Showing posts with label BIRC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BIRC. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 December 2013

Birc - Videos - Photos - Reflections

So no training today while I try and shift the cold - also works lunch do in the canteen so used that as a reason for the rest.
 
Over the week I've been reflecting on BIRC and have to say the overall experience was fantastic - the team (Q-Power) really and truly feels like a team with the people within it looking after each other and trying to help out where needed with others. It's funny in a sport where it's so much about ones personal goals that people still work so well for the good og others.
 
As for my races I'm still happy with the decision to both the Open and the 35-39 - there was a fear that the idea of having to race again would slow me in the first one - I don't think it did - what did slow me a little was a touch of illness and a touch of stupidity (where I worked out that 1:31.9 split meant a finish time of sub 6:04 - I doubled the seconds on the ave - d'oh) The races themselves in the outcome position wise where a fair reflection on my abilities on the day and the opposition I had - but - walking away as British Open champion and "Champion of Champions" still doesn't sit easy with me - when you look at the times on the "Champion of Champions" cup (mostly Mr Benton but also a Sir Pincent on there) and you are a little embarrassed to add a 6:07 – maybe it’s just an Irish guilt thing :lol: I have come away determined to make amends though – once I am back up and running there will be a bigger (in some areas (muscle) – smaller in others – (fat)) Beowulf ready for a tussle. That sub6 is still very much a goal I WILL attain – and now Mr Benton has upped the ante on the world record I have a real fight on my hand – onwards and upwards!
 
Thanks to Anne Yates for the top three photos
 
Getting ready for the Open
 
 
 
This video is purely the wait for the Open to start – just saved it cos I like it


 
The Race itself – fat men can row fast’ish
 
 
 
After the open “Why did I decide to do two!”
 
 
The Open result
 
 
 
Summoning up the energy for the 35-39
 
 
35-39H Race
 
 
 
During the race (35-39) - thanks to Sion Evans
 
 
 
The 35-39H results
 
 
 
Champion of Champions Cup
 
 
To infinity and beyond! Onwards and Upwards
 
 
The Q-Power Team – 4 Golds and 4 Silvers (incl James Howards who isn’t in the photo)
  

Sunday, 8 December 2013

BIRC 2by2k

Would like to say a well done to all who raced and supported yesterday - including those who weren't physically present.

Where to start - well - after the Irish  I regained some confidence and entered BIRC 35-39H then once the competitors list came out I saw an opportunity in the Open so after discussing it with Q we decided to TT the open and race the 35-39H.

Not a great week leading up to the race as I came down with a sore throat! But as it stayed at just that the plan remained the same. Target 1:31 for the open. Looking at the entrants for the 35-39 I figured sub 6:20 would take that.

Warmed up for the open about right - maybe a little early - but conscious of the 15min my marshaling time. Sat on the back row as I was a late entry  ;-) set of well and seemed to sit on my plan pretty well - about halfway though I found the throat really drying up and the throat caused a small problem - but carried on although the pace may have slowed - towards the end I was convinced I was on for a 6:04 as my tired old brain worked out 1:31.9 split wrong  :lol: when I'd finished it took me 30seconds to work out that the clock wasn't wrong with its 6:07.5 - a win which would also earn me the honour of winning the "Champion of Champions" cup.

Struggled over to collect my medal - watched Jens race - then back around to race again :lol: the aim was to sit on 1:35 and punch the finish - found myself 5th at the start but sat on my split and figured the lesders would fade - which all but one did - fair play to him - rowed a great race and deserved the win I got the silver with 6:17.2

Great day followed by a Q-Power team night out - today I'm struggling....

Friday, 6 December 2013

BIRC Bound - race warm up

Well up early to catch the flight to East Midlands - sourced a concept2 in a hotel across the road as I had a couple of hours to kill before the lovely Jen and Ian picked me up.

Into the gym and asked to have a quick look at the rower before I paid my fiver - drag was showing at 97! on level 10 - mentioned it could do with a quick hoover and offered to do it - he said he needed to get a screwdriver from maintenance but they where busy - so I went off to get changed anyway with the thoughts of doing the race warm up on 97!

Got into the gym and bless him he had the cover off and was cleaning it out - what a gent! Drag then shot up to 180 on level 10 - more than I needed - the chain was a bit clunky but not major major bad so I cracked on with my 5k race warm up.  Legs a bit tired - but the throat seems a little better.

Into the hotel bar for scoff - rice of course! (It's a Bristol thing)

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

BIRC Bound! Recover and Rebuild

So I (OK the mrs) found a flight from Cork to Nottingham return for €49 (Fri to Sun) and what with Saturday's result I can hardly not go to BIRC - so that's booked - need to work out how to get from Nottingham to Cardiff now  :lol:
 
As for training - well - after Saturday I had a two hour drive home - usual dog walks, baby feeds etc and then up Sun morning to spend 9 hours laying a laminate floor for the sister in law - to say my legs where fried after that is an understatement. Well at least I had Monday and Tuesday off work - unfortunately that was for a trip to Dublin and back as the baby needs to see a Dr up there - all going well but need to go back in ten months to finalise. So another 6 hours in the car. To say I'm tired today is an understatement :lol:
 
But - signed up to BIRC - so needed to get some blood pumping round to get the legs to start recovering - so a low rate workout called and with only 11,094m to go to 14million lifetime meters I stuck that in the PM - split it in 8 and rowed the first split as a warm up and the last as a cool down - the piece in the middle was to be 18/20SPM with HRR 70% - lovely jubbly and feel so much better now  :-D
 

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

My potted Concept2 Indoor Rowing history

Hi, I’m Paul although I also go under the name "Beowulf" which is my Concept2 forum name. It has become an adopted motivation name which I use to gear myself up for the "pain" sessions… and it might have something to do with traditionally fast finishes to races.
I am originally from Yorkshire in the UK although my father's family is from Belfast. I moved to Cork in Ireland in 2005 and have lived and worked there ever since. Before I moved to Ireland I weighed in at about 120kg (18st 12lbs). I played No.6 for my rugby club’s first team every Saturday and trained in the gym five days a week - weights and some indoor rowing for CV.
When I moved to Cork I stopped the rugby and took up an old sporting interest in American Football for four seasons but in 2009 I finished with this. Gym work came to a halt at around the same time. Then the inevitable happened and I gained weight, which somehow worked its way up to about 137kg (21st 8lbs).
I had to do something about it and so in March 2010 at the ripe old age of 35 I started back in a gym and after reasonable amount of CV work I got down to 127kg (20st 0lbs), but I needed more motivation and a goal. I was no longer playing rugby or American football and I needed a reason to go to the gym or I would get bored and start skipping it.
This is when a flash of inspiration appeared in the form of a "Gym Challenge" at my local gym. I only found out about it 24 hours before the competition (1km bike, 1km x-trainer, 1km run, 1km row) but gave it a go anyway. Now the run was not pretty, but I came fourth overall and noticed that my rowing smashed the rest of the guys. It was not long before I found the concept2.com website and realised that my 1k erg score was a reasonable time for the distance.
It was another short hop to concept2.co.uk which had a forum of people from around the world discussing indoor rowing, as well as OTW (on the water rowing), cycling and a host of other topics. My interest in the sport was further aroused by the Rowing Ireland Indoor Championships 2010. At the time I was fairly proud of my 3:10.6 1k and 1:25.0 500m… how things have changed. I was introduced to a few of the PaddyPower Indoor Rowing Club members (no affiliation to the bookmakers) whom over time helped me out immensely. Members of PaddyPower IRC are supposed to have some form of association with Ireland, but half of us cannot identify Ireland on a map and “once had a pint of Guinness” seems to be a sufficient connection. I became a member, it being my first indoor rowing club, and I proudly remain a member today.
So after a little work and a bit of encouragement I found myself entering the 2010 RIIC and managed a personal best over 2,000m with 6:20.1 and winning the bronze in the 30-39 heavyweight category. After returning home I realised I was hooked and found myself checking out the records on the C2 UK website I found that the Irish 30-39H record for a 2k was 6:07.1… it seems that I had my new target and set myself the goal of going back to the RIIC in 2011 and taking both the gold and the Irish 2k record. Ambitious? Perhaps. Achievable? Well, it was going to be fun finding out.
I also discovered that the English Indoor Rowing Championships were being held in January 2011 so I entered. At this point I was lucky enough to find my now mentor and coach who has become known simply as "Q" within the Concept 2 UK community (real name James Bailey). He put together a training plan for the run up to the event and mapped out a strategy for my race.
At this point I was still a relatively unknown on the indoor rowing circuit and certainly not fancied for a medal in the 2k so I was pretty much left to myself. After utilising the warm up Q had given me for the first time in a race context, I settled myself on the race erg and racked the drag factor up as high as I could get it (DF192; I used to train at DF220 until Q found out, went berserk, and brought me down to DF145). After the initial panic of the start I settled in and plugged along at just over 1:35.5 pace for the first 1500m, but as I came within sight of the finish Beowulf made his first appearance and within the last few 100 meters I overtook 4th place and then 3rd place to cross the line in 2nd to the sound of a shocked commentator bellowing "Oh look at the finish from Buchanan". The time was a new personal best of 6:16.7, the last 500m split coming in at 1:29.5. Watch the race
I also managed to jointly win the 500m (30-39H) in a dead heat with 1:19.1, and to pick up another gold in the mixed relay team.
After that things started to get rather more serious. Q persuaded me we had hardly started and decided to make a serious go of things. With a broad long term training plan which would run for some 3½ years , Q geared the next tranche of training towards the Irish Championships in November 2011. As an extra incentive along the way, I set myself the target of breaking as many of the Irish 30-39H records as possible and also the overall records if I could.
There were a few training hiccups along the way, something I have now come to appreciate are fairly standard given the training I was doing, but we seemed to be on track. Who said a few years of rugby and American football doesn’t take its toll. With the substantial (although steady) increase in training volume, and a marked sharpening of attitude and approach, I moved my training from the back bedroom of the house to a purpose built shed in the back garden specifically for my training, affectionately named The Temple of Q. After some of the hard sessions where I am out for there for 2 hours and finish up lying on my back too tired to get back into the house, I want to call it something else.
I have to say "Q" is an outstanding coach and has guided me to some huge PB's including a 17k+ 60min row. By the time we got to the Irish Championships in November 2011, I had taken all my age group records apart from the 2k (which the regulations provide can only be broken at a C2 event), so the pressure was on. The race went well and I won gold in a time of 6:11.8 (another PB), but not the Irish record we wanted - more work to be done.
I was entered into the World Championships in Boston, USA (known as the CRASH-B Sprints) in February 2012 - a long way to travel for just over 6 minutes of intense pain and suffering, but I had the opportunity to go and grasped it with both hands. Part of the motivation was the race in itself, part was a reconnaissance effort  for future appearances there, and part was to meet more of the hugely supportive indoor rowing community – a truly global and very friendly group.
I was pretty sure I was outside medal contention when entering, but I trained hard for the event and Q kept me precariously balanced between physiologically beneficial fatigue and total exhaustion. I was knocking out 100,000m or more each week and by February 2012 I was ready for it.
Travelling out to Boston as part of Team GB & Ireland was fantastic and I would love to go again.
It was clear from some of the earlier races in the day that conditions were slow. The air was quite warm and humid, the water vapour replacing some of the much needed oxygen according to Q. All I can say is that it certainly felt like it!
However all said and done, I put in a solid performance and won my first World medal (a bronze) in a time of 6:12.2. It was not the time I had been hoping for, even though I picked up a bonus trophy for being the fastest member of Team GB & Ireland. I believed I was capable of more. Q said he knew I was.
It was only a month to the British and European Indoor Rowing Championship in Nottingham but Q intervened with concerns about the way aspects of my physiology were developing (or not). Q and I talk a great deal and it is very much a team effort. He proposed cutting the speed work went from the schedule, declaring my racing season to be at an end, and returning to the long hard slog of foundation work. The reasoning and argument behind it seemed compelling, so a period of gruelling power endurance began. The concession was that I could go along to BIRC to race if I wanted to, but no training specifically for it. I managed to negotiate a three day taper.
Plainly the power endurance work was doing something since I could no longer get up the stairs after training sessions. I found a great deal of confidence grew out of the training and I could really feel the increase strength in my legs (which to be honest were pretty strong already) during the leg drive.
At BIRC I was lined up to race alongside Graham Benton who I knew was looking to take Steve Redgrave’s 30-39 Championship Record. Graham is out of my league - for now – and the pressure was truly off. I was seeded 4th, so no pressure to win, no pressure to medal. It was all about I wanted to get out of it and I set myself my own “personal” goals: my personal bronze was to break my 6:11.8 PB; my personal silver was to break the 6:10.0 barrier; my personal gold was to break the Irish record of 6:07.1. Q and I had formulated the plan, I had it clearly in my mind, and it was simply a matter of rowing my own race. I got the start and the first 500m I wanted and was able to hold the pace I needed through the middle 1000m.  As I came into the final 500m my average pace (/500m) was showing 1:32.7 but I needed a 1:31.8. It was time for Beowulf to make an appearance and he duly did - my final 500m came in at 1:28.1 and I smashed my own PB by 5.5 seconds, finishing with an official time 6:06.2 and a new Irish Record by 0.8 seconds. I also managed to pick up a bronze in the process - to say I was delighted would be an understatement. Even got a hug from Q.
So what next?
Well, I have only been in the sport for 15 months (a fact Q reminds me of on a weekly basis) and some of the competition have been doing this for 10 years, so there is a long way to go. On the immediate horizon in the 2012/13 season there are three overall Irish records that I have firmly in my sights: the 30 minutes, 10k and 60 minutes.
I had my eye on the 100k record but hopped on the erg in April 2012 and set an Irish Record in a time of 6 hours 46 minutes 7.7 seconds.I need to finish the 2011/12 Concept 2 Challenge Series where my Q-Power team mate Andy and I are fighting over gold and silver. Later on in the season I am hoping to break the magical 6 minute barrier for my 2k. I am now down to 114kg (18st 0lbs)…
 … and all thanks to Concept2, a gym challenge two years ago and Q.