Center City Slam
Posted: February 10th, 2018, 4:55 pm
1st place 7:18.0 60+ open weight
Pretty happy with this one. There were (6) guys in my class including a couple of established local OTW rowers. Really had no idea what to expect, I planned on going out pacing to go under 7:20 again and see how the race played out. I had also decided I was racing for a placing; they had some really cool looking medals and I really wanted one. This is a pretty big event and since I'm skipping Boston and WIRC I was making this my target for erg season. Traditionally this is a cold, very dry environment; it's held at the Drexel Armory in Philadelphia. It was a relatively warm day so conditions were better than previous years. I saw quite a few people I know. All the coaches and local HS teams from the Cooper River boat house were there. Mike Smith was there and he had big plans. I was feeling pretty good and went through my normal warm up. Last time I was here I almost missed my start time so I was a little more attentive this time.
I got called up and sized up the competition. The guy next to me was a tall, big, fit looking guy. Every bit of 6'3" and 210lbs. A couple of other fit looking guys. My plan is always the same. Pull my number and take a look around at the half way point. I set the foot stretchers, dial in my 110df, pick up the handle, and get ready. 5-4-3-2-1 ROW!
I drill it down and with-in ten strokes I'm at a 1:48 average. Perfect! Start to settle in and by the 1500m mark I'm looking at 1:49.0. I'm in third place, one guy off the front by 30m, everybody else close. Pretty amazing how fast things started to shake out. Right now I'm thinking "1:49-50 for the next 250m". By 1250m to go there's a big separation in the field. The top three are putting big distance on 4th,5th, and 6th. I'm not going any faster; but I ain't slowing down either. Hitting 1:50-51's. I tell my self to just settle in, hold my number, and get down to 1000m.
I cross the 1k mark and half the field is done, off the screen.3rd place is hanging on at 20m back and first pace is 7-8 meters ahead. I always tell myself the only time I really need to "man up" and suffer is from 1k down to 750m. One minute of torture. By the 750m mark 3rd has drifted back, 1st is 4-5m ahead. I decide to just hang right here and attack him at the sprint, I'm feeling pretty good.
Then around the 600m mark the inexplicable happens. 1st place HD's! I immediately attack with out even thinking about it. He picks up the handle, but now he's 30m back. I'm thinking I can back off a bit and relax, but I keep pulling 1:47-48. He HD's again and I just keep pushing with a little sprint at the end. 1st place and a really cool medal for the collection.
Same strategy I employ at every event. Stick to my plan, pull my number, trust my training. I'm with in 7/10's of my best event last year (7:17.3) so it's good to see my fitness hasn't really dropped off. I'll be targeting to get under 7:18 at Swan Creek in three weeks.
Pretty happy with this one. There were (6) guys in my class including a couple of established local OTW rowers. Really had no idea what to expect, I planned on going out pacing to go under 7:20 again and see how the race played out. I had also decided I was racing for a placing; they had some really cool looking medals and I really wanted one. This is a pretty big event and since I'm skipping Boston and WIRC I was making this my target for erg season. Traditionally this is a cold, very dry environment; it's held at the Drexel Armory in Philadelphia. It was a relatively warm day so conditions were better than previous years. I saw quite a few people I know. All the coaches and local HS teams from the Cooper River boat house were there. Mike Smith was there and he had big plans. I was feeling pretty good and went through my normal warm up. Last time I was here I almost missed my start time so I was a little more attentive this time.
I got called up and sized up the competition. The guy next to me was a tall, big, fit looking guy. Every bit of 6'3" and 210lbs. A couple of other fit looking guys. My plan is always the same. Pull my number and take a look around at the half way point. I set the foot stretchers, dial in my 110df, pick up the handle, and get ready. 5-4-3-2-1 ROW!
I drill it down and with-in ten strokes I'm at a 1:48 average. Perfect! Start to settle in and by the 1500m mark I'm looking at 1:49.0. I'm in third place, one guy off the front by 30m, everybody else close. Pretty amazing how fast things started to shake out. Right now I'm thinking "1:49-50 for the next 250m". By 1250m to go there's a big separation in the field. The top three are putting big distance on 4th,5th, and 6th. I'm not going any faster; but I ain't slowing down either. Hitting 1:50-51's. I tell my self to just settle in, hold my number, and get down to 1000m.
I cross the 1k mark and half the field is done, off the screen.3rd place is hanging on at 20m back and first pace is 7-8 meters ahead. I always tell myself the only time I really need to "man up" and suffer is from 1k down to 750m. One minute of torture. By the 750m mark 3rd has drifted back, 1st is 4-5m ahead. I decide to just hang right here and attack him at the sprint, I'm feeling pretty good.
Then around the 600m mark the inexplicable happens. 1st place HD's! I immediately attack with out even thinking about it. He picks up the handle, but now he's 30m back. I'm thinking I can back off a bit and relax, but I keep pulling 1:47-48. He HD's again and I just keep pushing with a little sprint at the end. 1st place and a really cool medal for the collection.
Same strategy I employ at every event. Stick to my plan, pull my number, trust my training. I'm with in 7/10's of my best event last year (7:17.3) so it's good to see my fitness hasn't really dropped off. I'll be targeting to get under 7:18 at Swan Creek in three weeks.