
from behind. So I let a few guys pass and settled into a good rhythm at around
4:10’/km. Holding this speed would safely get me to the finish in time and I
put an emphasis on good hydration all the time. Then at the end of the first of
two laps it was: the spiral staircase I had been warned about before the race.
You run on both sides of the Rhine river and yes somehow you have to cross it
twice on every lap. At the 9k mark of every lap this takes you up this spiral
staircase. Some 40 steps and a real bummer as it takes at least 15 seconds off
your time for that kilometer. Still for me this thing somehow defines the
development of my shape these days. Everything seems to go in an upward spiral.
I had no problem at all holding the 4:15’/km and it felt like cruising at
times. I got passed two more times on the second lap and thought myself to be
somewhere around 12th to 15th place. To my very surprise when I
reached the finish line after a race like a Swiss watch in 1:14:29h they announced
me as 10th overall and winner of my age group. Not bad for hours 22
to 25,5 of sports activity this week. ;)
I was cold & lonely on the podium at 7:45pm. |
So much for
my race and the fact that I enjoyed it very much. There are though a few
drawbacks if one dos this race in different parts of the field. Within my wave
of only 70 athletes there did not seem to be too many drafting issues. The two
waves of about 350 athletes each that followed though were a different story.
As the course heads out and back on quite a few sections I was able to take a
good look at some really bad drafting problems. I just hope that the marshalls –
there were many of then! – took care of that problem in the right way. The
other thing was that it took a long, long time for the awards ceremony to begin
and there was nowhere you could get shelter and warmth or even a shower. It was
only 15C yesterday and many people were very, very cold especially among the
full distance athletes. No showers and no warm place for them was simply a
shame!
Will I be
back for more at this race? As a mind calmer before Kona perhaps – for any
other reason – no.
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