MIT Race Report (Andrew Yoder - 4th Place Pro)

Miami International Triathlon – March 15, 2009 (Olympic Distance)
Race Totals:
1:49:05
Swim: 17:26
**Bike: **54:07 (27.5 mph)
**Run: **35:21 (5:42per mile)
4th place professional male

*Complete race results posted here. *

This past weekend I raced the Miami Int. Triathlon held on Key Biscayne in Miami, FL. I made a lot of changes during the winter in regards to my overall approach towards triathlon. I decided last spring to postpone college and completely focus on triathlon. It was a very hard decision but I love the sport and believe this was the right path for me. With my attention on triathlon, I needed to make some major changes in my coaching and nutrition. After a long couple weeks considering a wide variety of coaches, I decided to work with Lance Watson. Lance was a great fit and really has a great wealth of knowledge. I also needed a complete makeover with my nutrition, so I started working closely with Robert Kuntz of First Endurance and Brian Shea of Personal Best Nutrition. I felt completely confident in their expertise and we were able to develop a sound race nutrition program. This was huge for me as I have struggled with cramps and other nutrition related problems in races. Having a nutrition plan that works is a big step forward.

Lance and I decided that Miami would be a good first race to gain valuable race experience and see where my fitness was at. I had competed the year before and Wilber and his staff did a wonderful job. My goals going into Miami were to have a consistent race and to really stay mentally focused and stable the entire race. Don’t get overly excited but don’t dwell on the things that don’t go right.

I was in good head space race morning and did my usual transition/ warm-up. I was also racing with my new race day nutrition plan. Here is the down low (race start @ 7:00):

Pre-Race:

4:30AM: (2.5 hrs. from race start)
1 Bagel w/ PB and 1 serving of Ultragen (~ 650 calories)

*Last year, my pre race breakfast and calories leading up to the race consisted of all solids. I believe my body had a hard time breaking down all the solids which lead to cramps. As per Brian’s recommendation, switching to primarily liquid calories allowed for easy digestion & ZERO stomach issues.

4:30AM to 6:45AM:
Sipped on 20 oz. of EFS Lemon Lime until 6 and then switched over to 20 oz. of EFS w/ PreRace (~200 calories with caffeine)

6:45AM:
1+ serving of Liquid Shot (100 calories)

Swim (1.5km):
At the swim start, I positioned myself on the far right side next to Brian Fleischmann and Joe Umpenhour. I knew these two guys were strong ITU swimmers so I thought it would be a good position. I had an average swim start but held my own over the first couple 100 meters. At the first turn buoy, I was caught in the washing machine and lost contact with the front. Potts, Reed, Fleischmann, and Umphenour managed to open up a gap which grew to about 50 seconds by the end of the swim. I was disappointed that I missed the break but I stayed positive and kept a steady pace. Coming into the swim finish, I exited 2nd in the chase pack right behind UK 70.3 star Fraser Cartmell and toe to toe with Chris Lieto.

**Swim Totals (Time/Place): **17:26 (7th o’all)
**T1: **1:15

Bike (24.8 Miles):

Transition was smooth and headed on the bike in 7th position. I attacked right from the start as there is a “climb” over a bridge within the first mile. I managed to move into 5th by the top of the bridge and then set my sights on the leaders. I love racing 40k as it really is a true test of a rider’s strength. I was riding really well through the first lap and was able to pass Potts right before 20k. I had a small gap on Lieto and Reed was about 20 seconds up the road. Going over the bridge again, I brought back as much time on Reed as I could and took the lead with about 15k to go. I kept the pressure on knowing that Matt would not give up his lead easily. At the final turnaround, I was able to see I opened up a 30 second gap on Matt but Lieto had closed in and took the lead away from me with less than a few miles to go. I was really starting to falter from the hard pace at the beginning. I tried to stay in contact with Chris and entered T2 about 10 seconds behind.

Bike Nutrition: 24 oz. bottle w/ ~200 calories of EFS w/ (1) scoop of PreRace & (1) Salt Stick capsule for extra electrolytes (nice tasting combo). I decided on a regular bottle and cage because I was afraid the aerobottle may have bounced out. Drank about 20 oz. in total on the bike)

Bike Totals: 54:07/27.5mph avg
T2: :59

Run (6.2 miles):
Going onto the run, I made a big mistake by not bridging up to Chris. I let him dangle in front of me the entire run. Needed to be more aggressive but it was a good lesson to learn. I focused on my turnover and ran strong. The run has always been my Achilles heel but the work Lance has me doing is starting to pay off. I was running well but could not hold off Reed or Potts. Coming into the final straight before the turn into the finish, I could see all three guys ahead of me and I was overcome with excitement. It was the first time I felt like I was in the mix.
Run Nutrition: 1 serving of Liquid Shot at mile 1 & after that, I did not take anything else except water. I was hurting too much!

Run Totals: 35:21/5:42 per mile pace

Race Total: 1:49:05

I crossed the line 4th overall with a time of 1:49:05 w/ PR’s on the bike (54:07) and run (35:21).

http://www.personalbestnutrition.com/pbn/images/MIT09_Finish.JPG

With patience and hard work, things will continue to come together. I’m very pleased with the overall result and learned a lot from the race. There is nothing better than racing the best in the sport and seeing where you stack up.

http://www.personalbestnutrition.com/pbn/images/MIT09_LietoYoder.JPG
Post Race: Chris Lieto & Andrew Yoder

I would like to thank my sponsors for their continued support: 1st Endurance, Kiwami, Lance Watson of Lifesport, Elite Bicycles, FIT Multisports, HED, Shimano, Spinners Cycling and Personal Best Nutrition .

A special thanks to Wilber and Linda for their hard work in putting together an amazing race. Wilber’s passion to put on a great race is awesome and he has created a season opener that will become a classic! Also, a big thank you to my homestay Larry Soroka who took great care of me.

Congratulations to everyone who raced this past weekend! Thanks for reading.

Next Race: St. Anthony’s

-Andrew


Nice job, thanks for the info. I like reading these.

Awesome post and very motivating! Congrats on the 4th place finish!

27.5 MPH on the bike… Dang!

Any guesses as to what he was doing to himself while crossing under the finish banner. :slight_smile:

Very nice! Gotta work on the finish-line pose though: looks like yer checking out yer junk!

Congratulations on a fantastic race. It sounds like foregoing college for a while was the right decision for you. Nice job on the bike.

Any guesses as to what he was doing to himself while crossing under the finish banner. :slight_smile:
Perhaps he took the pre-race advice to “let it all hang out” a bit too literally?

A couple of things:

  1. Be sure to point out that you are not Andrew Yoder (or whoever’s race report you post)
  2. Why was Andrew concerned about his aero bottle bouncing out?
  3. How did he feel after taking in so few calories on the bike/run?

Adding another outstanding athlete to the PBN stable…

After going those speeds I’d be checking to make sure all my danglies were still intact, too.

Congrats to Andrew on a great race!

Gotta respect anyone who follows their passion and puts the work in to make it happen.

Looking forward to reading more of Andrew’s race reports this season.

I wish my Achilles heal was my sub 5:45/mi 10K after a 27.5mph 40K bike ride.

Dang…

Great Race!

I agree Brian at PBN is very helpful and has alot to offer about nutrition!

1) Be sure to point out that you are not Andrew Yoder (or whoever’s race report you post)
I thought including the name ANDREW YODER - 4th Place Pro in the subject line was fairly self explanatory ;o)

***2) Why was Andrew concerned about his aero bottle bouncing out? ***
He was kicking around the idea of using an aero bottle in his aerobars. I haven’t seen how he intended to set this up & possibly it wasn’t ‘rigged’ in a way he felt comfortable w/ esp when you’re coming off these bridges w/ large seems in the pavement at speeds in excess of 40mph.

3) How did he feel after taking in so few calories on the bike/run?
For an OD race, I am much more concerned w/ fluid & electrolyte intake than I am about calorie intake. In the span of a 1hr49min race, he’s not going to get in such a depleted state from a calorie perspective, that it would negatively impact his race. That coupled w/ the fact that he consumed somewhere in the vicinity of 1K calories before the race even started, left me w/ little concern that there would be a problem so long as he consumed most of that 24oz bottle.

We had also gone through a few ‘dry runs’ w/ this strategy over the last few weeks & felt confident it would work from a calorie intake stand point. The somewhat gray area was w/ regards to fluid intake as we weren’t able to replicate this in training (coming from PA & then racing in FL present 2 totally different plans).

Adding another outstanding athlete to the PBN stable…
It’s going to be a fun & interested '09 for us!


Why ultragen before race? Just curious, it seems like it is for recovery as opposed to pre-race, or maybe I’m just reading it wrong.

I wish my Achilles heal was my sub 5:45/mi 10K after a 27.5mph 40K bike ride.

Dang… **Yeah, how crazy is that. I have run a 5:42 exactly 2 times in the past year. And I did it one mile, and thought I was going to die! **


I’m not sure, no…I know I can’t do a 5:42 mile and probably never will.

Why ultragen before race? Just curious, it seems like it is for recovery as opposed to pre-race, or maybe I’m just reading it wrong.

Technically speaking, you’re right, Ultragen is designed as a *post-workout/race *recovery drink. With that, since we were trying to replace some of the solid calories Andrew was consuming, with a liquid form, Ultragen fit the bill perfectly. We could have also gone strictly w/ the EFS & achieved the same calorie #, but we were looking for something w/ a little broader nutrient profile (primarily the inclusion of a little protein), as it would be more filling & closer to replicating the solid calorie sources he used in the past.

I also want to add, this strategy is by no means the end all/be all & that you should be following the same strategy. It worked well for Andrew, so we’ll take that into account moving fwd, but that’s not to say we won’t make changes or that it won’t be improved upon. It’s important to realize, we experimented w/ this plan in training, it worked well & then also worked well when it mattered. Anyone reading this should always follow the same process of experimentation before ever using a new plan in an ‘A’ priority race.

I hope that makes sense, but please drop another post if anything is unclear.


****** ^^^ It makes perfect sense and I appreciate the response. I work well with protein before workouts/races etc…, I’ll have to ultragen a try and see if it works for me. I also want to try that pre-race formula too. Looks good though, not all athletes take nutrition seriously and seem to think that specific supplementation is not necessary. Of course, I disagree… Good luck on the entire season and keep us updated.