AUSTIN TRIATHLON CLUB
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Happy 3-Month Birthday, Austin Triathlon Club!

2/6/2018

 
Three months ago tonight, Austin Triathlon Club held its kickoff happy hour at the Ginger Man. Since that night, we have been working hard to build a community triathlon club that we hope will serve Austin for years to come. Thank you for getting involved in this all-volunteer effort, and thank you for supporting this club. Whether you're a member, a sponsor, or a facebook fan, we're excited to be working with you to serve the Austin community!

We have so much to be proud of and so much to be excited about. Here are few of the highlights from our first three months:

  • Austin Triathlon Club is building a welcoming and inclusive community of triathletes. Since our launch, Austin Triathlon Club has welcomed 73 new members, with more joining every week. Our members range from beginners training for their first triathlon to experienced Ironman athletes to professional triathletes. Some have coaches. Some are part of teams. Some train solo. Some are retired from triathlon. Together, we're a community of triathletes across the Austin area who have come together to support each other and this amazing city.
 
  • We are working out, having fun, and getting in shape. Club members have been organizing informal weekly workouts across the area, whether it's at Brushy Creek, Town Lake, or anywhere in between. Starting in January, the Club started hosting official rides and runs on a monthly basis. Starting next month, we will be hosting monthly swims, too!
 
  • We are learning and supporting each other. In January, Austin Triathlon Club teamed up with the great folks at Austin Tri Cyclist for a beginner bike clinic. In February, we're teaming up with RunLab for a run biomechanics clinic. In March, we're teaming up with Bicycle Sports Shop for a transition clinic. We have also been supporting the super helpful and educational community clinics being done at Bicycle World.

  • We are paying it forward. Austin Tri Club has 14 triathletes being mentored by experienced triathletes. We have a wonderful group of first-timers training for the Rookie Triathlon and other races coming up in 2018. We can't wait to cheer them on!
 
  • We are crushing the off season. We have 25 triathletes competing for Austin Triathlon Club in the USAT National Challenge Competition. These Club members have logged thousands of swim, bike, and run miles this off season. These athletes are in great shape to tackle the 2018 race season! Can't wait to see what our 2018 NCC team will look like!
 
  • We have incredible supporting partners. Austin Triathlon Club is extremely lucky to have so many wonderful supporting partners who wanted to get involved right from the beginning. Our club partners include local businesses: Austin Massage Company, Castle Hill Fitness, Chapter Fitness, City Limit Cycles, Dynamic Sports Medicine, Restore Cryotherapy, Revolution Mobile Bike Repair, RunLab, and Stewart Mickler Designs, plus national vendors Infinit Nutrition,  Orca, Power Meter City, Road ID, Rudy Project, Running Warehouse, TrainingPeaks, TriBike Transport, Xterra Wetsuits, and xx2i Optics.
     
  • We are planning for the future.  Austin Triathlon Club recently welcomed three new board members, Leslie Andrews Booker, Jennifer Standley, and Dena Childs. Together, we are listening to club members and community stakeholders to plan for 2018 and beyond. On the horizon are club kits, triathlete panels, community bricknics, and a variety of initiatives to accomplish our mission of making triathlon accessible to everyone in Austin.

Thank you to everyone who has pitched in so far. The Club is not possible without your support, enthusiasm, and willingness to give back to the Austin tri community. We hope to see you at the next club happy hour on Saturday, February 24th, at Flour and Vine!

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Austin Triathlon Club is a 100% volunteer, member-run club launched in October 2017. Austin Tri Club aims to improve the physical fitness and mental well-being of all members of the Austin community through the promotion and encouragement of the sport of triathlon. Click here to read more about our mission and values. ​

Triathlon Training 101

1/18/2018

 
Triathlon training

Training for 3 sports at once requires a bit of a different mindset, but follows some of the same methodologies used in other training regimes.   Most people utilize training plans, which layout out daily workouts over the course of the several weeks leading up to a race.  They will normally will range from 12 to 16 weeks, and often require you to do two workouts a day at some point.  This will not only work your body, but your mental toughness as well which, I believe, is an often-overlooked aspect of training.

If you’ve trained for races like marathons, you are probably familiar with periodization training.  Not to be confused with training periodically mind you.  This is the methodology of breaking down a training plan weekly into 4 distinct periods or phases which are Base, Build, Peak, and Taper.  Each has a different goal and approach with the overall goal of getting you to the peak of fitness just in time for your goal race.  Note that some plans have more distinct phases and that’s fine, there is a lot of variability in training and this is meant as a general overview to get started.
​
When training for triathlons, a common type of training you’ll probably see is referred to as the “Brick”.  This is often where you’ll have a bike ride followed immediately by a short run.  From what I’ve been told, these are called “Bricks” as your feet will often feel like bricks when you start to run.  This kind of training I feel is important as it gets you used to moving from one sport to another.    Training moving from swimming to biking would also be good, but you’ll see less of it as it is much harder to coordinate.

And while we are on the subject, transition training is a good thing to work in at some point before the race.  Often referred to as the 4th discipline, time spent in transition is time you aren’t biking or running.  The transition between swim and bike is often referred to at T1 and the transition between bike and run is referred to at T2.  For example, improving your T1 + T2 time by 45 seconds each is like running your 5k on a sprint triathlon about 30 seconds per mile faster.  And you’d be surprised how long you can take in transition if not prepared.  Not all transitions are done the same way, so research how your goal race does them and have a plan and practice the plan before the race.

Phases of Training

Base

The goal of this is to have fun, build your aerobic endurance, improve technique, and build strength.  As the name suggests, this lays the foundation for training.  Think of it as the baseline of where you want to start from when you start building towards your peak.  Like climbing steps so that when you jump, you reach higher.  In general, I regard any time between specific race training, to be “base” training.  This includes the “off season” as I believe consistency in training leads to an ever improving fitness and faster racing.

Generally this has a lower volume of workouts, but is the best time to hit the gym, to work on that swim stroke, and enjoy a bit of cross training like yoga, that will help reduce the chance of injury when you start increasing the intensity during the next phases.

Build

Training during this phase/period should grow in volume, intensity, and become more specific.  The workouts should also be increasingly more like the your goal race. Often, you’ll have a few build weeks followed by a “Easy” week where volume and intensity go down.
You’ll be pushing your mind and body harder and harder during these weeks, so you should pay extra attention to take good care of your body.  Nutrition is very important to help your body recover from the hard workouts.  This is a great time to schedule massages and to foam roll. 

Peak

Volume and intensity of training grows once again.  Emphasis on aerobic endurance and a decrease on drills.  Training here should be very close to the distances and intensity you’ll see and do on race day and, depending on the goals and race type, may exceed it. 

Mental and physical demands will be at their highest at this point and so should be your attention to recovery and nutrition.
 
Taper/Race

You’ve done your longest and hardest swims, runs, and bikes, but it’s still one to two weeks away from your race?  This period is called the Taper and, for some, it’s one of the hardest parts of training.
This doesn’t mean you stop training and start eating badly.  Maintaining your diet and continue to train with the goal of maintaining the fitness you’ve built, along with recovering psychologically.
Volume and intensity is usually dialed back so your body and mind will be fully repaired and ready for race day.  Usually training will switch to short intense workouts that don’t exhaust you, but still keep your body sharp and ready for race day.
 
Other considerations:

Coaches

Static plans, like the above sample plans, can be found online and in several books.  Joe Friel and Matt Fitzgerald are great sources.  But those plans and books don’t know you, they don’t know your strengths and weaknesses.  The static plans can’t see you run nor see you swim.  How do you adjust the plan if something goes wrong, like a sickness, that throws a wrench into the plan?  This is where coaches come in.
​
Having a coach helps not only be able to adjust your plan and make it more dynamic, but they can help with your form and give you advice that comes from years of training, racing, and experience.   For years, I did my own training plans and they worked out well, but I decided to employ a coach when I wanted to take it to the next step.
 
Recovery and Rest
​

Rest Days and Sleep are just as important as Long Runs in building fitness and endurance.  The importance of this increases with age.  Training puts stress on your body, but it doesn’t make you stronger or faster.  Your body rebuilding itself makes you stronger and faster, but it only does this during rest periods.  So it’s a good idea to have in your plan the ability to get a good night's sleep and has at least one rest day.

Also important is recovery after your race.  Depending on the demands of the race, having a plan to take some time off and/or slowly start back into light training, building back towards your base training is a good idea.  Be sure to plan for this however and stick to it as 1 or 2 weeks off can easily turn into 6 months as I can personally attest to.

Injuries

Nothing will impact your racing more than injuries.  I used to race a friend who was much younger than me, but I would routinely beat him in races.  He was much fitter and faster than me though so it frustrated him greatly.  One day, I let him in on a little secret, I was wiser than him.  You see, the reason I beat him was because he was always injured on race day.  He would push so hard in training, that he’d hurt himself.   I was older and listened to my body while training as to avoid injury as much as possible, so I was able to race at my fullest on race day.  Needless to say, he listened to my advice and started training smarter and I never came close to beating him again. 

Moral of the story is to learn to listen to your body.  This is a big part of where the mental part of triathlon comes into play.  Another friend of mine was told he needed to learn to run uncomfortably, which is true.  Your body will hurt when training and training, but it is up to you to learn if it’s a discomfort that can be ignored, or a pain you need to take notice of.   Pay attention and listen to your body.  Everyone has limits and pushing to them and not beyond them is the goal.
 
Sample Sprint Plans
http://www.triradar.com/training-advice/sprint-triathlon-training-plans/
http://www.triathlete.com/2017/09/training/12-week-super-simple-sprint-triathlon-training-plan_306300
https://www.active.com/triathlon/articles/a-12-week-triathlon-training-plan-for-beginners?clckmp=activecom_global_mostpopulararticles_pos1&page=2
http://www.lifetimetri.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Sprint-LT-Tri-Training-Plan.pdf
http://ironman.timex.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/12-week-beginner-sprint-triathlon-Timex-BD.pdf?cid=TPN
 
Other References:
http://triathlon.mit.edu/documents/recovery_importance.pdf
http://www.joefrielsblog.com/2017/12/sleep-part-1.html
https://www.active.com/triathlon/articles/when-to-push-past-the-pain-in-triathlon-training?page=1

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About the Author - Larry is a long-time triathlete who has completed every distance of triathlon, including three Iron-distance triathlons. Larry recently qualified for the 2018 USAT Olympic-Distance Age Group National Championships in Ohio. Larry is currently serving as Austin Tri Club's Director of Training and Group Workouts. To read more about Larry and the rest of the Austin Tri Club board, check out our Club Leadership page.

Happy One-Month Birthday, Austin Triathlon Club!

12/6/2017

 
PictureSeveral of the club founding members after the kickoff swim


One month ago tonight, the Austin Triathlon Club was holding its kickoff happy hour. At the time, the club officers were a bit nervous. We weren't sure how many folks would show up. We knew that most people probably hadn't heard of us, and might not know what to expect. Since Austin Tri Club is entirely volunteer, word about the club was spread primarily by word of mouth and grassroots enthusiasm.  Looking back a month later -- what a journey it's been!

As of this morning, Austin Triathlon Club has 38 members, with more members joining every day. Our members range from beginners hoping to complete their first triathlon to coaches to professional triathletes. We are truly grateful for the support and the faith that these founding members have placed in Austin Tri Club to deliver on its promise of serving as a community triathlon club for Austin -- and for throwing themselves into Club activities right off the bat. We are so excited to know you!

So, what has the Club been up to in its first month?  

  • The New Triathlete Mentoring Program is up and running. We have 8 triathletes being mentored by experienced triathletes, who are volunteering their time to share tips, support, and words of encouragement. Our club is founded on the principle of paying it forward!
 
  • We have 19 triathletes competing for Austin Triathlon Club in the USAT National Challenge Competition.  These Club members have already logged over one hundred swim, bike, and run miles, and we're only 6 days into December!  Even when it's cold, dark, and rainy outside, we're riding on our indoor trainers!
 
  • Austin Tri Club members have registered early for 2018 Ironman Arizona and 2018 Ironman Waco 70.3! As an official Ironman Tri Club, members have access to early registration for Ironman races, before registration opens to the public.
 
  • Austin Tri Club held its first ever NCC Kickoff Swim Night, with club members swimming circles around each other to start the month of December!  Afterwards everyone went to Whole Foods and had a great time eating dinner and catching up over drinks.
 
  • Club members have been taking advantage of discounts through our club partners. Word is that at least one member bought her family Christmas gifts using her club discounts!
 
  • Club members have been connecting through social media to organize group swims, rides, and runs! Unfortunately, our club ride this past Sunday got rained out. Nevertheless, club members powered through and ate their share of breakfast tacos!
 
  • Our amazing Director of Training and Group Workouts Larry Norris is busy planning a schedule of group workouts and clinics that will begin in the New Year. Not to mention a wealth of training resources that he cannot wait to share with everyone. Keep up the great work, Larry!
 
  • The Club has received an outpouring of support from athletes, coaches, and organizations across the triathlon community.  We are excited to work together and collaborate with so many amazing people to grow the sport of triathlon in Austin!

Thank you to everyone who has pitched in so far. The Club is not possible without your support, enthusiasm, and willingness to give back to the Austin tri community. We hope to see you at the next club happy hour on Monday, December 11th, at the Ginger Man!

​Let's make 2018 the best race season ever!

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Austin Triathlon Club is a 100% volunteer, member-run club launched in October 2017. Austin Tri Club aims to improve the physical fitness and mental well-being of all members of the Austin community through the promotion and encouragement of the sport of triathlon. Click here to read more about our mission and values. 

Introducing your best off-season ever with NCC!

11/1/2017

 
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When Club President Daniel first proposed starting Austin Triathlon Club the first thing that came into my head was NCC... I love NCC! 

NCC is the USAT National Challenge Competition: a triathlon club team competition where club members log swim, bike and run miles to collect points for their team. Triathlon clubs across the country compete to become NCC champions. Throughout the competition athletes can log miles in any discipline, but prizes are given for teams logging the most swim miles in December, bike miles in January, and run miles in February.

I did my first NCC in the 2013-2014 off-season and while I was a little sluggish in swim month and bike month (DC is cold!), when run month came I decided it was mine for the taking. In my previous on-season I had done an Ironman and an ultra marathon, so my legs were capable of doing a lot of miles. And when I saw that I could help DC Tri win the competition, and that I had a teammate on my heels racking up points at the same rate as I was, that was motivation to not miss a day. 

In my 2014 season, I was supposed to be not taking it and just racing for fun, but even without trying very hard I got a PR in practically every distance - marathon, half marathon, 70.3, Olympic... The friendly competition of NCC had been enough to get out there and build the base for my best season ever and led me to meet some really great people - including husband Club President Daniel, who chased me around the pool as he tried to figure out how to ask me out.

Since then, every year I get excited about NCC - even though I'm not in the same shape I was that first NCC year, it's great motivation to keep me training and not give in to the winter. In 2017, I'm excited about the prospect of entering an Austin Triathlon Club team. With the amazing community of triathletes and the resources we have for winter training - not least the weather - I'm convinced that Austin can be up there competing with DC Tri, Salt Lake, and San Diego.

The best part of NCC is that it doesn't matter how fast you run the miles or swim the laps, it's the taking part (or the points) that count!

Meghann Jones
​Vice President, Austin Triathlon Club

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    Welcome to the Austin Triathlon Club blog! Through this blog, Austin Tri Club members can share their triathlon knowledge and experiences. If you are interested in blogging for Austin Tri Club, please contact us.

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