

A blog dedicated to my gorgeous twin boys, my stunning wife and my sport of triathlon.
A thought - "If God invented marathons to keep people from doing anything more stupid, then the Ironman must have taken Him by surprise and Marathon Des Sables must have completely dumbfounded Him"
From the Ironman running rules "1. No form of locomotion other than running, walking OR CRAWLING is allowed"
"Do, or do not, there is no TRY" Yoda. "There is no Spoon" The Oracle
The Nexus race was organised by a group of the International schools in and around KL. Its primary focus is to introduce and involve the kids in triathlons. The categories started from the under 7's up to the Open Division.
On Sunday news started filtering through of a bike accident that resulted in the death of Yeoh Phee Keong (PK). PK was cycling on the Mex Hwy and was hit from behind by a car. 
CLICK TO ENLARGE

BIKE 2hrs13mins54secs
I saw Terry Walsh on the course so many times and he didn't miss cheering me once, awesome Terry, thanks buddy, it was really inspiring to hear you yelling me on.
I caught one of the drafters and left him behind. The other one was long gone. It was just a matter of time now, the finish was coming to me, soon I'd be turning right into the finish chute. And there it was, a quick look behind, didn't want to spoil the day by being pipped to the post. All clear. OK now look strong for the cameras, time to pretend how easy it was hahahaha.
I hung out with Jacob, Jean Pierre and Mark from Team Supersonic Biscuit at the finish. Jean Pierre had run past me as an impressive speed, he did the half marathon in 1hr15mins (his PB is 61mins), I was grabbing a drink at the time and thought "Oh no he thinks I'm walking" haha my ego is at work even then. They were stoked to have finished in 2nd place after Jabob and Mark's solid swim and bike and then JP's awesome run.
Shilpa messengered me that I was 3rd. I must admit, I was disappointed. I'd had a good race, my swim and run hadn't been as good as I'd have liked but I still thought I'd done enough to win. As it turns out the 1st place guy was 8mins30secs ahead of me, so you can't argue with that and the 2nd place guy was a minute and a half ahead and I never saw him, so fair enough. I thought I might get a chance of a roll down spot for the Worlds but realised I didn't have my wallet so set off on a mad dash to the hotel on the bike. I was soon lost and after trying for ages failed to flag a taxi down. In the end I managed to call one on the phone and he picked me up from the middle of nowhere.
All said and done, what a great weekend. Mission accomplished and Ironman 70.3 Worlds in Las Vegas here I come. Having said that, this pales into insignificance compared to my principle goal this year of qualifying for the Ironman Worlds in Kona. I took a lot away from this race, I need to triple my focus in my running and swimming and I need to get down to my goal race weight. Clearly I'm a long way from where I need to be, IMChina will expose any weakness and magnify it tenfold. But then this race was all about a reference check, I just need to respond to the knowledge gained. As my buddy Rocky so eloquently put it "I hope you eventually catch the bus that you are training so hard to run for". Haha, yes baby, I'm gonna catch that bus for sure.

I had great reservations about going to Xterra Philippines; my principle goal this year is to qualify for Ironman Kona and get that monkey off my back, especially as I came so close last year. I've had foot tendon problems in my right ankle for the past few years and I also had Achilles Tendinitis in my left foot. The last thing I wanted was to aggravate them in an off road race.
However, not being the smartest guy in the world I entered anyway, bought a super fandango sexy bike (aka "Baby") the week before the race and set about trying to learn how to ride it.
The long ride back to town on the bus was abandoned (no bus) and we hitched a lift in the back of a pick up truck. As time had gotten away from us we hung out at the welcome dinner venue in our smelly kit. Having been to 100's of these things before I knew not to expect much and when I saw the cultural dancers outside you could hear an audible groan eminate from my lips. However I take it back, the show was magnificant, really really professional, about 80 dancers and quite honesty I would have paid to go an watch it. Very impressed. The lady Govoner was there and the local lady Senator who not only did the race but also qualified for Maui.
The course wasn't too technical for the most part and when it was I just got off and ran. It was a two lap course and I soon caught loads of people (a reflection of my poor swimming skills not my magical MTB skills). I missed a couple of technical turns and sudden unexpected inclines but on the whole I thought I did OK. I improved measurably on the second lap - a steep learning curve!
I came across the line with a huge smile on my face and totally within myself, which is a nice change, generally at the end of a Olympic distance race I spend a good half an hour collapsed on the concrete about 3 steps over the finish line haha.
So there we have it. Like many I've been dreaming of a Speed Concept for sometime, don't get me wrong I loved my TTX SSL 9.9 (Black Beauty) and she was pimped up to the gills with Tula aerobars, Xlab Carbon Wing bottle mount, carbon/ti pedals, San Marco saddle and she was fast as they come but I coveted a Speed Concept just too much. I decided to go with the personalised paint job via Trek's Project One programme, I intend this to be my bike for many years to come (but we shall see). I rode it yesterday, an 84k ride that I use as part of my Ironman build up, I've done this ride many times before and yesterday was the fastest every a minute, without trying (although there's always going to be a bit of a boost on a new bike - placebo effect). All in all I couldn't be happier.
I'm loving the aerobox at the back. Tidies things up a lot with tools and spares nicely hidden away in there. Not to mention the sneaky way Trek have used the box to increase the aero advantage but within the UCI rules. Nice one Trek. Cervelo also did it on the P4 with their aero bottle of course (it's just a pity that the P4 is so ugly - haha)
With Trek's Project One you can opt to have your bike personalised with a name, I went for my pseudonym TriTwins which seemed appropriate, none contentious and no biggie if I sell the bike at some point in the future.
I'd committed to myself that if I was going to spend this sort of money on the ultimate bike then there would be no compromises. Therefore, I went with the electronic gear set with Shimano's Dura-ace Di2. Every time I change gear I chuckle to myself, it's just so mad to have electric gears on a bike. I have to say though that they save a slit second every shift and NEVER miss a gear or skip/scrape between gears. This has got to save time on the course, maybe only a minute over an Ironman but if you're trying to qualify then that makes a significant difference.
More on the no compromise front, I bought the horribly expensive SRM power meter, I've been told by triathletes that I greatly respect that I'm missing a piece of the puzzle by not using a power meter.
Looking from the cockpit the SRM head unit and the Di2 buttons, both on the aerobars and the brake levers - a real luxury if you're climbing and out of the aero position. Very Cool.