The world of Ironman racing
#1
Posted 22 November 2011 - 03:39 PM
So who else has ever followed Ironman racing? Any members here completed one?
Can you believe that we've had two sub-8 hour performances now in the past 3 weeks, first at Ironman FL, then this past weekend at Ironman AZ?
#2
Posted 22 November 2011 - 03:48 PM
There's a decent flock of triathletes here in Austin. A friend of mine made it into Ironman FL for next year, so I'm looking forward to studying her training(and mentally noting what she's doing).
Yeah, sub-8 hours... I'll be lucky to FINISH my first marathon in Feb irregardless of the time.
#3
Posted 22 November 2011 - 03:59 PM
#4
Posted 22 November 2011 - 05:20 PM
Aaaah, back when I had youth, energy and kneecaps! Those were the days!
I'm old enough to remember when just finishing the original Ironman was a HUGE deal. 24 hour cutoff! Then, within a few years, people started showing up to RACE. Amazing. It's like the Western States Endurance Run . . . you hear about it and just can't imagine people actually do that, but there they are.
~Boar
#5
Posted 22 November 2011 - 05:37 PM
#6
Posted 22 November 2011 - 07:03 PM
Thinking about doing a half IM in 2012.
#7
Posted 23 November 2011 - 08:53 AM
I was just in Austin in October for the half. What a great town. Tons of great restaurants in a nice downtown area and quite a few nice bike shops as well. Roads were s#*t for riding on, at least on the race course, but you can't help the weather/drought you had this past summer. FL is supposed to be a great race, one that I'll keep on the short list in the years to come. AZ is next year for me. Cozumel looks like a fun venue too.I've never "followed" it, except sometimes I catch news online but I do have a morbid fantasy of trying to complete one someday.
There's a decent flock of triathletes here in Austin. A friend of mine made it into Ironman FL for next year, so I'm looking forward to studying her training(and mentally noting what she's doing).
Yeah, sub-8 hours... I'll be lucky to FINISH my first marathon in Feb irregardless of the time.
Those sub-8 and even 8-9 hour finishers are just freaks of nature. The swim I can do as fast as them, but I can't even imagine riding 112 under 5 hours or going sub-3 for the marathon even in a standalone race. Crazy.
#8
Posted 23 November 2011 - 09:47 AM
If you ever get down again give me a hollar.
I'm with Boar on remembering the days when there was 24 hour cutoff, athletes these days get some incredible conditioning. Plus the technology that goes into everything is mind boggling(and expensive!). Some of those Tri-bikes are just too sexy.
#9
Posted 23 November 2011 - 10:03 AM
but just don't have the extra time to train, or the drive for that matter.
Have you ever heard of that Ultra-marathon runner that ran 50 marathons in 50 days... pretty amazing. Below is just a quote with some information about him. Interesting guy... Look him up if you guys get the time
"Dean Karnazes was an average beer-guzzling Joe, stuck in a job he hated and sick of the rat race. Then, while celebrating his 30th birthday at a bar, he suddenly decided to walk out the door and go for a 30-mile run. That moment changed his life forever.
As an ultramarathon runner, Dean runs distances far beyond a normal marathon and often in grueling environments--including 146 miles in the 120-degree heat of Death Valley and the 40--below temperatures of the South Pole."
#10
Posted 08 December 2011 - 10:24 AM
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