Kona Race Team

June 2009

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June 26, 2009

EAGLEMAN 70.3

The weather has been the biggest challenge this spring in the Northeast, so having a Half IM for the first race of the season was a bit daunting.  My goal for Eagleman was to break 5:30 and place top ten.  Decent swim, I felt great on the bike until a flat at 21 miles!  My initial reaction was oh @#$% !!!  Composed myself and changed it within 6 minutes, watching the women in my age group go by.   Upset at first, I decided to go for broke, knowing it may cost me on the run.  Final bike time was 2:48 (flat included),  and with a decent run, I would be well under 5:30.


Long story short,felt good on the run and finished the race in 5:20, 4th in my age group. Even with the flat, Eagleman was one of my best races in 4 years, with much credit to Kona Endurance Pro.  The difference in my training and racing has been incredible, and I plan on including more products this summer.

May 08, 2009

St. Croix 70.3 Race Report Kona Endurance Triathlete Bryan Rhodes

St Croix Ironman 70.3 Race Report

 

Me and my partner Erin traveled to St Croix on Monday to get ready for my 10th annual race on the island of St Croix .  We had a good week going over the course and relaxing at our home-stay Tom Peil’s.  Tom is a great host; organizing a carbo dinner the night before the race as well as an after party with an awesome live band. 

 

Race Day

With a 4.30am wake up time I felt pretty good and it looked like it was going to be a nice Rhodseycontact2hot day with light winds like I had hoped for.  The pro men got under way at 6.30am with a strong field of swimmers I decided to conserve energy and not contest for the swim prime.  We broke the swim record swimming a super fast 24 minutes.  Coming into transition to my surprise there was 13 guys in the lead swim pack.

 

I felt lethal on the bike and decided to put the pedal to the metal in the first few miles and drop as many wheel suckers as I could.  This worked pretty well as I flew through ‘hot corner’ and out of town, narrowing the lead group down from 13 to 7 people.  Going up to the beast it was hotly contested for the bike prime at the top of the beast.  I thought I had it until Igor decided to have a little run in with me near the top, so Richie was first to the top.  Descending down the beast we nearly lost 2 more of the riders as I witnessed some great bike handling skills with Stuart Hayes not making the sharp left hand turn and going straight into the fence and over the handle bars, along with Tim O’Donnell nearly getting caught up in the action. 

 

With 10 miles to go on the bike I decided to put the hammer down again to try and get away on the bike.  I was first off the bike but closely following me was Dirk and Igor, we had managed to open up a 1 minute gap on the rest of the field.  I left transition in second position due to putting socks on for the run.  I started at a nice pace but Dirk and Igor flew for the first few miles.  I knew that it was going to get harder and hotter as the run went on.  Around the back of the Bucanneer Hotel my right quad muscle started to cramp badly and I was just trying to hold my 5th position.  In the second lap I could see I was gaining time on Dirk but when I tried to push harder my leg would cramp a little more.  I was happy with my solid 1hr 23min half marathon and I am pleased with my start to the race season being injury free in comparison to last year. 

 

Results - Top 10 men
1. Tim O’Donnell ( USA ) 4:02:36
2. Igor Amorelli (BRA) 4:03:38
3. Richie Cunningham (AUS) 4:05:45
4. Dirk Bockel (LUX) 4:07:07
5. Bryan Rhodes (NZL) 4:08:20
6. Stuart Hayes (GBR) 4:11:11
7. Alessandro Degaspari (ITA) 4:13:38
8. Michael Lovato ( USA ) 4:14:07
9. Wolfgang Guembel (CAN) 4:16:34
10. Ted As (SWE) 4:19:39

 

Bryan Rhodes fuels with Kona Endurance PRO and Kona Endurance CitraBeta Shot. For more information on how to fuel like Rhodsey, please visit Kona Endurance

April 29, 2009

Kona Endurance Age-Groupers Flying on Kona Endurance PRO

Here is an email we received yesterday:

Hey! People keep asking my coach what I'm on. All the lifeguards I work with dont believe me when I sayKonaEndurancePROImage185 not steroids. We have to swim a timed 500m under 10 min swim twice a year for work, I knocked over 2:30 off since I got hired, but over a minute since last spring. i can keep up with the guards who have been swimming thier whole lives (me just for 3 years). I just completed a sprint race in Boca Raton Fl. Its a big race for around here although its just a sprint. Anyways, I managed to come in second place overall 1:30 behind Linda Neary who is our local amazing elite woman around here. I am now breathing down her neck getting closer every race. My 5k run for the last leg was under 20 minutes, a PR for sure. The only coverage in the local Palm Beach post was nothing of the race but me sitting my butt in a bucket of ice water (see attached) I am racing again May 9th in Sarasota as an elite and will let you know how that goes, then on to climb a mountain in June. Dont worry, when people ask my coach what I'm on he tells the and he has a supply of Kona Pros and his shop. Thanks again for the hook up Darin!

Sincerely,
Jessica Wald

 

Jessica, you are awesome! I am very glad to help you achieve greater heights. Your Kona Endurance TriTop is on the way.

Kona Endurance CEO, Darin Booton

For more information about Kona Endurance PRO please visit www.konaendurance.com

 

April 07, 2009

Newest Additions to the Kona Endurance Race Teams

Kona Endurance, the world's leader in endurance nutrition, is pleased to announce the latest roster additions to the Kona Endurance Triathlon, Cycling & Running Teams. We will continue to add athletes throughout the year, with our next round of selections slated for mid-May. Each athlete selected will receive Free Kona Endurance Racewear, Free Kona Endurance PRO, chance to test prototypes, etc. If you have not signed up, the Race Team Applications can be found here. Kona Endurance products are designed to increase VO2 max, reduce lactic acid, speed recovery and replace muscle glycogen. Here are our newest additions to the Kona Endurance Race Teams:

J.F. Houpert of Montreal, Quebec

Ross Stewart of San Francisco, CA

Erin McCarty of Los Gatos, CA

Dale Van De Loo of Menasha, WI

Eric Milbrandt of Pittsburgh, PA

Joshua Pettit of South Jordan, UT

Chantal Shea of Hayworth, NJ

Dale Plant of Bellingham, WA

Brett Stewart of Phoenix, AZ

Wiebke Brewer Hannigan of Sykesville, MD

Travis Kubicek of Seattle, WA

Barb Danielson of Kelowna, British Columbia

Jason Warner of Phoenix, AZ

For more information on Kona Endurance products and to learn more about our age-group sponsorship program, please visit http://www.dbmnutrition.com

April 04, 2009

Soon To Be Released NEW Endurance Product

Kona Endurance will be releasing a new endurance sport supplement the week of April 20, 2009. Kona Endurance CEO, Darin Booton said, "We are really excited about our new endurance product, testing on this product has been really remarkable. We are constantly pushing the envelope with new formulations for our sports nutrition and endurance sport products, which make triathletes, cyclists and runners faster, period. While I believe we currently have the most potent endurance sport supplements in the world, it's imperative to us that we constantly strive to one up ourselves. When we do that endurance athletes benefit. I can assure you, cyclists and runners are going to love this new product, it's really going to take their endurance training sessions up a notch." Kona Endurance sport nutrition products are safe, legal and approved by all athletic governing bodies, including WADA, USADA, IOC, USAT, etc. For more information on Kona Endurance products that are guaranteed to increase VO2 max and reduce lactic acid, please visit www.konaendurance.com

.

March 17, 2009

first victory of the season

Dear readers and users of Kona Endurance products.Waasland1


I managed to win my first pro race this season in Belgium thanks to my Kona Endurance products.

You can find the results on this site:

http://www.cyclingnews.com/road.php?id=road/2009/mar09/waasland09

Also a little movie on http://users.telenet.be/johancoenen/media/20090315.mpg (in dutch)


Greetings Johan Coenen

March 06, 2009

Me a Marathon

Marathon1 I am a cyclist and I say that with great pride, however,,,,the big however or the—but ha ha alas it always seems to be my butt is the belief that some times you have to put out just to put out! 

 

OK,OK,OK so what I am a cyclist.  Back in December 2008 I had started to run again for undisclosed reasons which I will share with you at a later date.  I had not run up to that point since 2006 May 7th exactly! And here is the story in that loving fashion that I used last year to portray the inner workings of an athletes mind portraying what is left of mine!

 

On December 15th I took my first run working with the technique of using time versus distance.  The first few runs were held at 30 min and I trotted along, working on form and foot turnover, nothing special here working the same program over two weeks to build up some form and leg strength.  The aerobic component was there from my early base period so I ended up actually enjoying my self over this early period. For those of you that are reading this and are not using Kona products you are missing out and I get to read your #s as I pass. 

 

I hate running sorry to all the runners but I despise it, more than likely from some deep seated mental block instilled in my brain housing group by some twisted, lung spewing drill instructor yelling in my face.  When I went for that first run it was like taking baby steps it felt weird after years on the bike and I am sure I looked like some arthritic robot break dancing. Doop-da-Doop, like Homer Simpson.   With total amazement I felt fairly stable after a mile or so and form came back like a Delorian shot through time.  The biggest thing I noticed is that there was no aerobic distress!

 

On Dec 31st I did a 3 mile “test” it was more of a game really, and let me explain, I have a goal in mind, fairly large and maybe some what arrogant but so what!  I also know that on short notice there are very few things that can boost performance into a competitive level short of taking drugs. Character and the All Mighty would always stop me from stooping so low, both also drive me forward!  So the deal was 3 miles 21 min if I nailed that I would continue on to my goal knowing with weight loss and 3 months of training I could make that # look more like 18.

 

Failure was one step away for the whole test and alas fail I did crossing the line at 23:01.  Now go back and look at two adjectives in the last paragraph one starts with an “A” and the other with a “C” and you know I am mad and disappointed in my self for that but you know what?  I am going for it!

 

OK so you think I am arrogant and too competitive so what! I guess you can’t read or feel beyond your own feelings.  (got Ya!) This was my thinking for what little there is of it these days.  Off by 2 min after a 3 year layoff and 2 weeks of training, eh, not too bad I shouldn’t be so hard on myself but I am and I will train myself into the dirt to win when I want to!  I was way off form had no clue when to push and was just out running like a crook running from the cops

 

 Over the next few weeks I trained like most other Multi Sport athletes train; bike run-run bike-bike run and so it goes.  For the running I planned to work most of Jan as a base period with all runs no less that 1 hour. I added 1 interval workout per week into the plan either up hill or just pure speed work on the flats.  I started my first bottle of Kona Endurance Pro Jan 1st and followed the directions on the bottle.  Over the ensuing 4 weeks my training time remained at 1 hr per session but the Garmin tells a story worth a million dollars.  Over that month my distance went up 1.5 miles and my HR stayed the same or came down all within the same block of training time.

 

Also during this time I started running with my oldest daughter Jamie.  Her runs helped me stay within the base zones on days I was kicking and helped her expand her distances to where she has now run 2, ½ marathons in the past 14 days. She is a Kona girl too!

 

Sure go run with your kid show her how it is done ole man!  Yea the kid wants to run 10 yea lets go,  my wife Chris thinks I am crazy and I guess she is right 3 years not a single step done to run, 6 weeks 10 miles as a la-la run, great that is what I am thinking, my kid thinks hey me and Dad can run a ½ marathon together??  Wth?

 

  I want to stress here not to try this at home but if you follow a solid base period of training in your cycling training your ability to handle any form of aerobic challenge is going to be fantastic!  SO yea you all know no challenge can pass me by just the way I am wired, I guess, man my poor wife!  Got a message from the RAAM people todaaaaaaaaay eh never mind where were we on this journey?

 

Run 13.1 miles go slow no problem, but who goes to a “race” to run slow right?  So we took off the goal time was set by my daughter 2 hours a very doable time.  We get to the starting line it is a brisk 50 degrees kid is sick and it is pouring rain-the side ways rain we get here in the south, pain and suffering was getting from the truck to the start line. 

 

Off we go and up to the ½ way point we were nailing the time to the pavement then it broke down ugly like.  I am rarely lost for words but what do you say to some one that just popped and you have 6 miles to go in some real dank weather?  We talked about nursing homes, regret and remorse, lost opportunity and the fact that I would not allow her to quit, nuff said she crossed the line hand in hand with dear ole dad at 2:29 mission complete for her!  However just to let you know my adv HR was 127 for the 13.1 miles and that is a direct reflection of a fantastic base period and Kona Pro.

 

 What did I learn though?  I guess that would be the all time question what secret of speed and endurance can I take from all this?

 

1)      Family first no matter what

2)      Just don’t stop

3)      Drink at every water stop no matter what

4)      If you want it bad enough you can have anything, it is all about sacrifice

5)      Watching some one else suffer is worst than suffering your self

6)      Just get out and try it puts you in the top 1%

 

The feeling of finishing was great! Not in a winning sort of fist pumping way but being able to hold my daughters hand above our heads as we crossed together!  This was a moment in time forever etched into the books as an event that WE did.  Mr. Armstrong has a book that says “It is not about the Bike” however some times it is “Not About Winning” at all, but about the doing.  In doing so solidifying values and morals instilled in the next generation so they can take over when we leave!

March 04, 2009

Bryan Rhodes Race Report Ironman Malaysia 2009 - 2nd Place!

IRONMAN MALAYSIA 2009!!

Coming to Ironman Malaysia 2009 was a decision that me and my partner (Erin O'Hara) was made in early decision in December.  I thought it would be a great place for her to do her first Ironman and have a holiday together.  My training preparation had been geared towards gaining my third title at Ironman Malaysia, as my previous attempts had not eventuated.
 
We arrived here with no dramas other than that they had missed to put us on the pro start list so had no race numbers.  We were left with the last pro race numbers, myself number 46 and Erin 47 side by side in her first ironman.  
 
Rhodescomingoutwater Race morning came around quickly as usual, but I was looking forward to the race to see how my early season preparation had been.  The cannon sounded at 7.30am as it was just getting light.  I took out the first 400m hard to get to the front.  A group of five containing myself, Luke McKenzie, Reinaldo Collucci, Mathieu O'Halloran and Hiroyuki Nishiuch, quickly moved away from the rest of the field.  I was doing most of the work on the front and trying to keep the swim pace fast.  I lead out of the water and onto the bike. 
 
I started out hard on the bike to try to gain a lead but after 15km I could see that it was just myself, Luke, and Reinaldo.  Luke and I were sharing a lot of the work at the front setting the pace.  We both knew that we needed to get a break on Reinaldo as you never know what sort of legs a Olympic athlete would have for the run.  At 140km Luke and I managed to open a gap on Reinaldo who later on pulled out of the race in the run. 
 
Leading off the bike onto the run I felt good and was confident in my running ability.  My plan with my coach was to sit back and run the last 21km harder as this is where I struggled in Kona. At around 2 laps I had Luke down to 24 seconds ahead but then I went through a bad patch.  This allowed Luke to enlarge his lead to a minute, giving him more confidence and he looked great.  I conciliated my 2nd place as I knew it was his day.  I happy with my second place finish as we dueled all day long and it is early season so I hope to get faster and stronger as the year goes along. 
 
The highlight of my day was being at the finish to see Erin finish her first Ironman in 10th place pro female even after suffering a nasty crash early in the bike at an aid station.   
 
Thanks to all my sponsors and supporters.  Look forward to reporting on more successful races throughout this season.
 
RESULTS - IRONMAN MALAYSIA, KUAH, LANGKAWI 2009
1. Mckenzie, Luke 8:26:48
2. Rhodes, Bryan 8:32:52
3. Fuller, Brian 8:38:06
4. Nishiuchi, Hiroyuki 8:48:23
5. Vabrousek, Petr 8:50:48
6. Evoe, Patrick 8:52:18
7. Schuberth, Elmar 8:55:24
8. Seidl, Gernot 8:56:35
9. Ohalloran, Mathieu 9:02:15
10. Dzalaj, Karol 9:05:11

March 02, 2009

Rock Racing's Danny Finneran Fueling With Kona Endurance PRO & CitraBeta Shot

Finneran01 We are happy to welcome Danny Finneran of Rock Racing to the Kona Endurance family. Danny is a heck of a fast cyclist and someone who is on the rise bigtime. We have supplied Danny with Kona Endurance PRO and Kona Endurance CitraBeta Shot. He's starting to feel the physiological effects as he was second in a road race a week ago. Last year Danny won the bronze medal at the Nationals Criterium http://www.rockracing.com/press/2008-08-07_Williams-Wins-Gold-Finneran-Bronze-At-Nationals-Crit.php so he know what it takes to go to the next level. Look for Danny to win some major races this year.

February 24, 2009

Kona Endurance Pro Evan Plews, follows up 24hr Solo victory with Cat 1 victory

So Sublime...

After a week off the bike resting and spending time with family in from out of town, it was time to get back on after my victory at 24 Hours in the Old Pueblo. Unfortunately, I had some work to do on my road bike and spent little time sleeping the night before!

I had also just received some positive news from our teams' title sponsor, so I was happy to show off our kit just minutes up the road from their dealership.

It was a chilly, but clear Willamette Valley morning as I drove across town to the Sublime Sublimity Circuit Race. We rolled west onto a brutal course with relentless short climbs, some rough roads and even a little winter wind. The race was five laps for a total of 63 miles and finished with a super-steepPlewscat1 20+% kick! With little time for warm-up the talented local field immediately raced hard and I hung on to the back of the group after dropping my chain on the hardest climb of the circuit. Things began to settle down midway through the second lap and I rolled to the front to see how things looked. The brisk early pace seemed to have tempered the groups' ambition, so I pressed a little and opened a sizeable gap.

I bridged across to the lone leader and immediately dropped him on the next climb. After a lap I had 50 seconds lead, and assumed an aero position to see how long I could stay out front. I maintained a comfortable tempo and increased my advantage to nearly two minutes. At the end of the fourth lap, the now motivated chasers trimmed my advantage to 50 seconds. With a lap to go, I became focused on making the break stick and increased my pace. With less than a half-lap to go, I was up but nearly 90 seconds and cruised in for easy win--thankful not to have to sprint on that final hill!

It was my first CAT 1 race, my first victory on the road in over 10 years, and nice to win so close to home! Sublime indeed...

February 22, 2009

Kona Endurance Pro MTN Biker Evan Plews Wins 24hr SOLO event

VICTORY!!!
 
Many of you know that I opened the 2009 racing season with a visit to the 10th annual KONA 24 Hours in the Old Pueblo. This was to be my first attempt at a 24 SOLO event, so I wanted to be well prepared. With support from my family and teammates, I was able to train consistently since the 1st of January and arrived at the race in decent shape for this time of year.
 
The race began with a "shotgun" start and a 1/4mile lemans run. I was able to get out in the top 20 and Phoenix_Trip_Feb_14__2008_047 settled into a reasonable pace. My plan was to maintain my 100 mile pace for the entire 24 hours. It worked well and soon I had caught and passed the early leader Tinker Juarez and was riding alone in the lead as darkness approached. I stopped for about 10 minutes to install my lights and add some more clothing. Throughout the night I maintained consistent laps and stopped only at midnight to lube my chain and change batteries. My form was good until about 5am when temperature seemed to drop and the wind began to pick up. I started to get cold even after daylight and another quick stop to remove my lights. I wasn't able to warm up and my lap times did not improve even though it was daylight. At 11:11am I lapped Tinker and decided that it was time to rest. We had a little recovery meal, pulled some cactus spines out of my legs (overzealous cornering!), and crossed the finish line victorious at 12:01 pm.
 
I want to thank all of my sponsors, but especially NoTubes.com for the totally rad new race wheels/tires, Magura for the new brakes, fork, and rear shock, and Scrub Components for the sick brake rotors that all arrived just in time to win! Even though I rocked it last year, this was a tough year for sponsorship. This race was on me, but I appreciate all of you out there that believe in my dream and support my cause. Thanks again and savor this one with me! The best is yet to come...
 
VP

February 08, 2009

We lost a good friend.

Some very sad news to post:

 

Qatar continues in memory of Nolf

By Gregor Brown in Doha, Qatar

Frederiek Nolf died before stage 5. The race was neutralised in his honour
Photo ©: TDWsports.com / Topsport Vlaanderen
(Click for larger image)

The Tour of Qatar continued Thursday despite the sudden death of Belgian Frederiek Nolf the night before at the official race hotel. The riders rode a shortened, neutralised stage of 30 kilometres from Al Shahaniyah to Doha. They took 55 minutes in memory of the 21-year-old of Team Topsport Vlaanderen-Mercator, who died of a suspected heart attack in his sleep.

"The riders were not in shape to compete today, above all the Belgians. I think that to stop the race all together would have been bad. When [Fabio] Casartelli died they did not stop the stage [Tour de France stage 15, July 18, 1995 - ed.], they kept going," said cycling legend and race official Eddy Merckx.

The stage started at 14:05 after the 131 riders observed one minute of silence in honour of Nolf. Teams Katusha and Doha led the riders from the start at the camel racetrack.

The peloton covered the short ride east to Doha's capital city. Team Doha led a silent peloton over the line.

It was not a day to take pictures or go racing
Photo ©: AFP
(Click for larger image)

Riders reported the mood of the group silent and sombre during the stage.

February 02, 2009

Kona Endurance - Real Athletes, Real Results

An email we received this morning:

Hey Darin,
I am so happy I reached out to Kona Endurance and became part of the team. I have been using the Smirnoffholdingprorecov Kona Endurance PRO and SUPER Recovery Drink for a week and a half it is AMAZING! My recovery time after a really hard workout is rapid and my muscles fatigue occurs later in my workouts. I also see myself holding a hard pace on my runs and high watts on the bike for longer periods of time. Testimonial: Yesterday I had a recovery run and did a 14 miler in 7:12 splits (mile before my recovery I did a 6:30) and this is only two weeks into my running after a 10 week downtime from running due to a couple fractures in my pelvis. I then followed that up with a 40 mile bike with a group of cyclists in which I was pulling some serious watts (for me at 96 lbs) and did not fatigue as fast. Even the guys all said they are really noticing how strong I am getting on the bike. I owe it to Kona Endurance. Really solid product you have!!

January 28, 2009

Jan Selections to Kona Endurance Race Teams, more to add in Feb

Here is a list of the newest members to the Kona Endurance Race Teams. We are selecting more in February and each month after that we will continue to add athletes. The next round of selections will be announced in late Feb. The newest members are:

Chris Ashley of Winnipeg, Canada

Paulo Baranda of Portugal, Spain

AJ Carr of San Antonio, TX

Kevin Delaney of Satellite Beach, FL

Rav Dighe of the U.K.

Lisa James of South Bend, IN

Bill Hess of Gainesville, FL

Shanna Pentico of Bradenton, FL

Mark Preston of Bronte, Australia

Mary Jo Pugh of Helotes, TX

Chris Russell of Littleton, MA

Kellie Smirnoff of Jacksonville, FL

January 26, 2009

Stage 6 of Fantasy Tour Down Under had Lance Finishing 71st-75 again

and with that, Jeff Landauer of Roseville, Ca and James Smith of the U.K. were left to battle it out again. Stage 1 had Lance Armstrong finishing in the 71st-75 group also. Just like in stage 1, Jeff Landauer was once again victorious. Him and Smith had a few of the same pics and it came down to Michael Rogers 35th place finish for the stage that really put Landauer over the top.

January 24, 2009

Stage 5 of Fantasy TDU Was a Close One!

This was our tightest daily battle so far. It came down to Michael Gordon of Dunwoody, GA and Eric Thomson of Merrit Island, FL. Both guys picked Lance's finishing spot correctly(21st-25th) and Michael Gordon was the daily winner for stage 5. With him picking Stuart O'Grady and Allan Davis, he was tough to beat for the day. Congrats to Michael Gordon for winning the daily bottle of Kona Endurance PRO!

Stage 4 Winner of Tour Down Under Fantasy Game Announced

Congratulations to Brian Bain of Calgary, Alberta for winning the stage 4 of the Kona Endurance Fantasy TDU Game. Brian picked Lance to finish 46-50 and with Lance's 47th place finish, Brian easily won the free bottle of Kona Endurance PRO.

note: virtually 80% of all entrants picked Lance to finish in the 1st-5th or 6th-10th groupings

Stage 3 Winner of Fantasy Tour Down Under was a Battle

With Lance's 32nd finish for the day, the competition came down to John Fletcher of Muscatine, IA and John Herda of Bayside, WI, but when it was all over, Herda's team handily won over Fletcher. Congratulations to John Herda as the Stage 3 winner of the Kona Endurance Tour Down Under Fantasy Game, we will ship you a free bottle of Kona Endurance PRO

Stage 2 Winner of Free Bottle of Kona Endurance PRO for Fantasy Tour Down Under

With Lance Armstrong's 45th place finish, Patrick Emmett of the Netherlands did not have much competition and he easily won the stage. His Fantasy Team did pretty well for the day with many of his guys finishing inside the top 50 and scoring fantasy points. Patrick wins a free bottle of Kona Endurance PRO

January 23, 2009

We have moved our Facebook page, please visit us

We have moved our Kona Endurance Facebook page to the more appropriate Product pages, where we should have been all along. Please visit us and become a fan! http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kona-Endurance/59733011631 

January 21, 2009

Base Training Time

Base training is more than likely one of the most overlooked and misunderstood forms of training.  Base training takes time and a lot of it and it also requires as much discipline as killer intervals.  The goals of this period will be to get you back into trainable shape, increase your ability to handle increased workloads and to insure the body becomes trained to use fat as a primary fuel source. 

The success, duration and final peak ceiling of your cycling or multisport season will be largely determined by the quality of your base period.  The physiological changes that need to be honed during this period of training simply take time to manifest them selves.  How long you ask?  The running rule is 12 weeks but honestly peak performance needs about 30 weeks to be eked out of the human body and over half of that needs to be taken up by the base period.  Think of a pyramid and notice that the larger the base the higher the peak the same holds true in endurance sports.

Base period training is made up of plenty of LSD.  Ok you wacko’s before you get excited or think I am a 60’s throw back think of it this way Long Slow Distance sorry to excite you and then let you down but there are doping rules!  The whole key is to use your training time to get in TIME and plenty of it keeping your efforts within HR zones 1-2 or power zones just above your recovery zone.  When you ride in a group and I know this is tough sit in and if that just won’t fly ride alone as it makes no sense to be a January superstar and a July burn out!  I know I can hear you all moaning about how riding 2 hours will take sooooo long, no sorry it will only take 2 hours.

The idea here is to get the body into good levels of fitness and more importantly to condition not only the aerobic system but to allow an adaption of the internal systems to use fat as fuel instead of Carbohydrates which are of limited quantity and produce huge amounts of waist byproducts.  This will pay big dividends in the summer months.

I like to use a 3 up one down cycle in the base period which means on the small scale you train for 3 days and rest one.  The same holds true for your weeks.  With cycling this is easy to plan for multi sport it is a little tougher but with good planning it can be done.  The recovery days and weeks are just that recovery.  Recovery is the biggest secret, if you recover you will be faster and stronger much sooner than just going full steam ahead all the time.  I like to have 1 full day off every 7 days during base training and my other recovery day is an active recovery day where I do something like a light spin or electro muscle stimulation or massage to speed things along.  Duration is totally up to you but should be progressive.  Below is a chart of how I am training the Wounded Marines to cycle. it is simple and effective and covers 20 weeks of progressive base training

Download Chart1

I also train on my Tri bike at times.  Really I have a bike that is set up for both road and Time Trial all I do is switch out the seat post and seat to get the right angles.  I use a steel frame bike in the off season so that I don’t wreck the good stuff and really at this point in the year I am the only nut on the road so there is no one to impress.  This also allows me to use it on the stationary trainer without worrying about stressing the frame and fork.  Here is a picture of it.  It is an old Cannondale even has a ball bearing bottom bracket but I have had it for ever and with some mods here and there I get all the angles that are on my primary frames and if I crash it I am out 100 bucks and E Bay has-em by the dozen!  SO take a look at what you are doing and slow down a little, if guys take off and show their stuff let them go do your diligence in the trenches and in July they won’t be around to bother you

 

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The only thing that isn’t ten years old is the power tap.

Kona Endurance Kenyans Winning Early in '09

The year started early as Jynocel Basweti and Wesley Ochoro raced in Jackson, Mississippi at the Mississippi Blues Marathon on Jan 3rd. Basweti continued his strong performances from last year as he fought for a very tough 2nd place finish on the hilly course in 2:19:19, beating the former course record by over 6 minutes! Wesley completed his 3rd marathon ever, placing 5th in 2:23:57. Great going guys!
 
Last weekend, Haron Lagat and Leah Kiprono traveled to Bermuda for the Bermuda Challenge. Haron once again had an outstanding weekend as he placed 2nd in the mile event Friday night, 3rd in the 10k on Saturday, and 5th in the half marathon on Sunday, WOW!! Leah was 6th in the mile and 10k and finished a solid 2nd in the half marathon. A good way to start the season!
 
Also on on Sunday, Fred Mogaka returned to marathon action at the PF Chang's Rock-n-Roll Marathon in Phoenix. Fred gutted out a solid 2:14:52 for 5th place in a very competitve field. Fantastic!
 In Naples, Florida on Sunday, Basweti tested his speed against a formidible group in the Naples Daily News Half Marathon. The result was a season best 64:59, good for the 5th spot. Joe Gray made his 2009 race debut with a personal best half marathon time of 1:06:16 and good for the 2nd American prize money!! Teriffic Joe and Basweti!
 
We now look forward to another busy weekend as we have athletes in 3 races from Miami to Austin to Carlsbad, CA.
All the best and safe travels to all.

winter seasons ends!!!, first races are coming

HI,at this point my winter "rest" is almost over, next week the first pro races start in Europe with La Marseillaise on 1st Febr. After this race I'll start in Bessege a 5day stage race.

At the moment I'm feeling ok, not at 100% of my top condition but around 90%. This winter I was bassicly doing long endurance rides with no hard efforts. I'll get my interval sesson at the first races.

Because the weather is not that great in Belgium we went to spain with the team, in December and last week another time. We did each day rides between 4 and 6 hours!!!

So that's is for my first post this year, i'll be soon posting my (hopely) good results


Greetz Johan Coenen

Fantasy Tour Down Under Winner Stage 1 - Free Bottle of Kona Endurance PRO

In our Kona Endurance Fantasy Tour Down Under game, Jeff Landauer of Roseville, CA was the winner of the FREE bottle of Kona Endurance PRO for stage 1. With Lance Armstrong finishing the day in 120th place, only James Smith and Landauer were the only 2 in contention for stage 1. Landauers fantasy team had Cooke finishing second, Mcwen finishing 4th and Cherel finishing 43. Scoring goes through 50th place and many of the big guys laid low. Stay tuned for the Stage 2 winner!

January 16, 2009

Play FREE Fantasy Cycling for Tour Down Under

Play our fun, FREE Fantasy Cycling game for next weeks Tour Down Under. Grand Prize is a Kona Endurance 12 Week Ultimate Endurance Package worth nearly $400. There are also 6 Daily prize winners based on how Lance Armstrong does for the day, with each winner receiving a FREE bottle of Kona Endurance PRO, our most potent supplement. To register, click here http://www.dbmnutrition.com/FantasyCyclingHomePage.htm

December 10, 2008

Kona Endurance Now On Twitter http://twitter.com/konaendurance

You can now follow Kona Endurance on Twitter. It is pretty cool, it you have not used it, you should...it's a wild tool. Follow us at http://twitter.com/konaendurance and get Twitter weekly specials from Kona Endurance. I would also recommend you take a look at Lance Armstrong's twitter page, its fascinating....whether you like him or not, he pretty much lays out his entire day, in real time as it happens, its really pretty bizarre http://twitter.com/lancearmstrong

December 07, 2008

You Tell Us What Flavor You Would Like In Kona Endurance Super Recovery Drink

KonaEnduranceSuperRecoveryImage185 We have been doing tons of r&d/testing new flavors to accompany or Fruit Punch Kona Endurance Super Recovery, an absolute killer recovery beverage (compare it to anything in the world). Besides the normal flavors, ie grape, orange, etc, we have been working with more "exotic" flavors, so we can add a line of flavors that separates us from everyone else. Compare our ingredients and you will already see we have separated ourselves from everyone else. Is there a flavor you would like to see available, let us know. I probably shouldnt say this, but man am I lovin a Cherries N Berries flavor we have going, damn thats good! Let us know if you a cool idea for a flavor.

December 04, 2008

We have a new web look

KonaEndurancePROImage185 We have really improved our Kona Endurance website, www.konaendurance.com, it's a much better look. We are also on facebook, myspace and twitter as of now, but we're still learning more about these (we should have just hired teenager just to teach us oldtimers about these newfangled social mediums).  Next thing we have to do is jazz up this blog. Looking forward to spring already, it's cold here in Chicago today!

November 22, 2008

The Baja Epic Firsthand With Evan Plews

BajaEpic08 086 The Baja Epic has come and gone and I am back home in the Northwest winter again. We had a blast in Mexico playing bikes and seeing sights. Here is my day by day report and some pics attached...
 
Day Zero
This was our travel day and we left early in the morning from PDX flying to San Diego. It also happened to be the day we would find out if we were going to be chosen to adopt two little girls--wow, the anticipation. We landed in San Diego with an hour to spare and sat down for a snack at Chili's. That is when the phone rang with great news! We ARE parents! After many phone calls and not much eating, we were ready to meet the Baja Epic Shuttle to Rosarito beach. Armando Carrasco (the promoter) was waiting at the curb with vans and trailers for all the bikes and gear. Awesome service!
We all hopped in and picked up some more racers at Holiday Inn. Next we drove to a local bike shop for last minute purchases. Then it was on to the border which was an uneventful crossing--I don't even remember them asking for passports! Shortly after we got back on the freeway heading south, things got interesting. We heard some sirens and looked back to see several pick-ups passing traffic with lights flashing. As they got closer we were immediately reminded that we weren't in the USA anymore. These "police" officers were armed with sub-machine guns and dressed from head to toe in black combat gear--including ski masks. In case you didn't know, there is a war going on right now just south of the border. Just so happens that the USA and its insatiable appetite for drugs is creating quite the battle over cartel control at entry points like Tijuana. Some locals told us that as many as five killings per day are happening there alone! Maybe the media needs to spend more time covering this mess than the mid-east conflicts... Soon we were on the coast and pulling up at the famous Rosarito Beach Hotel. This is an older place, but very cool indeed and worth another visit.
 
Day One
We woke up to sunny skies and kind of a slow start on the beach. After a little run through the soft sand,BajaEpic08 022 we headed east up and away from the coast. Initially we were on dirt road but then as we traveled inland we experienced jeep roads, atv trails and even a bit of single track. It was a difficult day starting at sea level and ending up at over 3000ft fifty some miles later. Since I was in the lead from early on, I rode alone pacing off my Garmin most of the way. Unfortunately I missed one turn but still made it to the finish line well ahead of the race caravan! Looking back, this was probably my favorite stage since it had a little of every kind of riding. We finished at Hacienda Santa Veronica outside Tecate. It was kind of remote but would be an awesome place to stage some epic off-roading from.
 
Day Two
Yellow jersey clad, I pedaled out of Santa Veronica into a rising sun and some sweet singletrack. It was a little hard to see with the glare but lots of fun. We continued to ride east for the first part of this EPIC 80+ mile stage straight into a vicious head wind. It was also a virtual uphill for the first 50 miles with many deep beach sand sections. I suppose that I walked a total of a couple miles but I enjoyed the beautiful serenity of the desert morning along at the front. Again I missed a turn but still managed to finish well ahead of any of the riders. Uphill, sand, wind--needless to say it was a HARD day! We traveled into the high sierra country and went right through a nice National Park. It was outrageous with nice pine forests and elevation over 6000ft.Then we had a great dirt road descent for about 15 miles into a small town called Ojos Negros where the finish was.
 
Day Three
After a wonderful night in Ensenada at the lovely San Nicolas Hotel, we shuttled back inland for a loop around a place called Mike's Sky Ranch. The stage started with some dirt road with a gradual stair-step BajaEpic08 139 climb to the ranch. We were heading south so the wind was mostly behind us and the first 20 miles to the Ranch literally flew by. We were sharing this part of the course with the Baja 1000 so it was pretty cool when I got passed by some sweet, off-road buggy! I plan to try some of that when my racing legs are through for sure... Anyway, after Mike's the trail deteriorated to rocking, rutted jeep trail and that was pretty fun. Unfortunately, there was a lot of up/down in and out of sandy washes followed by about 7 miles of perfectly straight washboard dirt/sand road into town. Oh, yeah, it was also into a strong afternoon cross wind--nothing like being able to see exactly what you are up against!
 
Day Four
Another night in Ensenada and short shuttle ride to the Wine Country of Baja. Some beautiful sights and a fast start on the road followed by a little single track and lots of dirt road and cow trails. We traveled northwest back toward Rosarito Beach on what I would describe as a high plateau just inland from the coast. The elevation was between 1000-1200ft most of the day before a quick plunge down to the beach. It was during this fast rocky downhill that I got a little distracted. After stopping for some photos, I jumped back on my bike only to mis-judge one of the last corners of the course. OUCH! After sliding about 20 yards on my hip and forearm over 1" minus gravel I was literal hamburger. Unfortunately, the fun was over and I high-tailed it to the finish hardly able to enjoy the beautiful beach or a nice victory and lobster chimi!
 
Epilogue
Luckily we were able to get into the hotel quickly where I tried to wash out my wounds which consisted on many gashes several inches long and more than 1/4" wide and deep. We also were lucky to meet a great guy from San Diego who gave us a ride to the airport Saturday night. With a layover in Sacramento, we decided to visit the local ER there only to be given a run around and no stitches or anything. Evidently all the flesh was gone so the doctor didn't want think he could sew me up! We finally got to bed at 2am and made it home Sunday morning. A great trip and a fun ride. Hopefully the Baja Epic lives on next year, since it seems like one of the best places in the world for a race like this!
 
Thanks for reading,
 
Evan Plews
www.evanplews.com

November 18, 2008

Kona Endurance Kenyans Continue To Dominate

Good Day Everyone!
 
We had a busy weekend with races in Ft Worth, Richmond, VA and San Antonio, Texas. The athletes again proved
that hard work and staying healthy pays off in these events.
 
In Ft Worth on Saturday, Haron Lagat and Richard Kimeli finished 1-2 in a repeat of last year's results. They fought off
a fierce headwind to manage the top spots in a rare road mile event. Congrats!
 
In Richmond, Virginia, Jynocel Basweti won his 3rd marathon in a row!! Basweti had won Quad Cities Marathon in Sept and
the Denver Marathon in October. He certainly proved that his nickname "Ndogo" or "tractor" is certainly well deserved.
Basweti finished over 2 minutes in front of the 2nd place finisher in another dominating performance. Great job!
 
On Sunday, in San Antonio, Texas, Meshack Kirwa ran a very smart race by staying in the 2nd group through about 16 miles
then cranking up the pace to catch the leader and pass him at mile 19. Meshack then held the pace to win in 2:14:36,
a full minute ahead of the 2nd place finisher. In the half marathon, John Thornell set his Personal Best time by covering
the course in 1:13:24. Congratulations to Meshack and John for their superb performances!!
Here is a link to the news cast and Meshack's victory:
 

http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/rocknrollmarathon/34563299.html


Scott Robinson
AmeriKenyan Running Club
Po Box 5808
Santa Fe, NM 87502
505-577-8555
505-466-3384 fax
USATF 42-0412       www.amerikenyanrunningclub.org

November 17, 2008

Cyclocross Bay area superprestige, Sierra Point.

  Bay area superprestige series, #3

Sierra Point, San Francisco

November 15th, 2008ScreenHunter_4

Rider: Aroussen Laflamme

Cat: A

Finishing Position: 7th

TeamMate: James Badia

Course:  1 hour on a 5 minutes lap

Weather: race at night, warm and no wind

This is Round three of the infamous BASP series. After a good race two weeks ago, where I finished 4th,  I was ready for another hotly disputed race. Unfortunately, my son and wife gave me a Troy’s Horse earlier this week in the form of a cold. Nevertheless, I was feeling good at the start line, just a lightly stuffy nose.

The race was held at night for an uncommon atmosphere, more festive than ever, with smell of prohibited substances and beer all around the course. Hopefully, the course did get smooth out by the numerous races before our, and was no longer like a corn field beaten by a herd of mad cow. This would ultimately lead to a road like fast race, with an average of over 27 Km/H.

POW! The race is on, and once again my first pedal stroke is no match with the other guys, I’ll have to practice that. Suddenly, the field is closing on me on either side. At this moment I’m scared to lose the hole-shot and hammer the pedal as hard as I could while waving the bike to get some space. The tactic works as I enter in the first corner in 4th place. This is a good thing considering the risk from passing from the tarmac to the dirt with a 45 degrees jump over the curb at 30+ km/H. The 3 next laps are so fast that I can barely think about changing my gears or replacing my elbow brace that fell under the tremendous amount of vibration. But I’m hanging on to those 4 Rocklobster guys. But soon they get organized and start to work together to drop me. Ultimately, after 25 minutes of closing gaps and painful attacks, I decide to take my own pace. I keep the 4 leaders in sight but start to pick better line and breathe more easily.

Then Cameron Falconer joins me and we begin sharing pulls. That was until my rear tire begins to give me some trouble. My tubeless set-up is leaking while cornering hard. Not sure how long it would last, noticeably becoming softer after each lap, I decide to stop at the first pit-stop. No luck, nobody’s ready to provide me with a wheel. So I take off on my softening tire. At the next pit-stop, the guy is ready and provides me with a nice Zipp wheel, neither tubeless nor tubular. This is to say that the tire is hard as a rock and not so grippy not to say that the shifting doesn’t work well for any reason..

Bumping my way up the field, I end up 7th, chasing like an animal after the podium. But out of luck, I have to settle with this position, 11 second behind the 6th place and some 30 second behind the last step of the podium.

I now have to solve this leaky tire problem before the next race if I want to remain in contention for the general classification. I’m now 5th overall with a peak schedule for the final race which worth twice the point. This would be an interesting ending.

Thanks to my sponsors Webcor-Alto Velo and Kona endurance (really guys, try that!!)

Thanks for reading

November 10, 2008

Kona Endurance Kenyan Runners Were Flying This Weekend

Good day everyone,
 
Our busy fall schedule continues with success on the roads.
 
Last weekend in Dallas, Rose Kosgei used a surge at the halfway point to open a big lead and win
the Dallas Running Club's "The Half". Rose was the defending champion and cruised to victory in 1:16:04.
Rose has had a terrific year, establishing herself as a formidible opponent at distances from 1 mile to the half
marathon.
Also in "The Half", Joseph Mutinda ran the entire race in the lead group and finished in 3rd place with
a time of 1:06:58. Francis Kiptoo used the race as a prep for an upcoming marathon and finished 7th.
Congratulations to all and thanks to Matt Desmond who drove them to Dallas for the event and also Joni Michaels
who housed and athletes for the weekend. We appreciate all the support!
 
Yesterday, on the coast in Monterey,California, Wesley Ochoro came direct from Kenya to dominate the Big Sur
Half Marathon
. Wesley broke from the lead pack early and maintained his lead throughout to win by over a minute
in 1:04:20. This is the 2nd year the an AKRC athlete won the event which was won by Macdonard last year. Wesley will now be ready for his late fall marathon in December. Great going Wesley!!
 
Thanks to Greg Macdonald and his family for hosting Wesley in San Francisco. Wesley was able to arrive a few days early to recover from the long travel and adjust to the climate.
 
We appreciate all the support of our sponsors and volunteers, without you this would not be possible!
 
Here are some links to the stories:
 
  http://m.montereyherald.com/articles/188018156;search_results?query=wesley&page=1
 
  http://www.thecalifornian.com/article/20081110/NEWS01/811100321


All the best,
 
Scott, Vanessa, John, Matt and the club athletes

Scott Robinson
AmeriKenyan Running Club
Po Box 5808
Santa Fe, NM 87502
505-577-8555
505-466-3384 fax
USATF 42-0412       www.amerikenyanrunningclub.org

November 09, 2008

Taking a breath.. - Canadian National Road Cycling Champion

It's been while since my last post and finally just now am I able to relax, take a few deep breaths and recover from the hectic last part of the season. Starting in August I was riding stagiare in europe with Garmin/Chipolte, basing myself out of Girona spain for the next 3 months. What an experience, living in the life in a historic apartment in the city which is known as home for most english speaking pros racing in europe(just two doors up from where Lance used t call home) to racing some of the historic fall classics. It was truly fantastic and I am extremely excited that having signed a 2 year deal with Garmin means I will have 2 more years racing with the worlds best, especially since the team will be going Pro Tour next year. It seems like we just finished up and after a short trip to the sun in Hawaii with my fiance I have begun again with some gym work and small amounts of riding and our first team camp starting next week in Boulder. Being home now I will be able to update more regularly on the happenings with myself as well as the team. Thanks again to everybody at Kona, going to need the Kona advantage more than ever over in europe.


Christian
DSC_0106-2

October 20, 2008

September to remember... now October! - PRO MTN BIKE RACER

Last time I wrote, I am sure I rained on some folks parade but highs and LOWS are part of the story. It has been nearly two months and I have been able to keep very busy. First objective was to get back on track physically following my meltdown in Canada. To do this, I find I really have to simply be patient and reset phsiologically. Over the years I have gotten better at it but the harsh reality is that we just never want to push past the breaking point. Once that happens only a lot of sleep, nutrition, and time counts.

The first weekend of September was the finals of the NUE (National Ultra Endurance) MTB series. The race took place just outside of Sacramento, CA. With a fair sum of cash on the line, the field was deeper than ever! We got off to a mellow start and I was able maintain the pace comfortably. At some point Chris Eatough and Jeremiah Bishop broke away and I shed the remaining chasers while bridging up to them. After awhile (about 75miles) I had it and they both took off again. I just rode along, trying not to slow down while finishing a respectable third place on the day and third overall in the series. I was happy after not being about to train much less ride for the better part of a month. Furthermore, I had never done one of these events before this spring and now I suppose I am "one of the favorites"!

Next up was the Oregon State Hillclimb Championships for MTB. This is a really cool event that takes place in Ashland every year. The actual name is the Mt Ashland Hillclimb and it has historically pitted road and MTB riders against one another in a race from town to the local ski resort. With essentially a mile of vertical elevation gain, there is a whole lot of climbing to be done and being able to get to the top first is sort of a good time. After winning the MTB portion two years in a row and the overall last year, I was ready for more. To this end I broke out my rigid singlespeed geared 38-17 and set a new PR--and won the overall!

As an added bonus, we have this competition in Oregon racing called the "Best all Around Rider" or BAR competition. With the HC win, I was able to collect enough points to secure the MTB BAR for the second year in a row and the third time in four years!

Then it was on to Interbike to try to find sponsorship for next season. Still no news on that front, but it was really nice to see all the industry folk excited about a great year and catch up on news and gossip! I spent two days walking the floor which probably was some of the best training I have done all year!

I came home to 'cross season going full swing here in the Northwest. Wow, every year it gets wilder (and harder), too! Proving that 72 hours of traveling, trade-showing, and not sleeping or eating well is no way to get ready to race, I only managed fourth place the next day. Oh, well, it was sunny and warm and other than plowing into a tree, pretty good times. I was also glad that I did some maintenance on my 'cross bike after KC nationals last year... it was all ready to go and performed flawlessly.Wilsonvillecross_edited

Now I haven't won a 'cross race since my first one every way back in 1996 so it came as a bit of a surprise to win the next two weekends in a row! Granted they were little local races, but winning is still fun and I proved my mettle by placing 11th the following day at the second race of the prestigous Cross Crusade Series. This last weekend I was in position for a third victory in as many weeks, but didn't factor a lapped rider into the equation . Anyway, I was second wheel to my hotshot young teammate and he made the pass and I didn't. Oh well, that is racing bikes--sometimes you win, but most of the time you don't!

I have been doing some serious training this last month and look forward to a good showing at the inaugural Baja Epic MTB stage race down south of the border. Hopefully all the banditos and rattlesnakes leave us alone in the desert and we have a fun race. After that, I will play around some more on the 'cross bike and then relax for the Christmas and New Year holidays.

In any case, I will keep you all posted and thanks for reading!

Ciao,

EP

NOTE: EVAN PLEWS USES KONA ENDURANCE PRO TO INCREASE VO2 MAX AND REDUCE LACTIC ACID

DENVER MARATHON WON BY KONA ENDURANCE KENYAN JYNOCEL BASWETI

WOW!

What an exciting weekend for AmeriKenyan Running Club athletes. We are very grateful for all of your support to help make these successes a reality.

In Denver, Jynocel Basweti took the lead at 10 miles and went on to win the Denver Marathon at a mile high!! His impressive performance comes 3 weeks after also winning the Quad Cities Marathon.
Jynocel is truly working very hard at being a solid contender at some of the toughest marathons in the US. His time of 2:22:16 was just short of the course record held by Alan Culpepper. Great going!
Richard Kimeli returned to the running circuit to finish a solid 2nd in 2:23:58. This was only the 3rd marathon attempt for Richard as he continues to build his resume. Good job Richard.
Judy Kiplimo lead from the start until the 24th mile where the altitude caught up with her as did former Olympian Nuta Olaru. Judy held on for a very strong 2:45:14 and 2nd place finish! Judy will return home to rest then prepare for next year's season.

South of the border in Chihuahua, Mexico, Rose Kosgei and Macdonard Ondara both ran impressively in the OXXO 21k. This event attracts a high quality field with good purse money. Macdonard was the defending champ and held his ground to finish in another sub 63 minute half at 62:54 and 3d place.
Rose set her personal best time of 1:12:11 as she also took home he bronze medal(3rd). Rose, who normally runs the 5k-10k distances has show her abiility to stretch out to the half-marathon distance and be extremely competitive.

In Santa Monica, Haron Lagat also showed his consistency with a 14:12 time and 6th place finish at the Snat Monica 5000. Haron was also the 2-time defending champ and showed his stuff against the toughest 5000 meter guys in the west. Haron is building for future races and this was a good step in the right direction.

Here is a link to see the finishng photo of Jynocel in Denver yesterday. His photo is the 10th from the left on the slideshow, give it time to load:

We are looking for to several upcoming clinics locally and also around the US. We'll keep you updated!

Cheers,

Scott, Vanessa, John, Matt and the club athletes

Scott Robinson
AmeriKenyan Running Club
Po Box 5808
Santa Fe, NM 87502
505-577-8555
505-466-3384 fax
USATF 42-0412       www.amerikenyanrunningclub.org
NOTE:THE AMERIKENYAN WORLD-CLASS RUNNERS USE KONA ENDURANCE PRO INCREASE VO2 MAX AND REDUCE LACTIC ACID

DAMIANO CUNEGO WINS GIRO di LOMBARDIA FOR THIRD TIME

CunegowinninglombardiaDamaino Cunogo of Team Lampre was obviously on a mission this weekend, as he dominated the 102nd edition of the Giro di Lombardia. As 168 cyclists took off from Varese for the 242 km road race, it was Team Lampre and Quickstep that did most of the work. By the time the riders reached Como, the group had splintered and roughly a dozen guys formed a break. Roughly 15km from the finish, Cunego grabbed the lead and never looked back. Cunego won this famed race in 2004 and 2007 and now again in 2008. Cungeo finished with a time of 5:37:04 and averaged over 43kph for the day.

102nd Giro di Lombardia (Top 50 Finishers)
1. Damiano Cunego (ITA), Lampre, 5:37:04
2. Janez Brajkovic (SLO), Astana, at 24
3. Rigoberto Uran (COL), Caisse D'epargne, at 24
4. Giovanni Visconti (ITA), Quick Step, at 33
5. Karsten Kroon (NED), Team CSC Saxo Bank, at 33
6. Mauro Finetto (ITA), CSF Group - Navigare, at 33
7. Christopher Horner (USA), Astana, at 33
8. Stefano Garzelli (ITA), Acqua & Sapone - Caffe' Mokambo, at 33
9. Morris Possoni (ITA), Team Columbia, at 33
10. Francesco Failli (ITA), Acqua & Sapone - Caffe' Mokambo, at 33
11. Craig Lewis (USA), Team Columbia, at 33
12. Christian Pfannberger (AUT), Barloworld, at 33
13. Alexandr Kolobnev (RUS), Team CSC Saxo Bank, at 33
14. Alessandro Ballan (ITA), Lampre, at 33
15. Matteo Tosatto (ITA), Quick Step, at 33
16. Federico Canuti (ITA), CSF Group - Navigare, at 33
17. Andrea Noe' (ITA), Liquigas, at 33
18. Matthew Lloyd (AUS), Silence - Lotto, at 33
19. Luca Mazzanti (ITA), Tinkoff Credit Systems, at 33
20. Rinaldo Nocentini (ITA), Ag2r La Mondiale, at 33
21. Pieter Weening (NED), Rabobank, at 33
22. Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA), CSF Group - Navigare, at 1:04
23. Roger Beuchat (SUI), S. Diquigiovanni - Androni G., at 1:34
24. Sylvester Szmyd (POL), Lampre, at 1:34
25. Manuele Mori (ITA), Scott American Beef, at 1:34
26. Cadel Evans (AUS), Silence - Lotto, at 1:34
27. Samuel Sanchez Gonzalez (ESP), Euskaltel - Euskadi, at 1:34
28. Joaquin Rodriguez Oliver (ESP), Caisse D'epargne, at 1:34
29. Jurgen Van Goolen (BEL), Team CSC Saxo Bank, at 2:20
30. Serguei Klimov (RUS), Tinkoff Credit Systems, at 2:20
31. Maxime Monfort (BEL), Cofidis, Le Credit P. Telephone, at 2:20
32. Francesco Masciarelli (ITA), Acqua & Sapone - Caffe' Mokambo, at 2:20
33. Juan M. Soler Hernandez (COL), Barloworld, at 2:20
34. Daniel Moreno Fernandez (ESP), Caisse D'epargne, at 2:20
35. Gilberto Simoni (ITA), S. Diquigiovanni - Androni G., at 2:20
36. Vladimir Miholjevic (CRO), Liquigas, at 2:20
37. Vincenzo Nibali (ITA), Liquigas, at 2:20
38. Kanstantsin Siutsou (BLR), Team Columbia, at 2:20
39. Leonardo Bertagnolli (ITA), Liquigas, at 2:20
40. Massimo Codol (ITA), Acqua & Sapone - Caffe' Mokambo, at 2:26
41. Niklas Axelsson (SWE), S. Diquigiovanni - Androni G., at 3:04
42. Ivan Velasco Murillo (ESP), Euskaltel - Euskadi, at 3:17
43. John Gadret (FRA), Ag2r La Mondiale, at 3:17
44. Alberto Losada Alguacil (ESP), Caisse D'epargne, at 3:17
45. Marco Pinotti (ITA), Team Columbia, at 4:10
46. Francesco Gavazzi (ITA), Lampre, at 4:10
47. Martin Velits (SVK), Team Milram, at 5:52
48. Andriy Grivko (UKR), Team Milram, at 5:52
49. Walter Ferna Pedraza Morales (COL), Tinkoff Credit Systems, at 5:52
50. Alan Perez Lezaun (ESP), Euskaltel - Euskadi, at 5:52

KONA ENDURANCE TRIATHLETE BRYAN RHODES RACE REPORT HAWAII IRONMAN 2008

IRONMAN HAWAII 2008

Dear Friends and Sponsors

Last weekend I raced the World Ironman Championships in Kona Hawaii my 7th time at the race and the 30th time it has been run as the World Ironman Championships. 
Rhodesriding After winning Canada Ironman in late August it is always hard to know how much rest will be need to have good legs for the Worlds in early October.-

My body was tired when I got back into training for the Worlds but my training sessions were very positive turning out some of the best riding times I had done in years.  Going into race week it is always very busy and some of my new products hadn't arrived until race week but I was very relaxed did my thing and had lots of sponsor engagements which were a lot of fun.

Race Day came around fast and I was pretty pumped up and felt good as I warmed up in the swim with 150 other pro Triathletes  I was in the best form ever on the start line at the World Champs.

The cannon sounded and it was a mad sprint I got off to a really bad start and was boxed in and had to swim very hard to get in font of some slower swimmers, I had missed the feet of Ben Sanson, Andy Potts and Pete Jacobs this meant I lead the second pack the whole way losing time that could have made a big difference.
On the way back I took my own line inside the buoys and nearing the last 400mts had a over zealous marshal on a red paddle board hit me several time and I tried to kick away then my left calf cramped up really bad this was not good at this early stage of the race and I hoped it would loosen up over the next 7hours.
I hit the bike in 7th place about 2mins down on the lead three, my legs felt great on the bike and I went for it but about 7k into the ride I saw the huge pack in tow and just kept to my own plan and speed. The pace was fast but it eased off around 50k into the bike I was waiting for the climb to Hawi before I made any moves.
As soon as we hit the up hill towards Hawi I hit the gas and pushed hard to try and bridge up to the other great riders ahead of Chris Lieto, Torbjorn Sindballe and Faris Al Saltan who where ahead of me.
I turned at Hawi in 5th place and was happy with this as I have never been this high up in the field at this point on the way back guys that had bigger gears came buy me Norman Stadler and Ain Alar Juhanson. I came into T2 in 7TH place and felt strong.
I changed as fast as I could and set out on the Marathon my left calf was giving me pain from the 1st step but I was hoping it would come right my pace was under 7min miles and that was what I wanted to achieve then about 4miles in the fast runners caught up with me and they were running fast I couldn't go with them and just kept battling on. Nearing the turn around I passed Ain and that lifted me a bit now I was having a few stomach problems and couldn't take in any of my nutrition my belly was starting to expand and my pace was slowing down.
On the Queen K I lost it a bit and walked a few aid stations and stretched my left calf my dream of a top 10 place was gone and I was pretty down then I saw Chris Lieto walking and I stopped and got him going again we jogged about 5miles together before I started to feel ok and picked it up.
I ran all the way to the finish but know I could have done better and was really disappointed with my race time and finish.
Now I look forward to making a few changes and doing better for 2009.
Thanks for all your messages since Ironman Canada my Worlds prep was #1 and I didn't get to reply to everyone.
I have a few more races before I head back to New Zealand for summer and down time with my family.
Hear from you all soon.
Cheers Rhodsey
NOTE: BRYAN RHODES USES KONA ENDURANCE PRO TO INCREASE VO2 MAX AND REDUCE LACTIC ACID

October 18, 2008

The Hat Trick

THE HAT TRICK

Wikipedia: A Hat-Trick associated with succeeding at anything three times in three consecutive attempts. In North America it is often rendered as a Hat Trick,

Hat Tricks are cool most are never planned, however they seem that way. The fluidity of the athlete is seemingly incredible even if you happen to be that athlete!  Some of us call it the zone, groove or what ever moniker one wants to bestow on the “feeling” however I never seem to fit into the “us” category

Taking a queue off my last race article, I think the KONA reading population knows how my brain operates some times.  I am focused, driven, goal orientated and my life is something that is truly blessed in the way of family and loads of love, even when I don’t want it!  I should throw in the term stubborn also, as I think that will get some play in a few lines as that is a direct quote from my daughter Jamie and my 2nd X ( Ok, OK I am working on that King Solomon thing)

AND THEN THINGS JUST HAPPEN!

Three weeks ago I really stopped training I needed to and it was a simple fact of life.  I was tired from 10 months of relentless training and amazingly it was pointed out by Chris that I slept and ate ( it was awesome ) for 10 days straight not a whole lot else, let the pundits in cycling know that there is a new secret ratio about!  Honestly I didn’t do anything else and I don’t think mentally I could have gone for a ride. 

You know I hate challenges, cuz if it is perceived as a challenge then you have to do it, in order to put out that mental fire! People also know this and they can get you to do things you would NEVER do yourself, jerks!  Yea jerks and that is what I was thinking as I crossed over the transition line today at a local Triathlon, well not really jerks but hey you get the point right? IT WAS A LOT STRONGER THAN THAT!

For what ever reason a few years running now a few friends; Clair and Travis and or my daughter get together and do this late season USAT triathlon 90% of the time the weather is bad as it was today.  2 weeks ago I get an e mail saying hey you want to do the Tri again, and the timing couldn’t have been worst 5 days into my 10 day sabbatical from life and this woman wants me to ride a tri.  I am thinking if red wine should be served cold or room temp and this ugggggggg person wants me to do what?

Training was quite fluid really and not a whole lot of effort things seemed to flow and my attitude was subdued so really I had fun in the process!  Yea what freaking process you nut bag 10 days of training and you are going to do what?  Get your head on bloke train harder faster more, eh nope!  I did what I thought I could handle and it wasn’t alot.  I felt bad, frustrated, weak and totally untrained as I crossed the line today, yea smart A$$ that will teach you, eh nope! Gold again!  I totally hope my sponsors are happy now geez! I think it is something like October 18, 2008 and base training starts on 14 Dec 2008!  Training this long and staying competitive has been a emotional challenge more than anything, your body will keep going way after your mind calls it quits and here in lies a nugget of information.  Do you think Levi felt bad during that last Tour of CA you bet and you know what he pushed on and won!  Do you think when Lance was foaming at the mouth, every last bit of sodium that was in his body leached out and turned into energy he felt good, no way folks I’ll bet, without knowing the guy, his heart rate was above 200 for most of the ride, but what did he do? He won!  It seems heroic, awe inspiring, breathtaking Oh hell I don’t know, there are more pretty adjectives in the dictionary than I could ever use! In the end really it is the athlete just mentally saying “screw it” lets see what’s on the other side. Remember when the 6 min mile was breached? Yea me neither.

Am I rambling on? Well yes I am and you know what?  Read on!  There are countless athletes that compete every week in running, cycling or multi sport-- from teenagers, singles, divorcees, grand-parents to mom and dads, every week!  Then there are the very few companies like Kona that support us, garnering all the attention at the podium

We the people constantly push back this pre-determined limit on the human spirit and endurance, surprisingly we represent 1% of the total population and hopefully if you are reading on in this blog you are one of US!

Ah but the hat trick right?  The main title-the sustenance of my article you are on the edge of your seat right? You know I did it!  Why the heck else would I write this article? Because Dave Zabriskie won 3 Pro National Championships that’s a hat trick folks?  But you know Dave is quite incredible. Lance, 7-8-9 10 you know the guy is incredible love him or hate him it is what it is? ---------NA! 

Then there is just me, the guy some grey haired politician calls Joe and Joe just goes out every day and does his best because he just likes to do his very best not for money or fame but just for Joe and  his family, it is the right thing to do no matter and just some times once in a blue moon you win and then you win again and then you get freaky nervous but do your job and win again and that my friends is called a Hat Trick.  Being a numbers guy it gets even freakier but being Halloween you figure it out BOO!

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October 16, 2008

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October 15, 2008

FORD IRONMAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP PRO WOMENS HAWAII IRONMAN TRIATHLON RESULTS

1 Wellington, Chrissie 11/1/1 31/WPRO 00:56:20 05:08:15 02:57:44 09:06:23
2 Van Vlerken, Yvonne 36/3/2 29/WPRO 01:06:49 05:05:34 03:04:26 09:21:20
3 Wallenhorst, Sandra 29/10/3 36/WPRO 01:03:21 05:14:56 02:58:35 09:22:52
4 Csomor, Erika 24/9/4 34/WPRO 00:59:09 05:18:11 03:03:05 09:24:49
5 Corbin, Linsey 26/4/5 27/WPRO 01:00:35 05:14:33 03:09:15 09:28:51
6 Berasategui, Virginia 14/13/6 33/WPRO 00:58:50 05:22:16 03:03:48 09:29:15
7 Comerford, Bella 20/12/7 30/WPRO 00:59:02 05:21:45 03:08:30 09:34:08
8 Ferguson, Gina 2/14/8 27/WPRO 00:54:45 05:26:29 03:11:18 09:36:53
9 Kehr, Gina 3/7/9 39/WPRO 00:54:45 05:21:46 03:14:35 09:37:06
10 Griesbauer, Dede 6/5/10 38/WPRO 00:54:52 05:20:52 03:19:17 09:39:53
11 Paul, Charlotte 28/20/11 35/WPRO 01:03:14 05:26:31 03:06:13 09:41:15
12 Snow, Caitlin 18/27/12 26/WPRO 00:59:01 05:36:57 03:01:59 09:43:27
13 Matter, Sibylle 8/8/13 35/WPRO 00:56:15 05:20:13 03:23:15 09:44:54
14 Lawn, Joanna 16/6/14 34/WPRO 00:59:00 05:16:44 03:25:10 09:45:33
15 Dogana, Martina 33/22/15 29/WPRO 01:03:31 05:27:26 03:14:32 09:50:47
16 Imaizumi, Naomi 34/17/16 25/WPRO 01:03:32 05:22:03 03:20:20 09:54:08
17 Granger, Belinda 7/2/17 37/WPRO 00:56:09 05:15:24 03:39:47 09:56:01
18 Keat, Rebekah 10/15/18 30/WPRO 00:56:19 05:26:39 03:28:27 09:56:01
19 Shiono, Emi 50/29/19 28/WPRO 01:14:34 05:22:23 03:15:21 09:57:04
20 Gross, Sara 22/35/20 32/WPRO 00:59:04 05:42:27 03:18:57 10:06:10
21 Robertson, Tracy 49/39/21 31/WPRO 01:11:01 05:34:04 03:18:23 10:08:26
22 Allan, Paolina 44/23/22 38/WPRO 01:09:22 05:22:41 03:32:20 10:09:38
23 Krebs, Meike 23/26/23 28/WPRO 00:59:07 05:35:19 03:31:16 10:11:53
24 Bij De Vaate, Heleen 45/28/24 34/WPRO 01:09:54 05:27:04 03:30:11 10:12:00
25 Major, Kate 12/11/25 30/WPRO 00:58:45 05:21:27 03:48:59 10:13:26
26 Gordon, Jacqui 38/34/26 35/WPRO 01:07:42 05:33:16 03:33:44 10:20:49
27 Louison, Alexandra 53/45/27 26/WPRO 01:17:52 05:38:55 03:18:43 10:20:58
28 Meyers, Katya 46/38/28 28/WPRO 01:10:43 05:34:08 03:29:06 10:23:01
29 Stewart, Tyler 48/21/29 30/WPRO 01:10:56 05:19:05 03:49:07 10:24:11
30 Cisarovska, Ladislava 40/42/30 35/WPRO 01:08:03 05:45:53 03:25:06 10:26:13
31 Dansereau, Sylvie 51/36/31 41/WPRO 01:14:42 05:27:03 03:42:22 10:29:32
32 Boman, Tiina 19/31/32 31/WPRO 00:59:02 05:39:16 03:45:15 10:29:38
33 Phelan, Donna 13/37/33 36/WPRO 00:58:47 05:45:26 03:40:15 10:30:38
34 Kujala, Wenke 32/40/34 32/WPRO 01:03:23 05:43:00 03:43:53 10:35:09
35 Biscay, Hillary 1/32/35 30/WPRO 00:54:35 05:43:26 03:50:08 10:35:10
36 Keller, Fernanda 30/41/36 45/WPRO 01:03:21 05:44:37 03:48:20 10:43:16
37 Stadlmann, Monika 35/43/37 30/WPRO 01:03:36 05:50:30 03:51:47 10:52:26
38 Miyazaki, Yasuko 37/44/38 31/WPRO 01:06:51 05:49:54 03:51:16 10:53:16
39 Ficker, Desiree 27/46/39 31/WPRO 01:00:37 06:02:00 03:55:03 11:07:48
40 Oswin, Prue 52/47/40 30/WPRO 01:16:17 05:53:11 03:55:55 11:11:48
41 Cooper, Haley 47/33/41 28/WPRO 01:10:44 05:29:29 04:34:28 11:23:33
42 Harrison, Belinda 42/48/42 30/WPRO 01:09:13 06:05:49 04:01:14 11:24:02
43 Pichler, Silke 54/49/43 35/WPRO 01:31:12 06:22:23 03:57:40 11:57:43
44 Loeffler, Kim 41/18/44 36/WPRO 01:09:00 05:18:07 00:00:00 00:00:00
45 Albertazzi, Teri 43/25/45 36/WPRO 01:09:21 05:24:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
46 Wurtele, Heather 31/19/46 29/WPRO 01:03:22 05:24:19 00:00:00 00:00:00
47 Badmann, Natascha 39/24/47 41/WPRO 01:08:01 05:25:07 00:00:00 00:00:00
48 Cave, Leanda 5/16/-- 30/WPRO 00:54:51 05:29:26 00:00:00 00:00:00
49 Kolters, Charlotte 9/30/-- 29/WPRO 00:56:17 05:40:01 00:00:00 00:00:00
50 Kraft, Nina 4/--/-- 39/WPRO 00:54:46 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
51 Preston, Rebecca 15/--/-- 29/WPRO 00:59:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
52 Docherty, Fiona 17/--/-- 33/WPRO 00:59:01 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
53 Leder, Nicole 21/--/-- 37/WPRO 00:59:03 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
54 Norton, Tara 25/--/-- 36/WPRO 00:59:12 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
55 Bevilaqua, Kate --/--/-- 31/WPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
56 Gollnick, Heather --/--/-- 38/WPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
57 Jones, Michellie --/--/-- 39/WPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
58 McGlone, Samantha --/--/-- 29/WPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00

FORD IRONMAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP PRO MENS HAWAII IRONMAN TRIATHLON RESULTS

1 Alexander, Craig 13/11/1 35/MPRO 00:51:43 04:37:19 02:45:00 08:17:45
2 Llanos Burguera, Eneko 8/4/2 31/MPRO 00:51:39 04:33:26 02:51:48 08:20:50
3 Beke, Rutger 37/13/3 31/MPRO 00:54:44 04:34:44 02:47:49 08:21:23
4 Schildknecht, Ronnie 46/14/4 29/MPRO 00:54:56 04:34:25 02:48:19 08:21:46
5 Bracht, Timo 28/8/5 33/MPRO 00:52:25 04:35:25 02:51:09 08:23:04
6 Brown, Cameron 23/10/6 36/MPRO 00:51:50 04:36:46 02:53:39 08:26:17
7 Vernay, Patrick 26/18/7 34/MPRO 00:51:58 04:42:49 02:51:40 08:30:23
8 Potts, Andy 2/17/8 31/MPRO 00:48:40 04:46:00 02:54:31 08:33:50
9 Hecht, Mathias 11/9/9 28/MPRO 00:51:42 04:36:55 03:01:12 08:34:02
10 Lovato, Michael 30/20/10 34/MPRO 00:52:58 04:45:20 02:52:11 08:34:47
11 Sturla, Eduardo 39/12/11 34/MPRO 00:54:47 04:34:26 03:03:19 08:36:53
12 Al-Sultan, Faris 12/5/12 30/MPRO 00:51:43 04:33:24 03:10:01 08:39:32
13 Stadler, Normann 31/3/13 35/MPRO 00:54:15 04:29:56 03:15:32 08:44:04
14 Juhanson, Ain Alar 73/6/14 32/MPRO 00:59:10 04:26:14 03:16:27 08:46:43
15 Twelsiek, Maik 35/15/15 27/MPRO 00:54:40 04:35:00 03:13:48 08:48:37
16 Marr, Timothy 10/24/16 29/MPRO 00:51:42 04:47:39 03:04:00 08:48:50
17 Amey, Paul 16/39/17 35/MPRO 00:51:45 04:56:53 02:56:01 08:48:58
18 Longree, Maximilian 80/50/18 27/MPRO 01:00:39 04:55:48 02:48:13 08:49:01
19 Bayliss, Stephen 9/30/19 29/MPRO 00:51:41 04:51:57 03:02:01 08:49:38
20 Brader, Christian 76/28/20 28/MPRO 00:59:14 04:44:06 03:02:13 08:50:08
21 Bean, Eric 56/22/21 32/MPRO 00:56:14 04:42:12 03:08:09 08:52:52
22 Vanhoenacker, Marino 36/26/22 32/MPRO 00:54:41 04:46:19 03:08:22 08:53:14
23 Rhodes, Bryan 4/7/23 35/MPRO 00:51:26 04:36:22 03:22:01 08:53:35
24 Patrcevic, Dejan 49/53/24 33/MPRO 00:56:02 05:02:31 02:50:58 08:54:19
25 Matula, Martin 61/43/25 37/MPRO 00:56:30 04:55:44 02:59:10 08:56:09
26 Neill, Mike 57/40/26 36/MPRO 00:56:17 04:52:28 03:03:29 08:57:00
27 Lieto, Chris 20/2/27 36/MPRO 00:51:48 04:31:48 03:29:40 08:57:56
28 Liebetrau, Steffen 33/25/28 36/MPRO 00:54:39 04:44:55 03:14:40 08:59:05
29 Kawahara, Hayato 55/67/29 30/MPRO 00:56:13 05:09:49 02:50:46 09:01:06
30 McKenzie, Luke 6/29/30 27/MPRO 00:51:36 04:52:03 03:14:33 09:02:17
31 Strini, Markus 85/52/31 35/MPRO 01:03:28 04:53:32 03:02:15 09:04:31
32 Vabrousek, Petr 64/47/32 35/MPRO 00:58:51 04:56:37 03:04:32 09:04:42
33 Rossmann, Benjamin 90/69/33 30/MPRO 01:08:47 05:01:09 02:50:48 09:05:15
34 Ronco, Will 79/55/34 30/MPRO 01:00:37 04:59:06 03:01:23 09:05:35
35 Vytrisal, Frank 58/36/35 41/MPRO 00:56:18 04:50:08 03:12:51 09:05:47
36 Major, Jozsef 86/66/36 29/MPRO 01:03:29 05:01:16 02:58:35 09:08:12
37 Lieto, Matt 45/38/37 30/MPRO 00:54:55 04:52:19 03:15:49 09:09:06
38 Fritzsche, Paul 51/44/38 31/MPRO 00:56:06 04:56:38 03:12:08 09:09:57
39 McDonald, Alex 83/61/39 27/MPRO 01:03:21 05:00:07 03:02:14 09:10:22
40 Seng, Brad 78/74/40 39/MPRO 00:59:17 05:17:55 02:49:17 09:12:02
41 Bastie, Christophe 67/46/41 39/MPRO 00:59:03 04:54:27 03:13:34 09:12:21
42 Hurd, Justin 89/63/42 27/MPRO 01:07:48 04:55:57 03:04:20 09:12:54
43 Hauth, Chris 29/51/43 38/MPRO 00:52:58 05:03:43 03:10:33 09:13:21
44 Helin, Loic 69/68/44 29/MPRO 00:59:04 05:09:01 03:00:30 09:14:29
45 Sindballe, Torbjorn 21/1/45 31/MPRO 00:51:49 04:27:40 03:50:41 09:14:43
46 Lebrun, Nicolas 72/54/46 35/MPRO 00:59:07 04:59:56 03:12:46 09:16:51
47 Niederreiter, Daniel 48/41/47 29/MPRO 00:56:00 04:55:15 03:21:42 09:16:54
48 Tani, Shingo 81/72/48 41/MPRO 01:00:44 05:14:05 02:59:24 09:19:08
49 Larsen, Steve 70/19/49 38/MPRO 00:59:05 04:36:23 03:38:36 09:19:25
50 Schuberth, Elmar 38/58/50 39/MPRO 00:54:44 05:08:33 03:13:09 09:21:43
51 Bonney, James 25/32/51 36/MPRO 00:51:56 04:52:12 03:35:56 09:25:54
52 Toivanen, Teemu 40/48/52 30/MPRO 00:54:48 05:01:05 03:27:33 09:28:08
53 Domnik, Norbert 54/65/53 44/MPRO 00:56:11 05:08:10 03:24:54 09:34:20
54 Marcotte, Kyle 60/49/54 31/MPRO 00:56:24 04:58:25 03:33:01 09:35:48
55 Gray, Nigel 75/42/55 38/MPRO 00:59:13 04:52:15 03:39:49 09:35:48
56 Soderdahl, Kai 88/79/56 40/MPRO 01:03:39 05:20:37 03:11:19 09:41:19
57 Muehlbauer, Hans 53/70/57 28/MPRO 00:56:09 05:16:45 03:26:15 09:45:26
58 Marques, Sergio 71/80/58 28/MPRO 00:59:07 05:31:38 03:09:32 09:47:16
59 Tollakson, TJ 18/60/59 28/MPRO 00:51:47 05:12:15 03:43:59 09:53:43
60 Jacobs, Pete 3/56/60 26/MPRO 00:48:43 05:11:07 03:50:39 09:56:02
61 Evoe, Patrick 87/77/61 31/MPRO 01:03:30 05:19:22 03:29:09 09:56:43
62 Snow, Tim 63/82/62 32/MPRO 00:58:51 05:40:02 03:17:03 10:02:51
63 Masuda, Daiki 62/78/63 28/MPRO 00:58:48 05:24:09 03:38:35 10:06:50
64 Schoissengeier, Peter 43/31/64 29/MPRO 00:54:53 04:49:46 04:21:34 10:10:37
65 Gurgold, Gary 92/84/65 35/MPRO 01:09:16 05:38:12 03:33:30 10:33:57
66 Becker, Blake 59/75/66 26/MPRO 00:56:19 05:23:41 04:06:10 10:35:12
67 Sanson, Benjamin 1/76/67 37/MPRO 00:48:40 05:34:09 04:46:19 11:15:22
68 Ressler, Markus 24/35/68 32/MPRO 00:51:54 04:54:30 00:00:00 00:00:00
69 Pereira, Raul 66/73/69 28/MPRO 00:58:55 05:17:09 00:00:00 00:00:00
70 Goehler, Rene 7/34/70 28/MPRO 00:51:37 04:54:41 00:00:00 00:00:00
71 Hempel, Hannes 84/64/71 35/MPRO 01:03:27 05:00:29 00:00:00 00:00:00
72 Elliot, Lewis 47/45/72 28/MPRO 00:54:57 04:58:25 00:00:00 00:00:00
73 Van Lierde, Frederik 14/16/73 29/MPRO 00:51:44 04:40:22 00:00:00 00:00:00
74 Chabaud, Francois 34/21/-- 37/MPRO 00:54:39 04:43:40 00:00:00 00:00:00
75 McKenzie, Craig 41/23/-- 35/MPRO 00:54:50 04:44:04 00:00:00 00:00:00
76 Riesen, Stefan 68/27/-- 35/MPRO 00:59:03 04:41:40 00:00:00 00:00:00
77 Hellriegel, Thomas 44/33/-- 37/MPRO 00:54:54 04:50:26 00:00:00 00:00:00
78 Van Lierde, Luc 5/37/-- 39/MPRO 00:51:27 04:55:42 00:00:00 00:00:00
79 Bell, Luke 22/57/-- 29/MPRO 00:51:50 05:10:38 00:00:00 00:00:00
80 Vuckovic, Stephan 27/59/-- 36/MPRO 00:51:59 05:12:04 00:00:00 00:00:00
81 Kohl, Frederic 42/62/-- 30/MPRO 00:54:51 05:08:57 00:00:00 00:00:00
82 Leitner, Werner 52/71/-- 39/MPRO 00:56:09 05:17:58 00:00:00 00:00:00
83 Radcliffe, Toby 65/81/-- 30/MPRO 00:58:53 05:32:54 00:00:00 00:00:00
84 Llanos, Hektor 19/83/-- 36/MPRO 00:51:48 05:49:23 00:00:00 00:00:00
85 Jeuland, Jose 77/85/-- 26/MPRO 00:59:15 06:02:58 00:00:00 00:00:00
86 Boecherer, Andreas 15/--/-- 25/MPRO 00:51:45 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
87 McCormack, Chris 17/--/-- 34/MPRO 00:51:45 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
88 Jammaer, Bert 32/--/-- 28/MPRO 00:54:38 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
89 Neyedli, Scott 50/--/-- 30/MPRO 00:56:04 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
90 Goehner, Michael 74/--/-- 28/MPRO 00:59:10 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
91 Anderson, Mitchell 82/--/-- 33/MPRO 01:00:47 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
92 Prungraber, Karl 91/--/-- 32/MPRO 01:08:50 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
93 Cigana, Massimo --/--/-- 34/MPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
94 Daerr, Justin --/--/-- 27/MPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
95 Doe, Kieran --/--/-- 27/MPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
96 Faure, Herve --/--/-- 32/MPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
97 Raphael, Jan --/--/-- 28/MPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00
98 Zamora, Marcel --/--/-- 30/MPRO 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00 00:00:00

FORD IRONMAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP - Hawaii Ironman

Wow, what a 30th Hawaii Ironman it was last Saturday, subplots all over the place. Will Chrissie Wellington ever lose another Ironman? What happened to Macca aka Chris McCormack? How did Andy Potts fare in his first venture into Ironman racing?

Craig Alexander of Australia won the mens race, proving it can be won on the run. Alexander clocked a flying 2:45:01 marathon in winning the mens title with a time of 8:17:45. As many expected, American Andy Potts came into T1 with the lead, leading Benjamon Sanson of France. Out on the bike, Torbjorn Sindballe took off like a rocket, with American Chris Lieto and Germany's Normann Stadler in tow. Chris McCormack of Australia, the defending champion, never did get his chance to defend, a snapped cable ended his day. As Sindballe led everyone into T2, it was unlikely his lead would hold up with the stallions that was chasing him. Roughly six miles into the marathon, Stadler took the lead with Eneko Llanos of Spain hot on his trail. A few miles later, Llanos crept into the lead, however, super runner Craig Alexander was coming hard. Prior to entering the Natural Energy Lab, Alexander grabbed the lead and never looked back. Llanos grabbed second and third place went to Belgian Rutger Beke. 

Chrissie Wellington dominated the women's race, period. As she was flying along on the bike with the lead, her rear tire went flat. She was on clinchers and carrying two levers, a tube and two CO2 cartridges. She got the tire off no problem and when she went to inflate it, she was not applying enough pressure, she said. She used up both CO2 canisters and then was a little helpless. Not knowing where the tech van was and very adament that no one help her, she remained as cool as cucumber. As time ticked by and other female pro's riding by her, Rebeka Keat showed the ultimate classy sportsmenship; she gave Wellington two CO2 cartridges. Wellington finished the tire change, regained the lead on the bike and then preceded to set the all-time female run record, an astonishing 2:57:45. Her finish time of 9:06:23 still beat Yvonne Van Vlerken by nearly 15 minutes.

What a debut for Andy Potts. He raced the previous weekend and has never done an Ironman. Potts stated before the race he has not done any 112 mile bike training and has run two 20 mile runs. Andy Potts, who is 70.3 World Champ, showed why he is a World Champion. He was the top American finisher, coming in seventh place. An absolute fantastic Ironman debut!

We want to congratulate Kona Endurance triathlete Gina Kehr on her fantastic Top Ten finish at the Ford Ironman World Championships, Gina finished in ninth place with a time of 9:37:06. We also want to give a shout out to Kona Endurance triathlete, New Zealand's Bryan Rhodes. Rhodes was coming off a win at the 2008 Ironman Canada and was shooting for back to back wins. He turned in one of the fastest bike splits of the day, 4:36:22, enroute to a finish time of 8:53:35. In the mens 60-64 division, Kona Endurance triathlete Steve Smith of Granger, IN finished second in his age-group with a time of 10:51:03 and he's 60 years old! Each of our Kona Endurance triathletes take Kona Endurance PRO and Kona Endurance CitraBeta Shot everyday to increase VO2 Max and reduce lactic acid.

Top 10 Men
1. Craig Alexander (AUS) 8:17:45
2. Eneko Llanos (ESP) 8:20:50
3. Rutger Beke (BEL) 8:21:23
4. Ronnie Schildknecht (SWI) 8:24:46
5. Cameron Brown (NZL) 8:26:17
6. Patrick Vernay (NCL) 8:30:23
7. Andy Potts (USA) 8:33:50
8. Mathias Hecht (SWI) 8:34:02
9. Michael Lovato (USA) 8:34:47
10. Eduardo Sturla (ARG) 8:36:53

Top 10 Women
1. Chrissie Wellington (GBR) 9:06:23
2. Yvonne Van Vlerken (NED) 9:21:20
3. Sandra Wallenhorst (GER) 9:22:52
4. Erika Csomor (HUN) 9:24:49
5. Linsey Corbin (USA) 9:28:51
6. Virginia Berasategui (ESP) 9:29:15
7. Bella Comerford (GBR) 9:34:08
8. Gina Ferguson (NZL) 9:36:53
9. Gina Kehr (USA) 9:37:06
10. Dede Griesbauer (USA) 9:39:53

October 13, 2008

KONA ENDURANCE NOW AVAILABLE AT GOTBODY.COM

We are very happy to announce that the Kona Endurance line of endurance supplements is now available at gotbody.com.....http://www.gotbody.com

As with our othe online retailers, www.gotbody.com is one of the premier online supplement stores around and we are thrilled to partner with them. They carry a very extensive line of products.....I assure you, whatever supplement you are looking for, they have it!

Kona Endurance Kenyans Keep Steamrollin Through The Fall

Hello Everyone,

The AKRC athletes had another weekend of success in Baltimore and Houston.

Mug_joseph At the Baltimore Marathon, Joseph Mutinda set a personal best time of 2:14:18(he beat the course record) and finished 4th in a field 30 top level marathoners. Joseph trained well for this event and was very focused. He ran his own race and realized his goals of a personal best, even on a hilly course. Francis Kibii also earned a prize check by finishing 8th(2:21) in his first marathon on US soil. It was also his first marathon since 2006 and we look forward to him improving on that effort in his next marathon.

In Houston, Richard Kimeli returned to win his 3rd consecutive Space City 10 Miler(51:30). Richard will use this race as a prep for his upcomomg marathon in Denver this weekend.

In Santa Fe, Rose, Judy, Jynocel, John, and Macdonard all participated in the Cross Country event at Capital High School on Saturday morning. The athletes handled several duties including: starting, assistance at finish line, awards, etc. Everyone had a lot of fun and the student athletes sure enjoyed getting to meet our professional athletes and discuss running, culture, food, race strategy, and other interesting topics.

We appreciate all of you support and are currently looking for assistance with travel expenses for the athletes. PLEASE, if you can donate travel vouchers, food gift cards, gift certificates or anything which the athletes use, please contact myself or John Thornell. These are areas of high cost to the athletes and every bit helps!

Also, we did collect over 3500 articles of clothing to go back to Kenya for the families and villages of the athletes during the El Dorado Fun Run Clothing Drive! That's tremendous! Thank you.

All the best,

Scott, Vanessa, John, Matt and the club athletes

Scott Robinson
AmeriKenyan Running Club
Po Box 5808
Santa Fe, NM 87502
505-577-8555
505-466-3384 fax
USATF 42-0412       www.amerikenyanrunningclub.org
NOTE: THE AMERIKENYAN WORLD-CLASS RUNNERS USE KONA ENDURANCE PRO TO INCREASE VO2 MAX AND REDUCE LACTIC ACID

October 11, 2008

Recap and Rebuild

Recap and Rebuild

I think in one of my less serious articles I had mentioned that things never really end they just morph into something else.  The same holds true for your cycling season and in a larger part your ability to honestly review your past season and plan for and make the necessary changes for the up coming season will help you morph into a better cyclist next year!

No one has a perfect season even if you won everything you entered (you need to Cat up!) each and every year of your cycling journey will reveal weaknesses in different areas.  Your success hopefully over the past year was your ability to hide your weaknesses and capitalize on your strengths.

The first thing you should do in recapping your past season is to gather all the data that you have collected from the various data sources and your personal journal.  If you haven’t kept a journal you should start by going back to one of my early articles that outlines just what you should be putting in that journal each and every day.

The first thing I do and it is the most satisfying is to graph out my progress over the past 10-11 months.  I do this by identifying a starting point for each one of the important variables; power, speed, cadence, heart rate vrs speed, power, body weight and I even get fancy enough to graph out a chart of my LTH and see if it moved over the year.  One of the biggest improvements I had over this year was a nice boost in my Vo2 Max which closed out the season at 78 which isn’t bad for an old guy, thanks in part to the products distributed by Kona Endurance.

Chart

The next thing I do is plot a final point for the above mentioned variables and gloat in the fine upward line it creates!  But alas all things must have a measure of fact and truth so I also plot the daily PBs for each. The end result should look like a graph of a normal stock market and not the politically manipulated one we have now.  Look at the power chart below and you can see that there was a chartable progression from day one and I had one real winger of a ride early on that wasn’t a true indicator of my fitness at the time.  The five plots at the end are post season rides.  The one thing I see in this chart is the tight range of power that was there in the early part of the year but as I began to push hard towards my #1 race goal the power became more erratic on a daily basis however it began a steep climb in the later 2 months as my fitness allowed for more brushes with higher watts and the ability to recover from it.

I would create charts for each of the above mentioned variables then look for cross reference date IE more power higher rpm lower Heart rate ect then you would want to make a judgment of just how long it took you to get to that point 6-7 months ect.  If at that time you were producing PBs then you would want to review what you were doing and figure out how to repeat it!  Conversely if your performance started to drop off for no reason like being sick or other personal stressors that that two needs to be examined.

Now comes the hard work, look objectively at each one of your performances, if you don’t race competitively then look over your attempts at personal bests and see what you did right and also what you did wrong.  Look closely at your strengths and look even harder at your weaknesses analyze them go over then in your mind then develop the following list in no particular order.

1)      Strengths to maintain

2)      Strengths to improve on

3)      Strengths to build on

Here is mine:

1)      maintain anaerobic endurance and power

2)      Improve on climbing skills and power to weight ratio

3)      Build on my aerobic base

So for me I have a pretty straight forward year ahead of me, I need to really focus on having a good long base period, loose a little more weight and place a little bit more focus on climbing while maintaining high wattage intervals in my training. 

That all sounds pretty easy and straight forward and it is over the next few months I will be putting up a series of training articles that deal with differing limiters and how to deal with them.


GOOD LUCK TO KONA ENDURANCE TRIATHLETES IN TODAYS HAWAII IRONMAN

Kehrgina Good luck to all of our Kona Endurance triathletes today in the Hawaii  Ironman. I'm looking forward to seeing pro triathletes, Gina Kehr and Bryan Rhodes, having a tremendous race day. I will also make a little prediction in the amateur ranks; Steve Smith of Granger, In will WIN the 60-64 age group, hands down....the guy is freakin fast!!!

Rhodesriding_2

October 08, 2008

Kona Endurance PRO Powers Kenyan to Victory in Quad Cities Marathon

The Quad Cities Marathon was run on Sunday and we felt Jynocel Basweti was up for the task. Basweti had won the race in 2006 so he was familier with the course. He waited patiently as some of the front Run_basweti_2 runners went out too fast. At 20 miles he and another athlete dropped the early leaders and ran together through 24 miles. That is when Basweti took over. He put on his final surge and cruised to victory in 2:18:04. Great job Basweti! Your hard work has paid off!

In Juarez, Mexico we had the women's winner for the second year in a row as Rose Kosgei dominated a strong field and also ran her personal best 10k, winning in 32:23. Rose lead from the start and kept the pressure on the field the enitre race. Fantastic Rose! Macdonard also lead the men's race until the final 300 meters. The final sprint to the finish left him in 4th position with a very solid 28:39 time. Judy Kiplimo continue to build on her speed and was able to climb into 6th place in a respectable 34:45 as she prepares for an upcoming marathon. Haron Lagat run up with the leaders through the halfway point then held on for 9th place and still in the $ finishing in 29:32. Francis Kiptoo Kibii continued his upward trend to run his best 10k arce in 29:36 as he put his finishing touches on his preparation for a marathon next week. Much success for all.

Scott Robinson
AmeriKenyan Running Club
Po Box 5808
Santa Fe, NM 87502
505-577-8555
505-466-3384 fax
USATF 42-0412       www.amerikenyanrunningclub.org
NOTE: THE AMERIKENYAN RUNNERS USE KONA ENDURANCE PRO TO INCREASE VO2 MAX AND REDUCE LACTIC ACID

October 06, 2008

Podium at Xterra Nevada 2008

Img_4650_2

Xterra Nevada, incline Village

Lake Tahoe, October 4th of 2008

Rider: Aroussen Laflamme

Cat: 30-34

Finishing Position: 3rd overall of 275+, 1st age group

Course: 750 m swim, 32 km Mountain Bike, 5 km trail running

Weather: cold (41oF), Windy (20 mph), cloudy

Last year I showed up at Tahoe for my first triathlon. There was snow on the ground at the beginning of the race, the water was cold and overall the experience challenging. This year I was prepared for anything, confident for the swim legs after I had completed a triathlon in Folsom in August. But Friday when we arrived, well dressed, and mentally fit, we had to concede that the Lake was stronger than us.

This year it was the wind. It created 2-3 feet waves that acted like a stiff head wind on your bike, while you’re going up and down on repeated bumps. I had to practice it to get confident and to learn how and when to breathe while going up and down on the roller coaster. My first attempt was disastrous. After 200 meters I have started to drink a lot of water, and my confidence level drop dangerously enough that I start to breathe too fast. I had to retreat to the beach. But this year I was determined not to be tamed by the Lake. So I jumped back in the water, shivering and a stomach full of water. This time I managed to swim in the three directions of the race with control and efficiency. I was ready.

Saturday morning, after the early body marking and transition spot picking, I started to warm-up on the trainer. That’s when I heard that the Sherriff was canceling the swim and that the race would become a duathlon. With mix emotion, sorry not to have the opportunity to master the Lake, but relieved that the main leg should favor me, I made my way to the start.

We began with a mile run to stretch the 300 racers. At the first transition zone I was about 25th. But I managed a really good transition and exit behind Christopher Sauser (at this time I didn’t know who he was, but I had noticed his fast start) about 10th. This year I decided to go easy on the pavement, knowing the brutal climb that was to come. So I let Sauser fly away, keeping him at view length for the entire climb. After that, I had some cramping and altitude issues that slowed me down a bit, as well as a misdirection that cost me a minute or so. I have to say that I had stopped taking kona Endurance supplements during the last week because I was out of stock, and I swear I could feel the difference at 9000 feet. It was taking me like 2 minutes to recover after each short power climbs, and I felt a bit dizzy at some time. Definitively worth taking for altitude racing.

And the wind never quit. I was so windy and cold at the top that my nostril where jammed by a frozen substance! Anyways, I was 5th at the top. Then I took about 5 minutes on the guy behind me during the descent, letting the bike fly over the rocks and sand with minimal use of the brakes; that was exhilarating!

But the young fellow, a collegiate racer, was a hell of a runner. He simply eclipses me on the run, which was absolutely painful. I was fighting for the third place overall, and against a bad abdominal cramp that never quit. After two attacks, I finished 3rd overall and 1st by 7 minutes in my age group. Sauser finally took me 16 minutes on the bike, but he was racing in a relay team: no run before or after. That feels like a really good race to me.But I would have to come back to tame this hell of a lake.

Unfortunately, on my way back home, my Cyclocross bike fell of my roof rack at speed on the highway. By chance, nobody’s get hurt or crash, but the bike is in bad shape. I need a new bike, sponsors welcome!!

Thanks to my sponsors Webcor-Alto Velo and Kona endurance nutrition

Thanks for reading

NOTE AROUSSEN LAFLAMME USES KONA ENDURANCE PRO TO INCREASE VO2 MAX AND REDUCE LACTIC ACID

October 01, 2008

THE MAN IN THE ARENA

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat´(TR)

            At the beginning of any endeavor one has to have a set goal in mind.  It amazes me how many people and athletes just go about things so haphazardly with no real direction, some find training as an end in it self.  Then there is that minute % of people and athletes that have a set purpose in mind and go after it with all the zeal of a teen age boy in love, these are your winners, your competitors as without competition there are NO winners. The way they act the way the speak and the things they do on a daily basis leads to one thing and one thing only the attainment of their goal, that is how they wire them selves, nothing left to chance.  Then things seem to happen to them like magic it is an amazing process to watch and even more amazing when it happens to you.Ttpos

            Lets us put this to the test OK?  Pick one thing you want to accomplish next year either in athletics or in life in general just pick 1 thing as long as it does not cause harm or violate the rights of others.  Wright out what it means to attain this one thing in clear precise detail, write about how it will make you feel and change your life when you attain your goal.  Break it down into smaller steps and then into smaller daily steps of how you will do it.  Think of what type of person you would need to be to reach such a lofty goal and become that person read about your goal and what it means to you every day and honestly review it every week or two and make changes and add details.  Focus for one year and the results will amaze you.

            Things will start to happen around you, you will pick up on sponsor deals or some trivial piece of information that helps you unlock the code on your way to your goal.  People will notice that you are driven, focused and in tune and they will help you in great ways or simply shy away. Your training in the early months will have new meaning and when it gets lonely and tiring in July you will still be driven still seeking the path to the attainment of your 1 desire. You will pick up on new directions that will eventually lead you to your goal and when your goal happens it will be a normal occurrence as you knew it all along!

            Sounds pretty mysitical doesn’t it?  But really it is simple goal setting. 

Last year as I was laying in a cat scan tube I went through this process in my mind.  I had had a good season in 07 but knew I was capable of much more I could feel it inside every time I placed 2nd 5th 4th oh God how that would eat away at me.  However at the time I was laying there I had just suffered a high speed collision with a large immovable animal and had suffered a complete AC joint separation and suffered some mild brain trauma.  If I would have told some one what I was thinking while I lay there they would have balked and called me crazy and so I was.  The above quote from Teddy Roosevelt ran through my mind time and again and while those around me felt that I had hit the mat for the last time I knew totally different.  I set my goals just like I outlined knowing deep within my heart that I would attain them, no question To validate this and  I can say that it was the medication but in 6 weeks I did a 20 K TT bringing in silver and 2 weeks after I traveled to Utah and took on the Zabriskie ITT challenge taking 3rd.  Little did I know I would return to Utah for even more epic ventures; however my one and only goal was to win the State Time Trial Championship in 08.

            I had a lot of fun posting here on this blog some of my coaching articles gave straight info and then as my mind twisted into a bike racer I hid those lessons of coaching in some fun stories of my travels over the year.  However as my year unfolded in incredible fashion I never once lost sight of my #1 goal and that was to walk away with a gold medal on Sept 27th and I did.   This year I had incredible support from my sponsor Kona Nutrition and Darin he was always was on the phone or e mailing asking me what I needed and it always showed up!  I am excited that he asked me to stay for the 09 season, I hope I can provide some meaningful content over the year for the athletes that read the blogs.  There are countless others who helped in the back ground cheering me on selflessly; My wife Chris, Christina, Bob, Pat, My children Jamie, Liz Sarah Steven and Naomi and yea even my X the list could go on and I am sure I left some one out “Suck it up stop whining!  No man is an island however no one but the individual steps into the ring to do battle on race day!

            Nothing really ends it just morphs into something else, so as one season comes to a close another offers the promise of new challenges and goals yet undreamed.  This year was incredible, I went every where and I did things I thought only super man could do, I mean I am a fighter but I like to think of myself of being some what publicly humble, my inner ego is something totally different and I fight on!  My coaches Bruce Hendler and Ian Jackson helped me put the year in perspective 1/10 of 1% of the cycling population got to do what I did or would even attempt it, I don’t know about all that, but I think of the quote above in that it doesn’t really matter win or loose it is the athlete inside, the you, of your self who in striving for a worthy goal knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; spends himself in a worthy cause; knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat NEVER!

September 30, 2008

Heavy Heart

There are times in our lives when training and racing have to to take a back seat to obstacles in our lives that we have no control of. The past six weeks have been an emotional roller coaster for my family and self. My father suffered a massive heart attack, surgery, ICU for 5 days, and then seemed to be making progress. Went to a nursing home for rehab, started to walk with the help of a walker, then, on his 85th birthday, came down with pneumonia. Back to the hospital where he remained until his death on September 18th.

During this time I was supposed to do a half ironman in PA (preparing for IM Arizona), but withdrew for many reasons. Exhausted, not eating properly, not focused, and most importantly, did not want to be away from my father. I was trying to get some training in during this time, but it was so difficult on many levels.

This past weekend I participated in the Jerseyman half ironman triathlon in Clinton, NJ. My goal was to use this as a training day and get back on track for November. All I can say is that there was some help from above, and from Kona Endurance Pro and Citrabeta Shot. Despite horrific weather(rain throughout the entire race), I finished 9th overall and 1st in my age group, with the 5th fastest swim and 4th fastest bike split. I actually felt good physically, and was holding back on the bike due to the wet conditions.

As of now, I am undefeated in my age group, and have finished in the top ten women in every race. Thank you Kona Endurance!!

Patti Weil