Lindsey Jerdonek

09:17
:09

USAT Elite Nationals Race Report

Posted in Racing by

On August 22 I raced USAT Nationals in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, home to the Univ of Alabama and city where you can get a turkey panini packed with green apple slices and gouda with side salad and bowl of fruit (upon presenting your USAT membership) for $3.81. crazy.

I earned ITU points for my 9th place finish seeing that nationals also served as an ITU Continental Cup. Why do I care about accruing precious points? Your points determine your ranking in the ITU points list–the more points you have, the higher your ranking. USAT, the governing body for USA triathlon, is inclined to send athletes with good results (thus, more points) to bigger races, like a World Cup. By consistently racing, placing well & s/b/r-ing faster, I have the potential to attend said races. If you get mediocre results (like ninth) and do 2 ITU races/yr (like me in 2009) you’ll painstakingly move up, but it’s better to race MORE and place HIGHER so progression doesn’t take a LIFETIME. That’s the goal here.

Background: Coach Paulo resides in neighboring TN and trekked to nationals to watch me and his other athletes race. I suspect the Chipotle presence in Tusca made the trip a SLAM DUNK.

The women athletes were introduced individually and jogged past the crowd to select a spot on the pontoon for the dive start. After brief deliberation, I placed myself between Hayley Peirsol and Margie Shapiro. I figured I’d get clean water on the Hayley side as she is her own front pack. 200 meters in I noticed packs forming on the ends of the field. Who can remember precisely what happend 3 wks ago, but I found myself on Jenna Shoemaker’s feet who wore a conspicuous, red race suit, and thought to myself I HOPE PAULO IS WATCHING THIS (3 consecutive wks of 28k meters/wk in the pool is good for something). I came out of the water on her feet (first out was Hayley, a pack of 3, then me and Jenna).  I have never experienced such an intense transition before–like LIFE OR DEATH to hang with her. On that day: DEATH.

BIKE (6 loops): It was a sad affair as I was alone and did not hang with the 3 women who passed me in the early laps (being dropped/passed by all on the HILL). watts/kg. blast it. Paulo knew what was going on in my head (as he has received colorful post-race texts from me) and reminded me to FOCUS & STAY IN THE RACE. Me: yea, he has a point, stay with it. At the half-way mark, it was clear I was not catching the front pack (who had likely settled down the pace now that they were a bigger group of 8ish–boo), I slowed down, per Paulo’s suggestion, to complete the ride with the pack behind me. Instead of dropping off completely in my slow-down-and-join effort, I made sure I got up that G-D hill on lap 4 and we merged around the top. Our group of 6 ‘pacelined’ like a carousel the remaining 2.5 laps and we found our way…

OUT ON THE RUN. The motor home in background indicates I am in fact in BAMA:

The run included 4 loops… I ran most of loop 1 with Amanda Hahn (effort level quite high) but I fell off our pace and slogged through the rest solo. The best I could have placed was 8th since the front pack started the run WAY in front of us (and I have not yet approached a 30 min 10k time). Paulo kept me honest with encouragement throughout and I crossed the line in 9th–it was different to race with him on the sidelines. Reality is he won’t be at every race, so I must keep myself in check from start to finish.

I have lots to take away, namely s/b/r faster, but ALSO, I over-indulged Saturday night with EXCESSIVE AMOUNTS OF FOOD–too much for MY stomach to handle. The following week I felt nauseous after EVERY meal eaten. To my dismay, I found little compassion as everyone just told me to not eat so much all the time.  Post-race celebration meals–don’t go overboard.

My dad sent me this lovely basket of flowers the following Tuesday as congrats/bday tidings since I turned a landmark 25 on race-day, celebrating by paying adult prices on my rental vehicle. 


03:13
:09

Hello, 10k Race Report, Moving, MEN

Posted in Uncategorized by
Hi Team Timex – this is my first post to the team blog!  Inspired–or peer-pressured–with the team’s impressive blogging/web site exploits, I started a blog recently with my friend, Lauren Harrison, who is also entering her first pro season.  It is available at: http://rookiepros.blogspot.com/.  I’m looking forward to meeting you all at Timex Camp!  Also, I welcome any suggestions on how to stick to a single topic for each post…
On Saturday I ran an open 10k in 37:11. I’m quite happy with my time and more importantly, the effort, and shaved 43 seconds off my PR from December. The race was an out and back on a portion of the Capital Crescent Trail, a hiker-biker trail which connects Bethesda to Georgetown. The race was organized by the Georgetown Running Company, the running team I socialize with… I don’t really train with them–when I do the group runs, it’s usually right after I swim, and since the women are faster than me to begin with, a heart-attack sets in after a few minutes. I typically drop back and run on my own until we rejoin for breakfast.

Back to the race–I took it out hard. I checked my watch at 13:40 just to see where I was time-wise and knew that my pace was too labored at that point. Aided by a false flat–DOWNHILL–for the first 5k, I reached the turnaround in 17:40. When I saw the time I thought, “Wow, that’s wrong. This course is short.” It wasn’t, so I set myself up for a nice mental toughness exercise for the last half. The men who I ran with on the way out finished 45-60 seconds ahead of me, to give you some perspective of the hill grade & my sufferfest. Excluding the masses of non-racers taking in Saturday’s nice weather & shouting encouraging words, I was pretty much on my own for the return trip. I finished first and about 5 sec in front of the second woman. In the final minutes I had a inkling that I was 1) dying and 2) getting caught by the woman I saw near the turn-around, so I stuck with it as best I could to the finish. I want to be under 37 minutes and will give it another shot next month. Results for the race are available at: http://results.active.com/pages/displayNonGru.jsp?rsID=75529&orgID=234639&pubID=2

I don’t have any pics from the race, but I DO have a shot of me with my roommate, Angie, looking out of the back entrance to our new apt, or as we lovingly call it, the cage. Following the 10k, I moved into an English basement in the U-street corridor, hence the safety bars on all windows/doors. My dad came into town to help and gets the photo credit for the following action shot.

This is my fourth dwelling since the start of the year and am relieved to be settled. I didn’t have access to a TV in my Feb. sublet and convinced Angie of the obvious improvements to life without basic cable.

To fill the TV void and in a matter of self-improvement, I’m playing the piano daily. Angie has a keyboard (with weighted keys!) and several times since our move, she or I have played while the other has bfast/dinner. It’s wonderful listening to Angie play and since she blocks out the occasional “son of a b****” that slips out when I mess up, she enjoys my playing, too. I established a daily goal of practicing at least 10 min and plan to learn/memorize La Valse d’Amelie (from the movie, Amelie) by Easter. In April, I’m heading to the West coast for 9-days to watch LAHP race Oceanside 70.3, attend Timex camp and spend the Easter weekend with LAHP and Matt where I will perform in the inaugural “Getting the Work Done” piano recital. She and I will play a duet–something non-chopsticks.

IMPORTANT: Today, Lauren shared with me a short article titled, The 6 Men You Shouldn’t Date. Ladies, file this away in your memory bank and include a hard copy in your edition of the dating bible (He’s Just Not That Into You). Through education, salvation CAN be yours.



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