Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Aero Field Testing: Is DZ Nutz?

For the first time this year I had a nice opportunity to do some aerodynamic field testing.  My bike was all setup from a race on Sunday and the weather finally was forecasting a calm day.  I also had a simple position change that I wanted to test out.  As I mentioned in my blog about my race on Sunday, I decided to try out DZs stacked hand position, guessing that it seemed faster.  So I tried a simple A/B/A/B protocol with two laps each on my half-pipe.  I believe I executed all my lessons from last year, never shifting gears, soft peddling, good turnarounds, good settings on my head unit, etc.  My bike setup was much like last year, except I was using a disc wheel this year (which actually made magnet setup easier).  Maybe at some point I'll document photos of the two positions, but for now I'll just describe them.  Position A is my "standard" setup, fairly narrow elbows with my forearms resting on my water bottle and my hands gripping the shifters.  Position B is my "stacked hands" version where I hold my left hand on the top of the water bottle and stack the right on top of that with my forearms essentially touching each other.  For reference I put a picture of my bike and front end at the end of this post.

Results:
My run results looked very clean in aerolab and were quite consistent. Ideally I would have done another couple of runs, but the magnet fell off when I did a faster higher power pass.
  A1: CdA .229
  B1: CdA .218
  A2: CdA .225
  B2: CdA .215
Conclusion: DZ is not nutz!


AeroLab Pictures
Configuration A Run #1

Configuration B Run #1

Configuration A Run #2

Configuration B Run #2


Details:
Bike+Rider: 162.5 lbs/73.7 kg
Temp: 73 degrees F
Dew Point: 46.4
Rho: 1.1850
Barometric Pressure: 29.9 Hg
Wind: NE 3-4 mph
Quarq offsets: -150, -153, -148, -149

Position Pictures



 

 





Monday, May 21, 2012

Columbia Triathlon 2012: Race Report

Yesterday morning, I raced in the Columbia Triathlon as a relay with my wife for the second year in a row.  Just like last year, I took the swim and bike legs of the relay and my wife acted as the pinch runner.  We had a great time at the race and ended up improving our times in each of the three legs.  The field at this race is pretty competitive, so even with our improved times, we only improved a little in overall place and came 6th out of the mixed relays with a time of 2:31:28.

Swim Training/Prep
I've now discussed it in a couple blog entries, but I'll mention it one more time.  This winter I increased my swim volume by quite a lot and saw some nice gains in my pool times and a good result last week in an open water swim.  This last week, some online friends suggested experimenting with various breathing patterns to increase the amount of oxygen you get during the swim.  I tried this out a few times this week during swim workouts and planned to give it a shot during the race.

Cycling Training/Prep
Last year, my goal race was Eagleman Aquavelo, a distance that I had not done well on previously on the bike and thus felt the need to have a lot of cycling volume.  This year, I didn't sign up for Eagleman or any other longer races in the spring and was focusing on increasing my speed on shorter races.  For me, this meant working on my FTP (functional threshold power) during the early season.  The reading I've done on some online resources such as Slowtwitch and the wattage forums suggested some workout (e.g. 2x20s) that were fairly time efficient on the indoor trainer.  I also started using some workout videos from "Sufferfest", which helped tremendously with the motivation to go hard when training inside.  As I did last year, I continued to track my progress using my power meter and GoldenCheetah's performance manager which was again helpful for tracking fatigue and tapering for events.  The reduced volume meant a lower total CTL, but I did see some FTP gains and felt faster on less total bike training time.
Weight
First, a little background story.  After doing well last year, quite a number of people said to me something to the effect of, "Wow, if you could only run...".  This got me thinking that maybe after 15 years of not running and being pretty healthy that maybe a little running wouldn't hurt.  Perhaps I could do a sprint with a 5K run and limit my run training volume (aquarunning?).  If I was going to run, I decided I would try to get as light as I could to limit any stress on my back and picked a 140 lbs as a goal.  In the past I had always raced at about 150 lbs, but I'd been below 140 lbs back when I played soccer in college.  In parallel, I hunted down a good neurosurgeon and setup an appointment to ask a professional how dangerous it would be for me to run.  The busy appointment schedule for the neurosurgeon meant I would have some time to work on the weight before getting his opinion.  In my normal analytical style, I went to work losing the weight by using a spreadsheet to track daily calorie deficits based loosely on the Hacker's Diet.  Here's a nice little plot showing my progress:
As a sort of proof that the world has an ironic sense of humor, I hit my goal weight of 140 lbs on the morning I had the follow up appointment with my neurosurgeon after getting an MRI of my back.  The MRI showed that my L5-S1 disc that I had surgery on twice was probably in ok shape, but that L4-L5 had a minor tear in the annulus and a herniation.  Fortunately, I was asymptomatic, but was told I'd be a fool to run and that my previous regime of avoiding running had probably saved me from additional issues so far.  Oh well, guess I'm not going to run!  On the plus side, being lighter should help my cycling speed on hilly courses like the Columbia Triathlon course.

Race Morning
I'm happy to report that finally my wave didn't go last.  Thank you race organizers.  This year they decided to put the relay wave start roughly in the middle, behind most of the age group men and before the age group women.  I was looking forward to not having to wait so long between transition setup and getting into the water.  I had a pretty good night's sleep and got up at about 5:40, made a cup of coffee to go and drove over to my standard "secret" local spot and walked the couple minutes to transition.  I had the pleasure of seeing some pros run by doing their warmups and gave a little shout out to Yoder, asking if he was going to win again and telling him I was routing for him.  I got to the transition area with plenty of time and did my standard setup: pump up the tires, tape up the holes on the aero wheels, attach the shoes to the bike, etc.  Given my earlier start time, I went over to the swim start early and watched the pros start.  I then had the first of many trips to the portajohn.  I got a bit worried by the third trip, remembering that my son had some GI issues at a party the night before.  It took till about midway into the swim before my stomach had completely settled down.

Swim: 21:34
I mentally had a stretch goal for the swim of 20:00, but thought that sub 21:00 was more realistic (last year I did 22:36).  My masters swimming friend Reg, who is a great open water swimmer, did about 20:00 last year, so my hope was to try to hang with him and see if I could do some drafting.  This worked great for the first few hundred yards.  We started the swim looking directly into the sun and I found sighting the buoys to be really difficult.  I somehow got confused for a short stretch and convinced myself that Reg was going offline.  No surprise, I was the one heading toward the wrong buoy and by the time I corrected, I had lost time and lost sight of Reg.  At that point I just got into a rhythm and tried to race at my own pace.  Once we hit the first turn and weren't looking into the sun, I managed to avoid any other navigation problems and swam the rest of the way uneventful.  I did make use of some of my new experimental breathing patterns (2:3 or 3:4 breathing) and felt pretty good by the end of the swim.  I didn't hit my goal time, but I was told that the course was probably a little longer this year, so it is more reasonable to look at overall place.   The online results don't make it especially easy to figure out, but I think I was roughly 70th out of 1700 vs 130th last year (and 5th out of the water for the relay teams).

T1: 1:39
I felt a little wobbly coming out of the water, but managed to trot over to my bike at a decent clip while taking off the top of my wetsuit.  As usual, I had to yell a bit at the crowd of people in transition to make some room, but this didn't really slow me down.  I had a touch of trouble getting the wetsuit off and had to sit down for a second.  Then I grabbed my helmet, put it on and ran off.

Bike: 1:03:20 (http://app.strava.com/rides/8931934)
The first minor challenge on the bike is to get my shoes on.  I admit that I didn't practice that much this year.  I practiced flying mounts with my shoes already clipped in four times the day before the race, even trying to pick the right spot on the course to start putting my feet in the shoes.  As usual, race day was slightly more difficult.  Maybe I should practice when my heart rate is 170+.  I waited for the first minor downhill section to start and managed to get my right foot in fine.  My left foot I managed to unclip my shoe with my foot barely in the shoe.  Fortunately, the shoe stayed with me and I managed to clip it back in and finally get the thing on my foot.  With that finally out of the way, I was ready to hammer.  I was feeling really good through the whole bike and feel like I made some improvements on my pacing.  In the past, I have had a habit of going too hard on the hills and "burning matches", which I've been advised is not the right strategy for even a hilly time trial.  While it makes sense to go a little harder up the steep sections, you want to keep your effort within a pretty narrow band.  I think this probably cost me a few strava KOMs up the climbs, but gave me a better overall time.  One other change I tried out was to use a hand over hand position based on DZ's position in the Tour of California time trial.  I had briefly experimented with this the day before the race and felt immediately comfortable doing it.  I'm sure I looked exactly like this:
I beat my previous year's time by about 1:30 and ended up with the 19th best bike split.  I was beaten by 12 of the 16 pro men, 5 of the 27 "open elite" division and one 40-44 age group athlete.  Not too shabby!

T2: 0:36
The bike to run transition is pretty easy for a relay.  I ran down the hill into transition, saw my wife waiting for me and ran to her.  She took the timing chip off my leg, put it on hers and ran off.

Fetching the Kids
My job after the bike is to go fetch my kids so we can all see my wife finish.  We live close enough to the race that this is a surprisingly easy thing to do.  I grabbed my backpack of our stuff so that we wouldn't have to come back to transition, walked my bike out of transition and hoped on for the short ride to our minivan parked just outside of the park.  I think I got to our house about 10 minutes after finishing the bike.  When I got home, I noticed two police cruisers parked outside the neighbor's house; apparently someone had tried to break into their place.  After a brief chit-chat about that, I took all my bike stuff inside, uploaded my ride to strava (KOM!), took a shower and gathered the kids into the car.  We drove the baby sitter home on the way to the park and made our way to the finish line with 10-15 minutes to spare!  With all that time to spare, I managed to forget the camera.

Run: 1:04:21
During my wife's training, she asked me one day to tell her a bit about "working through the pain".  I asked a bit more about what kind of pain; working through some muscle soreness or feeling a stitch in your side is what I assumed she was talking about.  Unfortunately, she said it was some knee and back pain.  We don't work through that kind of pain.  She was able to do some short or slower training runs without problems and thought she could make it through the race.  As we waited near the finish and she came into sight, I could see that she was in pain.  She had a grimace on her face and a limp to her stride that told me her knee was bothering her.  I was just hoping she hadn't hurt herself too badly.  Even with the injury issue, she managed to beat her time from last year by three minutes!

Post Race
After the race, we walked (my wife limped) up to the post race food and we found a nice shady spot to camp out for a bit while she recuperated.  I acted as gopher and got her and the kids food and drink.  As usual, the kids loved the treat of getting some chips and other snack food that they usually don't get.  After saying hello to a couple dozen friends who passed by, including an online friend who recognized me from my blog, I realized just how many friends I've made doing triathlons.  There was a variety of emotions, from the friends who were disappointed with their races,  to those who had placed in their divisions.  Overall, everyone seems to have enjoyed the beautiful weather we had and the well run race.

Summary
I managed to improve my swim, not quite to top 50 overall, but still clearly making strides, and I couldn't be happier with my bike.  As usual, I will compare myself with my 35-39 age group with the caveat that I didn't have to save anything for the run.  The guy who won my division (and has won the overall Celebration sprint that I had been targeting for my hypothetical run debut two years in a row) had the best swim+T1+bike time at about 1:27.  My swim+T1+bike time was about 1:26.  As one of my friends said post race (over and over), "...if only you could run...".

A friend who was describing his climbing adventure once told me a story about Ed Viesturs turning around within a few hundred meters of the peak of Everest because he had reached his turn around time limit for a safe decent.  My friend thought this was one of the bravest and smartest things he had ever heard about; to put off your year long goal within sight for safety sake.  I guess I have to be brave and smart like Ed and not do something stupid like run in a race just for some foolish pride...

EDIT: A Few Bike Shots
Someone asked about my bike setup, so here are a few shots, focusing a bit on the front end setup.



 

Sunday, May 13, 2012

2012 Centennial Lake Mile Swim: Another 2nd!

This morning I did the Centennial Lake Mile Swim, an open water swim held at the same lake as the Columbia Triathlon swim.  This was part of my planned foray into trying out other types of races (bike, swim) than just triathlons which I can't actually complete.  While I've done a number of open water swims as part of triathlons, this was my first actual swimming race since my early elementary school days on the neighborhood swim team.  The long and short is that I had a great race, came in 2nd by .6 seconds, and came in 4th overall.  

Preperation
As I laid out in a previous blog entry, I've done a lot of work on my swimming.  For almost 6 months, with a few exceptions for travel, I've been swimming 5 times a week with my masters team and getting about 20K yards/week.  The previous year, my first doing masters at all, I had typically averaged 3 practices, so this was a substantial increase in volume. During that period I've seen my pool times come down pretty significantly and my swim form and fitness improve substantially.  This would be my first real test of just how much I'd actually improved.  Apart from fitness prep, I also upgraded my equipment in the form of a new wetsuit.  I got a good deal on a used Tyr Hurricane 5, a well regarded fast suit.  This replaced the original cheap previous model year wetsuit I got in 2005 when I didn't know if I would swim more than one time in open water.  I figure after 7 years and over a dozen events it was time to upgrade.  I practiced with the suit early this week and felt really fast.  I also like that it gives me a six-pack that I'll never get naturally.

Race Morning
I had commented in my previous entries on bike racing how much easier the logistics were than triathlon.  This swim was even easier.  The lake is about a 5 minute drive from home and the only equipment I needed was my wetsuit and goggles.  The organizers sent a timeline before the race and just wanted us there about an hour before the start.  This meant that I was able to do our normal weekend morning routine with the kids, which was especially good given that it was Mother's day and meant I didn't have to foist all the childcare work on my wife just to go race.  After helping make "mommy" breakfast in bed, we all had our own breakfast, played for a bit and headed over to the race.

Pre-Race Registration and Sand Play
After parking, the whole family walked down toward the registration tent near the swim entrance.  There was a bit of a line, so I got in line while my wife setup with the kids.  Fortunately, my kids decided that the little sandy area outside the registration tent was an ideal sandbox to play in.  Registration itself was a breeze, grab a little packet with my swim cap, get body marked, get a timing chip and I was good to go.


Swim Friends
The day before the race, the organizers sent out a list of the heats so that we would all know when we were going to start.  Looking at the list, I immediately recognized the names of three of the swimmers in the top few heats (I was assigned to heat four).  Two were swimmers from my masters team, Columbia Masters, and another was a frequent poster on online triathlon website Slowtwitch.  I introduced myself to the Slowtwitch guy (Kevin) and we had a nice little conversation.  Turns out he is coaching one of the other guys I swim with who is doing his first triathlon this year.  I then caught up with the masters team guys as well as a handful of other familiar faces from masters swim practice.  It appeared that Columbia Masters was well represented at this event.




Quick Warmup 
After registration, the organizers gave us a chance to get in a quick warmup in the water.  I jumped at the chance since I needed to sort out a bit of a goggle issue.  I had bought a brand new pair of goggles (same model I'd used for a while) on Friday, hoping to eliminate leaks and fog, but at practice found that the new goggles leaked and were foggy.  I managed to try out the new and old pair and figured out that the old pair was going to work better.  It was also nice to get a sense for the water temperature, which felt perfect in a wetsuit.

Strategy
In my last two bike races, there were two distinct strategies.  For one, you wanted to stay in a group so that you could draft and save energy.  In the other, you were started staggered and it was illegal to draft, so you needed to meter your effort exactly.  An open water swim like this can be a little bit of a combination.  It was a time trial start, with heats seeded with faster times first going every 15 seconds or so, which should prevent large groups.  On the other hand, it is both legal and beneficial to draft, so if you can catch up with someone ahead or if you get passed, you can save some energy by swimming right on their feet.  I wasn't sure how accurate my relatively high seeding was; they asked for pool 1650 times and I guessed 20:00.  So I didn't really know if I would be able to catch anyone or get passed, but I planned to try to draft if the opportunity arose.  In terms of effort, I figured that it was much like the bike time trial, try to give the highest even effort that you can hold for the whole race.  Unlike my triathlon swims in this lake, I wouldn't need to bike after, so there is no excuse to hold back at the end.

Start
The swim start was a time trial start done in heats of three swimmers at a time.  I was in the fourth heat, which looked like it was going to be just me for a little while till another woman showed up.  Being early but not first was nice, I got to watch the first heats run in, but didn't have to wait long myself to make the plunge.








What Happened in the Water? 22:43
Racing in open water is a little bit of a weird experience in terms of understanding what is happening during the race.  You essentially live in a little sensory bubble that doesn't extend very far around you with periodic sighting ahead that you try to limit because it takes extra energy and can slow you down.  So you are aware of any swimmers that are within about an arms length to the side or ahead and might be able to tell who they are if they are particularly distinctive (size, suit, etc).  You can also make out where the splashing is ahead of you and make a reasonable guess how far ahead they are and whether you are losing or gaining ground.

After we ran into the water, I was focused on trying to catch up to the swimmers ahead and never saw what happened to the woman who started in my heat.  Based on my result, I assume I got and stayed ahead of her, but I certainly wasn't sure of that while in the water.  By the first turn buoy a hundred yards or so into the race, I could tell I was gaining ground on one swimmer and tried to catch up to him.  A few hundred yards more into the outbound straightaway I caught and passed a non-wetsuit swimmer who I realized post-race must have been my friend Reg.  This was a good sign for me since Reg is a great open water swimmer (at a big speed disadvantage without a wetsuit, but at least in a distinct division).  By the last buoy before the turn around point, I think I had caught one other swimmer, but don't remember clearly.  In both cases of passing, I didn't stay in the draft much since I wanted to do my own faster pace.  At that point, ahead I could see what looked like a pack of splashing that I wasn't making up much ground on.

A key point in the race came when I noticed that the pack ahead was swimming to the wrong turn buoy.  The course went clockwise around two turn buoys at the far end of the course.  The group was headed toward the right most buoy.  I've done a number of other races on this lake with similar layouts, so I knew the course and figured out pretty quickly that they weren't going the right way.  I could see that there was at least one person ahead going to the correct buoy and concentrated on trying to track that person down.  The turn and the backstretch were pretty uneventful. I could see that the group had finally figured out they went the wrong way, but at this point they were going to get to the right turn buoy after me.  I was able to keep the swimmer ahead in sight, but didn't make up or lose any significant ground as far as I could tell.

A final key bit of the race came right near the final turn back to the finish.  The course goes around a small island and then back to the start.  As we got to the island, I saw my new Slowtwitch friend going by on the left.  He started ahead and must have been in the group that went the wrong way.  I finally got the opportunity to draft for a little bit and managed to stay pretty tight onto his feet.  I then noticed that he wasn't taking a good line to the finish going to the far side of a buoy that we didn't need to go around.  I hesitated a little since I didn't want to get DQ'd right at the end, but eventually decided to try to peel off and go the more direct route.  This proved slightly harder than I thought since there was another guy right behind who I almost turned into.  After avoiding him, I headed to the finish.  In the end it probably didn't matter much since I got out of the water just after those two swimmers.  I guess I should have trusted my knowledge of the course, but it can be tough to make those calls quickly on the fly, especially when you think your getting a good draft. Here's the video of me coming into the finish.

Post Race
I had been a bit concerned about how long my kids would last post race and whether I would have to leave before they announced the results.  Fortunately, the organizers had provided a nice little buffet of snacks for the racers and my kids were entertained by trying the different snacks and playing in the sand.  This gave a nice chance to chat with my friends about how the race had gone.

Awards Ceremony
I knew that I had done well, especially by making up some ground on stronger swimmers with some good navigation.  Since there were awards given for two categories, wetsuit and non-wetsuit in each age group, I'll admit that I was expecting to win.  When the announcer called my age group and said a different name for first, I was a little surprised.  While I walked over to get the second place ribbon, it registered that he announced the first and second place times as a second apart!  As I walked away and commented to my friends about how close it was, the announcer said something to the effect that it was actually just .6 seconds.  I guess my 2nd place karma is very strong.
  
Post Race Thoughts
I am extremely happy with the race.  It was low key, easy to do logistically and I had a great time.  I feel like I swam well and definitely can see the hard work paying off.   4th place overall is higher than I had any right to expect.  And 2nd place by small margins seems to be my fate.  In the last year, I have four second places in various races by a grand total of less than a minute (11 seconds, 27 seconds, 15 seconds and .6 seconds).  Next week I get to swim in the same lake as part of the Columbia Triathlon.  Maybe my relay will get 2nd place?

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Hercules TT: Yet Another 2nd



Yesterday morning I raced my first individual time trial (ITT) at the C-130 Hercules Time Trial in Dover, DE.  An ITT is very similar to the bike leg of a triathlon, each rider goes off individually and races for their best time over a fixed course and drafting off of your competitors is not allowed.  I raced as a Cat5 (the intro category of bike racing) and placed 2nd, missing the Cat5 win by 15 seconds.  Cat5 can have quite a spread in abilities, especially in time trials.  ITTs don't count for getting promoted to higher categories, so some cyclists who only like to time trial (to avoid crash heavy events for example) stay Cat5.  Also, because of the similarity to triathlons, they sometimes attract strong triathletes who don't bike race much and thus are by default Cat5.

Bike Setup
The only new thing on my bike this year is a new disc wheel I bought used.  In theory this should be a little bit faster than my previous race wheels.  Here's what my ride looked like after a little pre-race wash down and tune up:
 
Race Morning Commute
When I signed up for the race, I saw that it was in DE and thought "that's about an hour away".  A couple days before the race I looked up directions and realized the race was all the way on the eastern shore, more like two hours away.  The race director sent out start times and I had an early start time at 9:03, so I decided I needed to leave at 6am or so.  Fortunately, that early there isn't traffic over the Bay Bridge, so the drive went quite smoothly.  I even followed another racer (obvious from the TT gear in his car) for 30 minutes or so till I needed to stop for gas.

Setup and Warmup
Not having raced like this before, I wasn't exactly sure what to bring and erred on the side of bringing just about all my worldly bike stuff in my little Audi TT.  I was told that lots of people warmup on trainers (which was true), I brought my trainer and a training wheel just in case.  I also had some minor concerns about the race number; I received some advice about how to put it on aerodynamically (spray glue + pins) that sounded a bit involved.  In the end, everything proved to be simpler than I had originally thought.  I put the wheels on my bike, pumped them up to pressure, taped over the valve hole cutouts and the bike was good to go.  I sprayed my race number with the glue, let it dry and stuck it on my tri-suit while wearing it to ensure a nice flat fit.  I then went to the bathroom, took off the tri-suit, added some pins from the inside to secure it (and because the rules say there must be pins).  When I checked in, I had asked about warming up and was told that there was a nice stretch of road the opposite direction from the course.  So after setting up everything I went and warmed up for about 15-20 minutes with a couple of short race effort intervals.

Race Strategy
An ITT isn't very exciting as a race.  Unless you happen to start near one of your competitors and get passed or pass them, you don't have any idea how you are doing relative to the field till the end.  The challenge is to give it your best effort and hope that is enough.  Since we started in alphabetical order of last names, I started second of the Cat5s, behind a half dozen or so juniors, meaning that I would have almost no idea how I was doing relative to the field unless I was getting passed.  In theory, with my power meter on the bike the best strategy is to stay at an even effort of my 1-hour max power.  I'd been given the advice that you need to be careful not to go out too fast, since it is easy to feel good at the beginning and fade.  Instead, I was advised to go a little easier at the beginning and try to crush the last 2 miles.

Race Course
I wish I had brought my camera to the race (pretty dumb for someone planning to blog about it afterward).  This race starts at the Air Mobility Control museum at the Dover Air Force Base in a big airfield with a dozen or so huge planes.  The time trial itself starts out of the back of a C-130.  To give an idea of what that looks like, here is another racer who posted his picture.  NOTE: THIS IS NOT ME!


The course itself consisted of about a quarter mile or so to exit the museum grounds and then an out and back along a pretty flat north-south stretch of Rt 9.  The finish line was a little before the entrance to the museum on Rt 9, so the back leg was a bit shorter (something I didn't realize till the end).

The Race Itself (http://app.strava.com/rides/7923876)
We lined up outside the side entrance to the C-130 in the order we were scheduled to start.  The plane held about 4-5 riders at a time queued up getting ready to start at 30 second intervals.  Since I was one of the early starters, I was in the plane almost right away.  The starter held my bike so I can start clipped in and warns me that the ramp is pretty steep and I'm off.  After navigating the turns and a bus that almost backed into me, I got out onto Rt 9 and tried to establish a nice tempo, reminding myself to take it easy.  I looked at my heart rate and saw I was at 180 bpm!  I figured high 170s was probably sustainable and tried to settle down a bit.  The rest of the race was pretty uneventful.  I passed the guy who went off 30 seconds ahead about 3-4 minutes into the course, which was a little unexpected (I think he was on a road bike).  I then passed another three or four guys on the outbound leg which was pretty motivating.  Near the turnaround, I got an idea of how far ahead the riders ahead were and could see that all but one were way out of range.  My goal for the back would be to catch that one guy.  I took the turnaround a bit gingerly; I think I actually went around the far side of a cone that I didn't have to just to be sure I wasn't cutting the course.  I think the wind was a fairly consistent 5-10 mph from the east, meaning it was a crosswind for pretty much the whole course.  I remember thinking that I was going into a slight headwind on the out leg and hoping to get a helping wind on the way back.  At the turnaround I quickly realized that if anything the opposite was true and the wind was hurting slightly more on the back leg.  I did manage to catch the guy I was shooting to catch on the back leg; he was a junior on a road bike with clip-on aerobars and a road helmet going at a pretty impressive pace for that setup.  I had been holding back a touch in order to be able to go all out with 2 miles to go as planned.  A minor glitch in this plan was that I had assumed the back leg was the same length as the out leg, but it was actually about a half mile short, so I feel like I ended up with a little left in the tank.  I was actually slightly confused at the finish; after passing the finish line I wasn't 100% sure I was really done and still kept going fairly hard returning to the museum parking lot.
  Time: 48:30
  Distance: 21 miles
  Avg Speed: 25.8 mph
  Avg Heart Rate: 177 bpm
  Avg Power: 258 watts

Results: The Waiting Game
I knew from my bike computer that my time was about 48:30 and that would have placed reasonably well in some previous years, so I figured I should stick around to see how I had done.  I put away my bike, packed up my other stuff and changed out of my bike clothes and was good to go by 10 am.  I called home to make sure I didn't need to rush back and then hung out near the registration desk, periodically chatting with other riders who wandered by.  A saw a number of other riders doing post race cool downs on their trainers, with one notable guy a couple cars away lamenting how sore he was.  Eventually, the race organizers brought back the results for the juniors and "preliminary" results for the Cat 5 riders.  Seeing that I had placed 2nd on the preliminary results, I figured I would wait to get my medal, but they wouldn't give those out till there were "final" results.  I figured that wouldn't be too long.  In the meantime, I found out the guy who beat me by 15 seconds was the sore guy.  I wasn't sore at all.  Hmm.  It felt pretty hard while I was doing it, but maybe I didn't go hard enough. By 11:30, I decided I needed to just bail and drove home.  Maybe they will send me the medal if I send them postage.

05/07/2012 Edit: Official Results
The official results were posted after I wrote this entry originally:
https://www.usacycling.org/results/?year=2012&id=982&info_id=47693 
Looking at the overall results, my time was about 28th best of of ~150 racers when you include all categories.  Somehow that doesn't sound quite as good as "2nd".  Also, those results don't yet seem to include the Cat1/2 guys who I would assume all beat me, so my real overall place is probably a bit lower.