London.
A race that I had great hopes for coming into, as I have had some solid results
recently, and coming off of the back of a good training block I was feeling
strong, but a race I was nervous about as I had a poor run last year.
The good
thing about London is due to the fact it is a long way to first buoy, the start
isn’t quite as important, however I was lucky in that I managed to follow a set
of feet all the way to the front of the race, after starting on the left hand
side of the start. From there it was a case of settling into my rhythm, and
getting dragged along. Surprisingly no one came past, meaning I exited the water in
second. Then came my first big mistake… I ran past all the volunteers holding
out bags to put the wetsuits in, so had to then try to fight against the
traffic, to finally locate a bag and head into transition.
Coming out
of T1 I was just off the back of the lead pack, and frustratingly, I couldn’t quite
catch back on, hence I had to ride the next 10k or so on my own before the chase
pack caught. I sat in to get my legs back for a couple of kilo meters, and then
started working. It was nice to see a lot of the group coming to the front for
a change, and as such we closed the gap slightly to the leaders, meaning coming into T2 they had about 30 seconds.
Cue my next
mistake, and coming into T2, I was near the front, but hadn’t got my feet out
the shoes quick enough, so it was a bit if a messy dismount, and in the panic,
for reasons unknown, I decided to undo my helmet as I was running into the
Excel. Quickly realising my mistake I stopped and did it back up before anyone
noticed, but I had lost precious time in doing so.
After last
years debacle on the run, where I nearly collapsed due to the heat, and, due to
the fact it was very hot again, I decided to set out a little conservatively on
the run. Soon I found myself picking
off several of the guys from my bike pack and even a couple from the leaders. Last
lap I was feeling strong, and coming into the finish, I noticed good friend and
rival Luke Pollard up the road, so gave it everything trying to catch, and on
the line I just got him to 7th overall, and 4th in the
Standard Distance British Championships. On crossing the line, I could see that
Luke was in a bad way suffering from the heat, so it was good to hear that he
was OK a few hours later.
A race
where I was pleased with the result, but not so much how I got there. Luckily I’ve
got another chance to put those mistakes right this weekend against a very
strong field in the British Sprint Championships in Liverpool.
Thanks once
again for the support from Anchura Partners, Red Venom and HUUB design, without
none of this would be possible.
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