I hadn't intended to stay in Saipan for Tagaman, but due to the earthquake last week, and the possible radiation leaks in Tokyo, we decided to stay on. This meant I was going to miss Singapore 70.3, which was my first chance in 2011 to try and qualify for the 70.3 World Championships, this year to be held in Las Vegas. I was disappointed, but was pleased to be safe in Saipan. After finishing high up in last weekends xterra race, I decided to enter Tagaman as a Pro, which basically meant I was eligible for money, if I did well. Tagaman starts at the PIC with a 2km swim, then the 60km bike section rides north up the island to the Banzai cliffs, the Grotto and then to Suicide cliffs, and then finishes back at Memorial park, for a 15km run.
Just as last weekend in Xterra, it was raining on Saturday morning, and it looked like it was going to rain for the whole race. The swim at the PIC is very well protected, due to the encompassing reef, vastly different to what we experienced in Xterra. It was still dark as we got down to the water at 5:45am for a 6am start; Kaisei was doing the swim leg of a team event, so in we jumped for a quick warm up, the water was crystal clear, and actually warmer then the air temperature.It was a 2 loop course, and the Pro's had a 1minute head start to give us clear water. The swim was a quick start, being surrounded by just pro's there was certainly a very clear difference in people's starting speed's. Often I get into clear water quickly, but in this race, I was middle of the pack and having to fight for my space. I fell into stroke with a couple of the women pro's, it was a much quicker stroke rate than I was used to, but I felt good, and was happy to push myself to stay in contention. We stayed together for the first lap, and after the start of the 2nd lap, but I soon fell off the back, and noticed my stroke rate started to slow as I lost contact, I then saw Kaisei streak past me! I made it in to the beach in 33:25, not bad for a 2km swim with no wetsuit.
Onto my borrowed bike from Russ Quin, an unexpectedly nice Specialized carbon Transition, it was a bit big for me, but compared to racing this on my Stumpie, it was a pleasure. At the prospect of rain, I had made sure I had included my little pump (no gas cartridges on the island), its hard to spot any crap on the roads when they are wet. Well lets just say it was a bloody good job I did, I ended up getting 4 punctures! Almost a whole life time's worth in one race. I think it ended up costing me about 20mins, most of that was pumping! The bike in the dry is a lovely ride, with the Northern end of the island offering some spectacular riding, but in the rain and with the punctures, I was just happy to get it done. I ended up running in from about 1/2km out, as the tyre was flat again, which made me 2:05:37 for 60km, not great!
After my crappy bike ride, I was determined to try and salvage something decent from the run, this was my first Pro race, and it hadn't exactly gone well so far. I went through the 1st 5km in 21:30 not a bad clip after 60km on the bike, the sun was out intermittently and when it was it was hot. I could see the other Pro's coming back against me, and I was trying to count how far back I was, alongside picking people off further up the run course. The turnaround at the Toyota garage was about the 7km mark, and I could see a number of runners ahead of me, I was now on a mission to hunt them down. Although they were probably a good 750m ~ 1km in front, I steadily hacked away at the distance, over the next 5km. By the time I got to the northern turnaround, I had caught them and was legging it for home. 15km's finished in 1:08:07, which when extrapolated to a 1/2 IM is about a 1:35...so not bad.
Unfortunately I ended up coming 7th in the Pro field, and missed the money by 1 spot. Great race though and would certainly do it again!
Adam - FOUR flats and you still finish 7th! That is impressive. Maintaining the focus and drive after distraction and frustration of mechanical problems is tough - lots of people would have just headed back to the beach. Good job.
ReplyDeleteJay