I simply cannot believe it took me this long but finally, I write my first Ironman race report. (You can scroll down to Sunday if you want to just read about race day)
Thursday July 19th – Brooke and I head to the Hartford airport to pick up her Brother Jay who is flying in from Palo Alto, CA and who is also attempting his very first Ironman (and second triathlon) along with me. If you didn’t know this already, Brooke completed the hardest Ironman in history in 2005 at the Ford Ironman Wisconsin event where over 22% of the athletes did not finish. (To view results, log onto www.nasports.com)
After we picked Jay up, we headed back to the house to pack the Jeep and headed up to Lake Placid. Upon our arrival in Placid, we were greeted by a good friend Sheri Fraser who gave each of us the best pre-race massages that one could get, thanks Sheri, we owe you! We rent a great house that is within walking distance to the expo and the swim start and share with the guys from Team Sports and other close friends including Chris Travers from Profile Design who cooked 3 beer butt chickens for us on Thursday night for dinner. It was an early night for the three of us as we were all tired from getting up so early and Jay had flown in on a red eye flight the night before and barely got any sleep at all.
Friday July 20th – The three of us got up at 6am to have a light breakfast then headed down to Mirror Lake where we met our coach Mike Monroe for a loop of the swim course. I ran into my good friend Tim Moxy from Blue Seventy wetsuits (new sponsor to the Timex team for 2007) and caught up only briefly but Tim’s last words to me were “Have fun and let the suit do all the work.” Those words will stick in my head and carry me through the best swim of my life on race day.
After our swim, the three of us suited up in our rain gear and headed down to the Olympic Oval to register for the race. I have never experienced a race registration that ran so smooth, great job to NA Sports!
Friday night was the Pre race dinner, which was held out at the horse fairgrounds under a mega tent. Few things to mention…Mike Richter, former goalie for the NY Rangers gave a short speech about his quest to conquer Lake Placid and said he had dreamed the night before that the lake actually froze on race day while he was still swimming and when he became coherent there were a bunch of Detroit Red Wings skating around him…too funny!
Saturday July 21st – Day before the race and we are all getting very excited at this point. We spent the day getting a few last minute items including Brave Soldier anti-chaffing crème, tic tac box for my Advil, CO2 cartridges and a few other
misc items. Saturday is also the day when you need to hand in your transition bags and turn in your bike. Once that was all done, we went back to the house, cooked some pasta and just relaxed for the evening. Heading to bed, we were all prepared to get very little sleep the night before the race but Brooke and I got a solid 6 hrs or so…Jay on the other hand was not so lucky. The first thing Jay did when he woke up on race day was to give us the big zero sign with his fingers, indicating the amount of sleep he had gotten that night.
Sunday July 22nd, Race Day!! – 4am came around pretty quick for Brooke and I but Jay had been waiting patiently for the alarm to sound so he could get on with the day.
We each had our own pre race meal that we were attempting to get down but it’s hard to eat at 4am. My favorite pre race meal is a wheat bagel with crunchy peanut butter, low fat cream cheese and a banana…oh, and my coffee.

After breakfast, we dropped off our special needs bags, headed to transition to put our water bottles on our bikes and add a few last minute items to our gear bags and then went back to the house to get suited up.
615am – we are all body marked, transition is set and we are way ahead of schedule and I am lovin’ it!
Start
My strategy for the swim was simple, be confident, know that I am going to get hit a few times, breathe easy and let the suit do the work for me. My strategy worked great as I exited the swim in 1:15, not bad for a guy that just took his first swim lesson in February.
Transition
Into transition I go…taking my time of course as I am not here to go for the win but to make sure that I am comfortable on the bike and I don’t leave anything behind.
I listened to the advice given to me by our coach as well as a few professionals who have done very well on this course and it was clear that you wanted to take it easy on the first loop. That I did, zone II the whole loop for a 3:01 and I felt great, I passed about 200 people on the climbs alone and never felt as if I was pushing too hard. Lap two came around and I was starting to get a tightening in my left IT band and my right hip flexor muscle, uh oh…between the high winds and the aches and pains my body was feeling, lap two of the bike was waaaay slower 3:24. What I imagined to be my strongest leg of the day has turned out to be the one I suffered the most on.
Transition
Finally I enter T2 and am feeling good that I am off the bike and about to start the run. (my weakest event of the three). As soon as I start running, my left IT band pops in for a quick hello and it hurts, so much so that I spend the first mile doing my best impression of Terry Fox. All of the sudden I hear people yelling my name and cheering me on and out of the corner of my eye, I notice its Cassidy from Trigger Point Therapy. “Good”, I say to myself, “Cassidy will know how to fix my IT band issues righ
t here on course, he is the man you know?” So I stopped running and Cassidy popped out of his chair to come greet me in the road. I told him about my issue and he said to just “Tilt your pelvis more forward…that should help.” Once again, Cassidy talks me off the ledge and by mile three; my IT band pain would disappear for the remainder of the run!
I must say, my favorite part of the day was the first half of the run. I was feeling good physically and mentally, got to see my brother in law Jay a few times and saw how awesome he was doing and it helped to lift my spirits.
The second half of the run was not so much fun however…(I forgot to mention that I had been dealing with a mild stomach discomfort since mile 10 on the bike and wasn’t sure what was going on but I was having to force down my nutrition the entire day. Luckily, I never got sick but there were plenty of times that I came close). It is very difficult mentally to come all of the way back into town after completing 13 miles and hear people finishing, see the finish line shoot but have to take a different turn and head back out of town for your final 13 miles. I s
huffled through the run and was still feeling fairly good. The plan was to run the second loop at 145-160bmp but I could not get my heart rate to go above 128. Along with my concentrated mix of Infinit nutrition I was using on the run, I was alternating at aid stations with Gatorade and coke…I love Coke, it really gives you that extra push and helped to settle my stomach. I knew the end was near when I hit the turnaround on the out and back portion of the loop an fueled me to push even harder. There was never a time during the race that I ever felt like I wanted to quit, our coach Mike Monroe really prepared Brooke and I for this and mentally I had prepared myself.
With 1.5 miles to go until I become an Ironman, I get the best cheer of the d
ay from my best friend (and my wife) Brooke. Brooke was on her way out to start her second loop of the run and still had that same smile on her that I left her at the swim start with. She is truly the reason I was out there on Sunday and was my inspiration to keep going when things got difficult. Seeing Brooke right before the finish was just was a perfect ending to a perfect day for me.
I had two goals for the day, the first was to finish and the second was to come in under 13 hours, which I did with a final time of 12:54:30.

The Ironman will forever be the proudest accomplishment in my life and I can’t wait to start training for the next one, thanks for reading.
Oh, forgot to thank everyone who donated my to my fundraising efforts through the Janus Charity Challenge, i raised over $4,000 for Trips for Kids!!!
Congratulations to Alex, this win couldn’t have gone to a more deserving person…a true athlete!