Of course, after midnight I started waking up every couple of hours. Around 4 I started feeling those butterflies in my stomach- I guess you could call them sympathy butterflies! Up and at 'em nice and early and we were heading out to transition right on time. We were only about 2 miles from transition, so it usually takes about 5-10 minutes to get there and get parked. Not this year. There was about 1.5-2 miles of backed up traffic at 5:45. After 15-20 minutes in line, we came upon a scenic view area with a few parking spots. We abandoned the cars there and hoofed it to transition. At this point, the race was 50 minutes away, so the warm-up run was a jog down to transition. We had been expecting rain and cooler temperatures, but it was still warm, just gray with no rain.
Janda and Dean headed into transition and got their gear ready and then Janda went to finish his warmup jog and hit the porta-potties. I met back up with him over by the swim start where he stretched out and got geared up. We reconnected with Dean here and found out that he had just further injured his shoulder and could not lift his up up properly! Of course, most people (me definitely) would have called it a day, but apparently Dean is not like most people and decided to start anyway!
At this point we found out that the race was delayed due to an accident out on the road, so everyone sat around shivering without wetsuits waiting for updates. Finally about a half an hour later, everything was back in place and the race got underway. Janda had a good no-wetsuit swim and came out of the water in 21st, 17th pro male and only 3-4 minutes back from the main group of guys. Dean swimming with 1 good arm came out quickly after Janda and was off in a flash.
The Start
Out on the bike
Two hours of waiting and finally guys start coming back in on the bike. Bjorn Andersson killed the bike and actually put a good gap into Andy Potts, but after those 2 came flying through, it was a bit of a wait. Guys started to trickle through and Janda hit transition in 9th. Dean came through a couple of minutes later- it turns out that he had had 2 issues out on the bike! Having to stop to fix one problem and then stop again and wait for the support car to bring him a wheel, he still biked within a minute of Janda!Back to transition
Out for loop 1
At this point I headed to the finish chute to wait for him. Andy Potts killed everyone, but then there was some shaking up of the order, so I hoped that Janda had managed to finish loop 2 strong and run by a few guys. In fact he had and I was extremely pleased to see him come down the chute in 7th! Given his run issue, I thought that this was a great placement.The finish
Probably b/c he couldn't push all out on the run, he was actually a little bit less screwed up that usual. He headed over and got a quick massage on the hamstring. Then we found Dean at the finish and found a somewhat shady spot to chill and eat/drink. By now the age-groupers were finishing, so we started getting reports from Janda's athletes. Amanda, who thought her race was only so-so, ended up being the 2nd amateur overall and only one of three amateur women who cracked 5 hours on a super hot and humid day.
After everything was said and done, we headed back to the camper, cleaned up and headed out. We grabbed some dinner on the way and we were relaxing on our own couch at 9pm. What a weekend!
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