Saturday, 21 September 2013

2013 European Junior Triathlon Tour / London World Championship / Eton Dorney / Tiszaujvaros


I’ve left it kind of late because I figured that there was no point recounting my less than desirable race experiences. However, that was it – the race experiences – that were stopping me from sharing the entirety of my travels with everyone. Therefore I’ve decided to stop whining and take the bad with the good. Amidst the general report I try to mix it up with the callous competition remarks across the four races just to avoid becoming a monotonous, negative Neville. It'll be focused on the races but I'll throw in some other things you may enjoy. 
I will be starting from plane trip No.1 so I feel the length of this recap will be the equivalent to that of a J. K. Rowling Novel, most likely the 5th, and longest, addition in her Harry Potter series. Enjoy!

Sitting on the plane in Sydney I thought that I better get some photos just so I could share them and have some memories. On second evaluation of said photos I will not be sharing a single one because I look awful, and yes they were self portraits of my excitement. I’ll use my outstanding descriptive writing skills to paint a picture…
I was alone in my row, praying for the hostesses to begin the pre departure shenanigans before the seats around me filled up, I raised my head and looked behind me I cast my eyes from left to right only to catch a few watchful sets of eyes staring back into my soul, I had never seen less people on a plane, I was shocked, excited and a little bit optimistic for every other flight I were to be on. From that moment I fell in love with the upper deck of aircrafts, I didn’t know how many were on the lower deck, didn’t care though this was a big win for me. During the 6-hour flight I was getting fidgety so I got up and did some stretching. As I was stretching my peck I caught the eye of one of the air-hostess’ and she must have thought I was trying to open the emergency exit door, as she looked absolutely petrified and scared for her life. I gave her a cheeky smile and a little wave of a semi flaccid the arm and all was well, I think.
The first, of many, flights was done and I was eagerly in search for the rest of the team in Singapore’s, Changi Airport. Without technology this task could have taken days, that place is huge. Eventually I found them and we said our hello’s and all that junk then before I knew it we were on the next plane toward an exuberant yet unmistakably ghost-town-like Tiszaujvaros.
Not much exciting happened on that flight. I didn’t have as much room as the previous flight and I was next to a bloke who lived 40 minutes away from me, in Sydney. Funny story about him but I wont go into that. Gotta keep the rambling to a minimum.

After a long and tedious 13 hours we arrived in Frankfurt. The wait there was great – Wi-Fi !!
The team, minus Joel, got lunch and waited till it was time to get on the next plane. Again nothing exciting happened.
After this, it wasn’t long until we touched down in Hungary. We were all very eager to get into Tizzy and see what it was like. As soon as we stepped outside my first words were – “Dayum!”. It was a huge shock, the exhausting heat that struck us and we hadn’t even stepped out into the sun. However, there were smiles all round. Hello European Summer.

After we were all settled in and had our things unpacked and bikes put together there wasn’t much to do but lay in our 5 foot long beds and fry in the little sauna like rooms. Likewise for the coming days leading into the race, apart from training and the evening trip to Mamma Rosa’s for dinner. I’ll skip those trips though, nothing special there.

The day was upon us. Race one of our preparations for World Championships. All had not gone to plan for Matt but I certainly was excited to give it a good crack.
Plan – be fit and have taken necessary steps to avoid any dramas from traveling.
Actuality – had niggles from the NTA camp which prevented me from running when I needed it, didn’t avoid dramas from traveling and had Wisdom teeth out mere days before I got on the plane (under instruction from the team doctors due to pain I was experiencing on the NTA Camp).

Any who, all that aside. Lining up for introduction I wasn’t thinking about any of the above dilemmas I was just keen to smash it. I’ve always gotten a bit nervous for the swim start and there was no exception this time – I was packing it!
We were all called down and ready to start etc. then for some ungodly reason I stood still as the starter yelled “on your marks” and I took a step forward as the horn went. Good news was I still managed to react fairly quickly. Bad news was during my impeccable streamlining I could hear two athletes battling it out right above me. As I came up, to my expectation and their shock, one bloke’s hand landed right on my shoulder and the three of us were in a tussle. Sadly it was a losing battle, them Belgians are big. Of course by the first buoy I was in last position, given how I was swimming this is definitely not where I wanted to be. Unfortunately the swim was much shorter in this race because there were heats and finals instead of the usual sprint distance. Despite my mistakes I wasn’t dead last out of the water but I was certainly at the tail end. Things weren’t looking great and I was stressing about it. I was in no mans land between the second pack and the stragglers behind me, again not where anyone wants to be. Eventually I gave up trying to catch and let the group behind pick me up.
Then came run time, I went out way too hard and I could feel it, but as far as I knew my body could handle it for at least as long as it took to catch the few guys just ahead of us.
Unfortunately, there was no hope for me. After roughly 1500m I hit the wall hard. I was basically jogging and had never felt more horrible during the run leg of any race I’d ever done. Being the only one on the Australian junior team to not make the final and having raced as I did, you could imagine how I felt. Thankfully my coach, Keiran put it into perspective for me and noted the conditions of the race compared to what I was used to at home and the circumstance I was in. From this point my focus was get to Spain and prepare as best I could for World Champs.




Easier said than done, and of course – more misfortune headed my way.
Finally we arrived at the next destination, the one I was most looking forward to. It wasn’t as I had pictured it; I suppose it never is, but nonetheless a beautiful place.
The rooms were really good and had everything we needed, except a kettle – an athlete essential. Luckily there were copious amounts of coffee shops within walking distance.
In the first few days we were doing a lot of exploring and we found some pretty cool places and saw some cool things in the small Basque country of Vitoria-Gasteiz.
Not long after we had gotten settled in and had a few recovery sessions and started to get stuck into the solid side of training I noticed I had difficulty breathing. Apparently there had been a few athletes who have suffered from this when they first arrived in Vitoria. I had a talk to Ryan Bailie on a long run that we did and he noted some symptoms he had and that he was diagnosed with sport induced asthma. My symptoms were very similar so I talked to the medical advisor and organized a ventolin puffer. That didn’t seem to work so we headed to the local doctors and had an assessment done. Nothing out of the ordinary showed up there. However, the doctor said I could have a mild form of bronchitis given what I had been experiencing and the color mucus I was coughing up. Sorry guys, I couldn’t figure out a less gross way around mentioning that.
Once that was all sorted and I had a few days off training I was able to scrape in one brick session before it was time to start tapering for the Junior European Cup in Eton Dorney. Mind you, I wasn’t allowed to go too hard incase I wrecked myself.

I wont go through the days of taper, that won’t be much fun.
The next adventure begins – off to Eton Dorney. I wasn’t expecting much of the hotel we were to stay at in Windsor, as it turns out I was wrong again. It was the nicest. By the nicest of course I mean the best bed and buffet combination. For any athlete those are two of the biggest deal breakers between a good hotel and a bad one.

This race was a first for me. Usually when things go wrong I panic and continue a downhill spiral.
The pontoon position was one of the most unfair that I’ve ever been on. First position was a dead straight line to buoy 1 followed by two 90-degree right hand turns and back to the swim exit. So me being number 58 on the far right I was a long way away from the desired line.
Figured ‘it-is-what-it-is’ and there wasn’t a thing I could do about it so I found my spot and listened hard for “take your marks”. I was actually pretty happy, both athletes beside me were scrawny, but I was still pretty nervous about being drowned like I was in Tizzy. All went well and I had a good start, gained half a body length on the two guys next to me and swam hard through clear water. Only mistake I made was that I gauged off the athletes to my right so I didn’t need to look up and I swam in a dead straight line…
After a good 250-300m I looked up and noticed we were not far away from the first buoy and I was very far over. Because of that mistake by the time I made it across there were dozens of battlers hitting the first buoy and I was very wide. This threw me out of at least getting in the second pack. So I was pretty upset about that but to my surprise I forgot about it and swam hard back into shore, then focused on doing absolutely nothing on the bike… Sounds like a dog act but I have my reasons! I needed to be confident in running well off the bike and Tizzy did not provide me with that confidence and when you think about how horribly unfit I was I had to prioritize and save as much energy as I could. So I was a prick and sat on and pulled a turn every now and again. Made it even worse by attacking the last few kilometers and getting into transition first. Probably could have done without the accelerations in doing so but I had never gone into transition with a large amount of people and I didn’t want to be involved in any accidents.
I hit the run and was feeling remarkably good, but I contained my excitement and adrenaline and kept it together. Not long into the run and as expected a few athletes came around me, some I sat on and others gapped us slightly. Things were looking good so with the tailwind I picked it up slightly on the return 1.25km. Without any dramas in that I did so again on the 3rd quarter of the run. This was into a headwind so it wasn’t a pick up in pace but in effort. I saw that I was catching some of the athletes that had passed me in the first 1.25km and that gave me motivation to continue pushing. Coming into the last 800m the few that I bridged back up to accelerated and my fitness stopped me seconds after I tried to go with them. The run wasn’t exceptionally quick by any stretch of the imagination, but it was controlled and solid which was what I needed.

We didn’t have many days to spare before and after the race so that trip went pretty quickly and all of a sudden we were back in Spain with 10 days until the big one. The next few days were recovery focused followed by a couple of hard swims and a couple of solid rides and runs. There was one particular swim session which I felt incredible in and I knew I was back to where I needed to be with the swim, unfortunately the impact of running and thus fatigue in my legs for the final solid bike session knocked me back down a little.
Things were progressively looking better. By the time we were to fly out to London my health was almost back to one hundred percent. Unfortunately my fitness was far from where I wanted this close to a World Championship event. But once again I didn’t let it bother me. I had my strengths that I figured would get me into a decent position to push through the remainder of each of my races.


Reflecting on it now I think that doing the both Aquathlon and the age group sprint races was a bad idea. Thought I’d be all right but in the end I struggled a fair bit. Just a quick recap on the two then we’re done!
Just a little dilemma though, what would preparation be without them? The day before the race I was taking off my wetsuit and basically 3/5ths of the calf tore at the seam. Not good at all! All was sorted out with the guys at the Blue Seventy tent though, brand new wetty. Win!
I was most confident for the Aquathlon, I was in a good state mentally which triumphed and kept my mind off my physical state. Shortly after we were called into the athlete holding area they started introducing the athletes, I had no idea and therefore became extra nervous when I heard the introducer announce “2012 ITU World Aquathlon Champion and London Olympian, Richard Varga”.
Nevertheless, nothing I could do about it so a big smile came across my face as I realized I could really give it a good crack and see how things are going in the water. We were denied a swim warm up, not exactly ideal but hay, everyone missed out. Luckily for me I brought resistance bands and went through my routine at lighter resistance followed by harder resistance. It worked a treat!
Grabbed an excellent spot on the pontoon and before I knew it I was underwater. With incredible urgency I kicked hard and popped up half a body length in front of my competitors, all except one – Varga!
Alternating looking up at the buoy, then over to my right every second stroke my eyes glued on Varga, he was edging closer and closer as we headed for the first turn, I was exactly where I wanted to be and it was an awesome feeling. I had an excellent line and didn’t zigzag one bit, coach would be proud. We hit turn one, two then turn three and were on the back straight. By the time we got back in line with the pontoon, roughly 650m, he had gapped me slightly. Expected.
Around 850m a couple of the elite and u23 guys came around me and I jumped on their feet, such a relief! But by this time my arms had, had enough of swimming that fast and I blew up slightly. Still managed to come out around 4th or 5th position in 11:46 – a whole 1 second quicker than my pb in the pool, I was fairly stoked about that!
Onto the run… felt good, actually ran horribly. Not much more to say about that. Clearly I was much more excited about the swim! In the end, I came home with a second place in the World Junior Aquathlon Championships, cannot complain.

Mere hours after that race I tried to sit on a park bench. Nothing I have tried has ever been more dismal than those 2 seconds of simply taking a seat. My ITB’s were hammered, not a good feeling less than 30 hours before another World Champs race.
Tried my best to recover and before I knew it race 2 came around. I was feeling ok compared to the previous day still not fantastic though. Once again we had no swim warm up. I assumed my bands would do the job as they did for the Aquathlon. I foolishly gave more room to the spectators then they needed and as I was very rushed – all the other athletes already standing in the athlete holding area – I double over my bands to do my warm up, without at least giving my arms a light activation.
Adrenaline was pumping through my body though so I thought nothing of it, until I got 100m into the swim. I felt awful and didn’t even make it to the buoy first. I sat on feet for the majority of the swim and toward the end a few athletes came around me. I did make an effort to make sure I was with them though, considering how fresh these guys were I couldn’t miss being in contact with them for the ride, especially given that the bike course was 2.95km long.
Things weren’t looking great but I was gaining on the gap a few had as we ran to transition. For some unknown reason some nitwit put plastic boards down on a sharp corner and as soon as I hucked a left I fell straight down and hit my knee pretty hard. Although, I did recall hearing “slow down people are falling here” as I got up… gee thanks!
Anyway got up and into transition not too far behind the handful of athletes in front. Jumped on the bike and just stayed in contact with whoever was first at any given time. Some guys started to come past and I noticed they were in different age categories but it became difficult to keep track of who was who. After the race I found out that some kid managed to get 90 seconds ahead of us. Thought I did well keeping track of em all, obviously not!
There was a few of us who jumped off the bike together, I was pretty relaxed and tried to keep a high cadence leading into T2 so I was as fresh as possible. The run in was disgustingly muddy and slippery, as we were running down to our racks I nearly slipped over on several occasions and could barely get any speed. Then, just my luck, I started to feel both my calves cramp. At this point I was filthy! If I had to stop and stretch them out it wouldn’t have been nice being another athlete and hearing words come out of my mouth at ridiculous decibels.
Thankfully they didn’t cramp but god they were tight the whole run. It was amazing the confidence I got running past people out of transition rather than losing places, this made me feel pretty damn good and I focused on catching the next guy, and the next guy, and so on. Not a whole lot of that happened though. I began to fade toward the end, my shoulders felt heavy and tight, my knee was hurting with every stride and my ITB’s weren’t giving me any relief. Given all that knocked me back in the lead up I finished off strongly with a run time I was happy with despite my lack of confidence after seeing the run time from the Aquathlon.

All in all, the trip was excellent and there were many positives taken. Never a dull moment with triathletes, wouldn’t have had it any other way (with the people and international experience, of course).
Huge thanks to everyone who was apart of it, there were many humans involved in the process so I won’t name them all, forgive me but you know who you are. Not just the athletes and coaches but family and friends. I envy the patience and understanding you all have.

Till next time.

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