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Headcase Ironman

~ Raising funds to help find a cure for Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) brain tumours.

Headcase Ironman

Category Archives: Dan

Stand by your beds….

22 Thursday Sep 2016

Posted by Editor in Blog, Dan, David's Posts, Events, Peter's Posts, Tony

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How many days until… 233 days
How many weeks until… 33 weeks
How many months until… 7 months
How many hours until… 5592 hours
How many minutes until… 335520 minutes
How many seconds until… 20131200 seconds

Dynamic Dan’s Dauntless Determination……

22 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by Editor in Blog, Dan

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Tags

Abu Dhabi, GBM Cancer, race, russell, triathlon

Dan “Ever since I took part in my first triathlon back 2010 at Blenheim, it had never crossed  my mind that I wouldn’t complete the race even in the most darkest of times during the run. That was until November last year.

It was the first ever half Ironman distance in Dubai and Dad had flown over to race even though deep down we both new he would never complete it. This was solely due to the fact he had about 6 degrees of movement in his hip before the involuntary electric shock manuovere was activated. If you spent any time with him towards the end of last year you will know what I am talking about. It’s funny now but at the time it definitely wasn’t.

With that taking up most of the conversation prior to the race, never did I once think that I could also be in danger of not completing it. To be honest, I wasn’t confident in having a great day as I hadn’t put in enough hours, but having raced in Mallorca earlier this year and leaving a bit disappointed, I was determined to leave everything I had out there and try and nick a result.

IMG_5550My wave started and we began the swim but around the 1k mark I was beginning to feel very sick. I am not sure whether it was nerves, the sea water or the jel I had just taken before the race, but it wasn’t enjoyable and cost me a bit of time without a doubt. I exited the swim around the 36min mark and relatively happy all things considered.

I really enjoyed the bike course as it was on a road I use when driving all the time. Up and back down Hessa street 3 times with a tail wind going up and a headwind back, I had a lot of fun. The only issue was that I felt the need to consume 6 – 7 gels over the 2 hours and 47 mins I was on the bike. There are millions of different articles and pieces of advice you can find on the internet about best practice and rule of thumb when it comes to nutrition, but I can tell you right now, that is way too much.

Completely oblivious of what I had done, I entered T2 in a pretty strong position with my only worry being that I may of gone too hard on the bike and if my legs would hold up for the 21kms ahead of me. “you’ll be fine’ I said to myself. “Just go off steady and build in to a rhythm – you’re way ahead of schedule”

FullSizeRenderSo off I went running at around 5.10min k pace which is slow but I was very happy to stay at for the first 5k. Its worth pointing out at this point that it was around 10.30am and the weather was around 32 degrees C. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to know that is bloody hot and not ideal when you’re about to embark on a half marathon. Even less ideal when you’re unaware of what is just around the corner.

The first couple of k of any run off the bike is tough while you get your legs used to the change in motion and your heart rate a steady pace. But by 3k I was still not feeling good, and by 4k I was feeling worse. Then my stomach started playing games and by the 5.25 turnaround point it had enough.

I spent the next 15.25 kms following a clockwork routine of Run, Puke, Walk, Run, Puke, Walk. To say it was rough would be a rather large understatement.

IMG_5558Even in the best conditions that is not something you want to go through, but when its beaming sunshine and every bit of energy you had stored is now plastered across the crescent of the Palm, it’s actually quite dangerous. I was unable to consume anything aside from water and even when I did that, I saw it again moments later. I still don’t know how I managed to get to the end but I stumbled across in 5hrs 43 mins and 46 seconds. 23 seconds slower than Mallorca earlier in the year and a 2:15:55 half marathon split! Ouch!

IMG_5561

It took me a good while to recover from the race and that gave me time to reflect on what happened. This sport is bloody tough and if you want to do it well there are no shortcuts at ANY level. Although the nutrition issues played a key role in my day, I was 100% guilty of showing a lack of respect to the distance and I said to myself the next day that will never happen again.

Its a bit of a cliché but how often do you hear people say that you learn more from disappointment than success? It’s thrown around all the time particularly with sport but in my case it couldn’t of been more true. I looked at what I was doing and what I wanted to achieve in the sport and decided that I needed a complete overhaul. I realised I wasn’t happy just being a middle of the pack athlete and needed to do something about it particularly with training structure and planning. My answer was simple. I needed a coach.

I found my guy and met him 2 days later. 3 days later I had my first assessment session and by the end of the week I had started my personalised training plan all structured towards my next race which was 4 months away – Challenge Dubai. We looked at my weaknesses and technique and worked out how I could get the most ‘bang for my buck’. Like most age groupers I have a pretty unpredictable job which means I have to be flexibile and plan my sessions in order to get the most out of them. Before I would just rock up to the gym with no plan or just head out on a 10k run at one pace not knowing if it was really helping me improve. Having a weekly plan allowed me to plan around my work and social life and gave me the confidence that what I was doing was working. This proved to be pivotal in my improvement as it relieved the mental stress I was putting on myself regarding training – one of the biggest issues age groupers come up against in this sport.

Aside from the Christmas period I pretty much trained everyday in one shape or form but averaged around 6 hours a week in the 4 months – almost half the average when I was training for Ironman. Obviously its worth noting that I was only training for a half so that would make sense but I knew deep down that this was the fittest i’d been for a long time and was only really lacking the endurance needed for a longer event which you can only get from hours and hours in a low heart rate state, or what’s otherwise know as f***ing mind numbing training!

Training Peaks

February came and I got my usual chest cold 3 weeks out from the race. This was another bonus of having a coach as he helped me understand that it wasn’t going to effect my fitness level enough to make a difference and that all the bulk of the work was already done. The stress I put myself through before Ironman France when I thought i’d lost all my fitness in the 2 weeks leading into the race was actually probably more detrimental to my performance than the illness that I caught. Stress is literally the number one evil and the more you can limit it the better you will become.

We put my plan together which included my nutrition and HR zones and I was ready to go which was something I had never done before, particularly with nutrition. I removed gels altogether from my plan and stick with solid food and high calorie chews.My relationship with jels has now come to an eternal end.

Feeling excited, I woke up on the morning of the race and the weather was like nothing id seen before in dubai. The wind was blowing at speeds up to 50kmph and the sea was like something you’d expect to see on the coast of Australia, not in Dubai. As such the swim course was moved inside the bay and became 2 loops. I was actually really relaxed for some odd reason, perhaps it was that I knew I had done the work and stress levels were low I don’t know. The pro’s went off first and were thrown around like rag dolls in the 3ft waves. I was still very relaxed.

The swim was as rough as it looked. So much so that I came out in over 40mins and way off my target time. While I was annoyed I knew there wasn’t anything I could do apart from bike hard and run harder. So that’s what I did.

By the time I had reached 45km split averaged around 39kmph. Granted there was a pretty big tail wind for about 30km of that but the other 15km was made up of horrific side wind that actually blew people off the bike. I knew that was fast as it was way beyond what I planned but I was well within my HR zones that I set out with my coach before the race. Happy days!

The way back wasn’t so enjoyable into huge headwinds but I managed to hold on and get to t2 with a 2:37 bike split and an average of 34.2kmph, whilst also nailing my nutrition. Buzzing!

It was at this point where I told myself to just stick to the plan on the run. Stay in my zones planned and if I have anything left at the end use it. And that’s exactly what I did. Looking back at my data my HR pretty much stayed between 3 beats of each other the whole way (155 – 158 between zone 3 &4). That might not mean much to you but to me and my coach that was amazing as it allowed me to stay just below threshold and at the same pace for the whole 21k. I had executed my plan perfectly and as a result ran my fastest ever half marathon off the bike (1:42:32) and was over the line in 5:06:34 (9th in AG).

IMG_5557As always, when you look back at a race, you ask yourself could I have done more here and what if I did that there, its inevitable and this was no different. But for me, this was my first real breakthrough race i’d had and it really showed me what I could acheive. In all honesty, I hadn’t really changed much in terms of hours trained or types of exercises over the 4 months, in fact, I probably did less and kept it simpler than before. The real difference was that I highlighted what was the real factor in the way of me improving and resolved it. I worked out I needed a structure to suit my life and eliminated the mental stress I was putting on myself. The result speaks for itself.

I’m now planning the rest of my year and working out what races to do. Last weekend I did a sprint where I managed to get 8th place (out of 71) which was really fun – 1 hour 20mins of full on pedal to the metal. Sadly though that was the last triathlon here until October but in truth there is a lot I need to work on before I race again later in the year.

The race in Dubai managed to raise another 90 quid for Headcase which was brilliant but we need CAN and MUST do more. We’ve all put so much into this over the last few years achieved great things. Now is the time to evaluate where we are going and and what we need to do in order to take this to the next level, we can’t stop!

The triathlon bar has been raised and new targets have been set. Let’s all analyse what we can do to raise the fundraising bar and make 2016 the year of breakthroughs.

25.204849 55.270783

Race photos

11 Sunday May 2014

Posted by Editor in Andy's Posts, Dan, David's Posts, Peter's Posts, Tony

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SONY DSC SONY DSC SONY DSC SONY DSC SONY DSC
SONY DSC

Not in the Script… Last minute hiccup?

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by Editor in Dan

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Oopsies. Had a fight with a bike chain and lost. Not ideal 12 hours before my flight…

photo 1 photo 2

Different Year, Same story

20 Sunday Apr 2014

Posted by Editor in Dan

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three weeksDan: There seems to be a bit of a pattern starting to form, and not in a good way (see picture). A year on from last years big race and I have managed to catch a similar virus to the one I did 2 weeks prior to Nice. This time though its taken me a good 2 weeks of unproductive coughing and hospital visits to begin any kind of worthwhile training. The virus managed to directly attack my asthma and as a result has meant that I’ve missed 2 races, countless planned training sessions and gone relatively insane due to the lack of physical activity.

It took me a good week to accept I needed to do absolutely nothing to get better, which, if you are like me, you would know how physically hard that is to follow through with, particularly when your body feels fine. I only really accepted it after trying a few relatively slow 20k cycles which were swiftly met by coughing fits and shortness of breath. Not fun.

Anyway, after a number of tantrums and productive chats with various willing sources (they had no choice), it seems as though I’ve finally begun to come out the other side this weekend. I was able to do some light cardio sessions coupled with some weight circuit sessions which were on the whole fairly positive. Judging from the the aches this morning, it definitely succeeding in giving my body the shock it needed to get back into a decent 2 weeks of training before race week. Going into work on a Sunday (Monday) morning just isn’t the same when you’re not aching from head to toe! Its just not right…

So, in short, I am not going to be where I’d planned to be fitness wise at the end of last year but I’ve now accepted that. In fact, there is an argument to say that I never will be as fit as I’d like to be for a race as there will always be doubts and questions you will ask yourself about what you could have done or should of tried. What’s most important, particularly for this race, is getting to the start line fit and ready to enjoy it as that’s what its really all about at the end of the day.

I don’t think I’d be far off assuming that the excitement level is starting to creep up between all the squad and everyone is eager to put their bodies to the test. This of course will be met by the usual pre race anxiety a day or two out (some more than others) and then before you know it we’ll be across the line, and in the bar discussing next years location.

3 weeks to go… and I intend to enjoy every second of it!

Smashed it!

15 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by Editor in Dan, Tony

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Congrats to Dan and Tony who are chilling out after a tough race this morning in Abu Dhabi, lined up against the Brownlees. 

Results (click for full split times):

Dan:  TIME:4:24:19 Dan knocked up a FIRST place (1/13 all 26 yr olds) must have been the new wheels!

There were 98 in the same age group (21)
75 were Men (20)
18 were British and (3)
13 were the same age (1)

Tony:  TIME: 4:58:42

There were 114 in the same age group (49)
101 were Men (45)
42 were British and (23)
13 were the same age (8)

A pretty amazing accomplishment all round.

Other results:
Jonny and Alistair crossed the line together at 3:12:21 then set about getting back in some water!

Brownlee post AD

Race Debrief

02 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Editor in Dan

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image[12][4]

Dan: Warm up race number 2 of 2014 found me at the Yas Marina F1 circuit for the Olympic distance and I think its fair to say there isn’t many better venues than this one! The temperature had started to creep up over the last few days to around 30 degrees and with an afternoon start of 3pm, it was definitely going to play a factor. The 2014 wetsuit saga continued before the race as I noticed another tear in my 3rd replacement wetsuit! Just the sort of thing you want to notice 5 seconds before you jump into the water! Either way, I was just treating it as a decent training session and a good test of where my fitness was 10 weeks out from Mallorca.

I was in wave 1 with all the big boys so once the gun went off I held back a little to find some open water which worked perfectly as I had a pretty clean swim from start to finish. I managed to find a decent rhythm after about 500m and just tried to focus on technique rather than speed for this race. I felt pretty good fitness wise but could definitely notice there was a lack of power in the arms which l’ll need to improve on over the next few weeks. Nevertheless, I got up and out the 1500m in 28.13 which, all things considered, was a reasonably decent time for me.

Next was the 40k bike which I knew would be the real test. The biggest issue I currently have with long rides is keeping focused for the entire duration. My mind seems to go wandering at points and I forget to concentrate on my cadence, speed, corner taking etc. Maybe that’s not a bad thing as it keeps me sane but I’m sure ill be able to shave off a few minutes each time if I stop thinking about what I’m going to have for dinner at the 23k mark! Still, overall it was a decent ride and I came in to T2 with a 1.07.14 bike split.

image[15][2]
On to the run and I had know idea what was going to happen. I had intentionally set out to have way under the amount of gels and electrolytes for the race (1 gel and 1.5 bottle of electrolytes) in order to see how well I could use my stored energy, which was something that worked well in training for last year. I quickly settled into a usual rhythm and it wasn’t until the  6km mark where I started to feel the effects of not having enough energy on board. I managed to hold on and keep my pace clocking 4.30kms for pretty much the whole way round coming through with a 44.57 10k.

Through the finish line in 2.25.14, I was met by my number 1 fan who had been shouting ‘GO ON DANNY!’ the whole way round! I think the highlight of the day was the fact my race number happened to be 69 and Chrissie proudly wearing the sticker ‘I’m supporting 69’ as if it was some sort of campaign. On a serious note though, you really can’t beat seeing faces in the crowd particularly when you’re digging in, so the news that Nanny and Grandad will be there in Mallorca is absolutely awesome!

Attention now turns to a strong week in the gym building my swim strength and working on my cycling, before a half marathon Friday prior to Russell seniors arrival on Saturday.

Ciao for now.

Image

Pre Tri Yas. .. Let’s go

01 Saturday Mar 2014

image

Posted by Editor | Filed under Dan

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Image

#Sorry

21 Friday Feb 2014

Training Day

Posted by Editor | Filed under Dan

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We thought we’d lost him…

07 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Editor in Dan

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Tags

Cancer, GBM, ironman, Mallorca, russell, triathlon

Having had what was without a doubt the busiest January of my entire life, I can finally say the journey to Mallorca has begun. A combination of work and play (a balance that’s hard enough to grasp without throwing in training!) has meant that the majority of this years training has been high intensity, strength and core. While that’s not enough to reach my goals come May, I have felt that its kept me at a decent level of fitness to build from… maybe?

photo[3]

Today marked the first race of the year (last weekend was a write off) and the usual thought processes of ‘can I be bothered’ and ‘its bloody freezing and I don’t even have a wetsuit’ (don’t ask!) were flying around my head. If I had to pick one thing that I took away with me last June, id have to say a set of solid mental balls. Yes, the fundraising was huge and will always be the real achievement, but on a personal level, whenever I’m finding something tough, either personal or at work, I just remind myself of one thing…. “you’re a f***ing ironman”! So far that’s always managed to do the trick 🙂

Ok so back to the race. Once I pulled myself from my bed at 4.30am and overflowed my car with petrol half asleep whilst filling it up at the station (they don’t do it for you before 6am – how rude!), I made my way to the venue. All I could think of was how cold it was and not having a wetsuit was really playing on my mind. This feeling that was amplified when I was literally the only person apart from 2 kids in the junior race going skins! “if they can do it then I can surely?” was my immediate reaction followed closely by… F**K!photo

A quick 1km run to warm me up followed by 40 Burpees/40 Squats just before the race started meant I was nice and warm and prepared for the plunge.  Suddenly… Ooosh I was in, and all that drama for 2 and half hours prior to that moment suddenly became a waste of time. Yes it was cold but id somehow managed to forget I live in the middle east and cold here is close to a heatwave in the UK. Ironman my arse!

This was my first swim of 2014 and I was fairly happy with how I felt but know there is a lot of work to do. Technique and strength have gone since Nice so pool 

sessions are top priority now for sure. Out the water and on the bike I was excited to see how i’d do having done a lot of speed work since Xmas. This definitely showed as on a pretty windy day I still managed to average 34km which I was happy with. Off the bike and into the run I was as comfortable as I’ve ever been, hitting a decent pace and feeling really good from start to finish. I don’t know officially but I’m pretty sure it was a negative split 5k* which was another positive.

With an extra 4km added to the bike and an 800m swim I managed to clock a time of 1.20.04 which, considering the month I’ve just had, I was more than happy with. The race didn’t really tell me much I didn’t already know and now its about kicking on from here and building for the Olympic at Tri Yas on the 28th.

Its great to see the updates coming in from the rest of the squad (my favourite still by far is Tony: Sore ankle) and hopefully we can continue to build a picture of everyone’s journey to Mallorca. Its crazy to see how far we’ve come from a few loose emails and drunk conversations but that’s what its all about!

Have a good weekend and those of you that are training… train hard!

Cheers

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