Categorized | Featured, Multi-sport, Sports

Ironman 2014: Apolo Ohno & a few others to watch

Apolo Ohno (Photo courtesy of Ironman)

Apolo Ohno (Photo courtesy of Ironman)

By Lee Gruenfeld | Special to Hawaii 24/7

When Apolo Anton Ohno entered the Lake Placid Olympic Training Center in 1996 to train full-time for short track speed skating, he was 13, making him the youngest skater ever admitted.

A year later he won his first major title and became the youngest national champion ever.

He went on to become the first American to win the overall World Cup title, which he did three times, then he won the overall World Championship title, followed by eight Olympic medals, and too many other major events to count.

But here’s the thing: String all of his race times together since he was 13 and they wouldn’t add up to a single Ironman race. I’m not sure they’d even add up to the run.

So you have to wonder: Why is this skating superstar determined to pour more energy into a single-day triathlon than he’s expended over 20 years’ worth of short track speed skating?

We caught up with him to find out.

Lee: Are you crazy?

Apolo: I hear it helps to be a little crazy if you’re going to do an Ironman race.

Lee: So we’re agreed on that. Why are you doing this?

Apolo: I think every athlete who retires ends up with a desire for the next physical challenge. Even if they’ve gone into business or sought some other mental challenges, there’s always the pull of the physical.

Lee: I can understand that, but why Ironman?

Apolo: I came from a sprinting background. My specialty was 90-second races all the way down to 40 seconds, and it was about all-out ballistic power and speed. I’ve watched Ironman over the years and known a lot of triathletes, and I’ve always admired their sheer tenacity and will over those long distances, partially because it was so alien to me.

Lee: Did you ever think about doing one?

Apolo: Quite literally, the thought had never entered my mind.

Lee: What changed?

Apolo: I actually got the opportunity to give it a go last year, but I was just too busy with work, traveling to Asia every 30 days…it just felt impossible. This year I thought I’d have more time, and it turned out I was even busier. But I committed anyway.

Lee: Why entertain the thought in the first place?

Apolo: I needed a big challenge in my life. I’m four years retired from the Games, and I just found myself wanting to undertake something very difficult, something seemingly impossible. I know I’m not going to win, or even make the podium, but I want to see how hard I can push my body. And Ironman racing is so completely at the opposite end of the spectrum of what I spent over half my life training for, I know it’s going to test me in ways I can’t possibly imagine.

Lee: And if you pass the test?

Apolo: Everyone I’ve ever spoken with who’s done the event has said it’s a life changer. And to be able to call myself an Ironman competitor and be a part of one of the most remarkable communities in the world? I couldn’t resist.

Lee: Every event you’ve ever trained for has had a specific goal, like a world title or Olympic gold. If you already know you’re not going to win on Saturday, or have a podium finish, what exactly are you setting out to do?

Apolo: Interesting question. I’m not a professional triathlete, obviously, but I look at this as an opportunity. I’m humbled to be in the race, and I plan to go as hard as I can, but for me it isn’t going to be about shaving minutes or seconds off a previous time. It has more to do with the experience.

Lee: What part of the experience are you talking about?

Apolo: Being in Kona, having all of that energy around me…from all that I’ve read and heard it’s a true spiritual experience. And, to be candid, I think it’s the closest I’m ever going to get to a feeling like competing in the Olympic Games again. I’ve spoken with Crowie (three-time Ironman world champ and course record-holder Craig Alexander) about it, and of course Paula Newby-Fraser is my coach, and I found myself smiling every time all of these athletes and coaches talk about Kona, because they make it sound like you’re competing on a different planet. To me it’s the epitome of athletics, when you’re able to go beyond whatever you’ve known before. And in an Ironman race, you do that on several levels.

Lee: Are you at all worried about looking like Michael Jordan after he tried baseball?

Apolo: No. Not at all.

Lee: You’ve got this aura of being the very best in one sport. No fear that it’ll be eroded if you’re not the best of the best here?

Apolo: Just not an issue for me.

Lee: So what kind of time goals do you have?

Apolo: Difficult to say. If there’s one thing I’ve learned about expectations in this sport, it’s that you have to be prepared to adjust them depending on race day conditions.

Lee: So what are your goals for a good conditions day?

Apolo: I don’t have specific time goals. Just want to go out hard and turn in the best performance I’m capable of.

Lee: How are you going to know whether you’ve had a good day or not?

Apolo: (laughs) I don’t know! But I’ve done an Ironman 70.3 race, you know.

Lee: Boise, yeah.

Apolo: So the first priority is to finish, and the second is to still be wearing my sunglasses.

Lee: Because…

Apolo: It’ll mean I finished in daylight.

Lee: But for an experienced, competitive athlete like you, if you don’t have a specific time or finishing place goal, how are you going to know, when you’re out there on the Queen K, if you’re ahead or behind, if you need to push yourself even harder…how do you make sure you finish with no gas left in the tank?

Apolo: I am 100 percent confident that there will not be a single ounce of gas left in my tank when I start the run. That’s how hard I think it’s going to be. Seriously, I’ve never had any hesitancy about pushing myself to the limit. My problem is going to be the opposite: making sure I don’t go out too hard so there’s something left to finish the race.

Lee: Do you have any goals for the individual legs, or a race plan of some kind?

Apolo: I think I have a pretty good gauge of how hard I’m going. I’ll be strapped up to all kinds of stuff so I’ll have heart rate, cadence, watts. I’m no stranger to hard work. I know how hard to push my body.

Lee: But…

Apolo: I’ve never done it for that length of time or in those conditions. But I’m fairly confident I’ll have a good handle on how hard I’m going and if it’s the right level of effort.

Lee: You said after Boise that you’d gone out too hard on the bike because you got so excited early in the race.

Apolo: I sure did, and I paid for it on the run. I didn’t have a good sense about how to pace myself. I’d gotten invaluable direction from Paula, of course, but man, when that gun went off? Surrounded by all of those incredible athletes? I wanted to see how hard I could push myself and just didn’t want to start off doing anything less.

Lee: How did it affect your run?

Apolo: I’ve never been a great runner, and I’ve always been a sprinter, so let me tell you: I had no idea 13 miles could feel that long.

Lee: If you thought that the gun going off in Boise was exciting, wait until you’re sitting in this nuclear reactor called Kailua Bay and the cannon fires up.

Apolo. I hear it’s bananas. Absolutely bananas, and I’m excited.

Lee: Did your experience in Boise match your preconceived notion of what it was going to be like?

Apolo: Somewhat, but there were some surprises, too. Like, how bad of a runner I was. (laughs) I was running with this woman, she was about double my age, and she’s having this full-on conversation with me. I’m thinking, I can’t shake this lady! But I do have this 40-meter sprint I can turn on when I really need to, so that saved the day.

Lee: Did the Boise experience make you feel better or worse about your prospects for the full distance?

Apolo: It was the best possible thing to have happened to me, to have gone too hard, and to have suffered, because it was a slap in the face about what I really have to do to be able to perform like I want to in Kona. And Paula was happy. She was smiling the whole time. Even before the race she goes, “This is going to be such a great wake-up call for you, I’m so excited!”

Lee: One thing I’m curious about, and it relates to the post-Ironman race blues I’ve heard about. All that training and anticipation, and then it’s over. You’ve obviously done some very intense training in short track, and spent years dreaming about the Olympics. When you won your first gold medal, was there a letdown afterwards?

Apolo: Oh, boy, not me. I was absolutely euphoric for days, and in fact it took me time just to work through the disbelief about what had happened. Look, you work for the opportunity to be perfect for forty seconds every four years, and if you don’t pull it off, your hopes and dreams about being an Olympic champion are dashed. When it happens, the feeling is indescribable. But there’s another side, and that is, win or lose, all the life lessons, the discipline, everything you did to give yourself the tools to be a champion…all of those things are still yours. At least that’s how it feels to me, so there’s no letdown afterwards because the dividends keep paying off.

Lee: You mentioned that you’re coached by Paula, which is kind of like taking golf lessons from Jack Nicklaus. What’s that been like?

Apolo: Amazing. Just amazing. She’s such an incredible coach. You know, a lot of elite athletes think they can be great coaches, but many of them can’t. But Paula, I mean…she could have coached me during my short track career, that’s how good of a coach she is.

Lee: In what ways?

Apolo: First of all, she understands the body and can read subtle signs like no one I’ve ever met. She knows how I’m feeling, before I even know it, and even more remarkably, she knows how I’m going to feel before it happens. Second, she not only has this incredible book of knowledge, she knows exactly how and when to apply it, and can pull out all kinds of wisdom at the perfect moment. Seriously, you can’t appreciate those abilities until you’ve experienced them. She’s been the best part of this whole trip.

Lee: So how fast does she think you can go?

Apolo: Honestly? She’s never really told me how fast she thinks I can go. I think that’s because she doesn’t really know how well I’m going to be able to handle the heat so she hasn’t told me what she thinks I can do.

Lee: Well, she told me. Want to hear it?

Apolo: Yeah! What’d she say? She won’t tell me!

(This part of the conversation deleted. Watch the race Saturday.)

Lee: I’ve watched you race on the ice many times, and you’re a pretty reserved guy, not a lot of overt emotion, whether you win or place. Has anyone prepared you for what it’s going to be like on Alii drive during the last quarter-mile of the race?

Apolo: They’ve tried to tell me about it, and I swear, I start to choke up hearing it.

Lee: You should come back when it gets close to midnight. There’s nothing like it anywhere on earth. (I describe the scene.)

Apolo: I’m getting goose bumps just listening to you.

Lee: Many people have told me over the years that there are always moments of deep fear and doubt during the race, when you question whether you can pull it off. Have you experienced dark moments like that, and are you prepared to deal with them?

Apolo: I’ve felt something like that on some of my longer runs. On the bike I always feel like I can muscle through. Even if you slow down you can still roll and make progress, but in running, you just stop moving. I know it’s going to take a lot of mental strength to get through the dark moments.

Lee: Are there some mental tricks or games you rely on?

Apolo: Sure, plenty of them. I’m a huge fan of visualization, of positive self-talk. I believe strongly in accepting situations as they come and trying to work through them without wasting energy worrying about why they happened. Look, I don’t know what I’m going to find out on the course in Kona. I’ve never gone that long or that hard or in those conditions. I’m not used to that heat, that humidity, those cross winds. But I’ll tell you what: I’m a competitor, and I’ve been in plenty of tough situations, so I’m looking forward to being tested, and I’m confident I have the mental and physical tools to deal with whatever gets thrown at me.

Lee: Now I’m getting goose bumps. Do you look at the Ironman World Championship as something to check off your bucket list, or do you think you’ll do more once this one is over?

Apolo: I don’t know! Let me see how this one goes. I’ll tell you what: This process has been really amazing. I had no idea how much I would enjoy the endurance world. The community of people doing 70.3s and Ironman, it blows me away. I had no idea of the kind of camaraderie, the intensity that’s everywhere in the sport, and I also had no idea how big it was. I feel blessed and humbled to have been welcomed into this community of athletes. I don’t know if I’ll be doing another full Ironman race soon, but … OK, listen: I’ve already told Paula I want her to coach me when I’m 40, eight years from now, and I want to go faster than I do this year.

Lee: A guy you might have heard of named Dave Scott placed second here when he was 40.

Apolo: That’s incredible! I won’t be placing second but I want to be up there somewhere.

Lee: He’d already won it six times so he was no amateur.

Apolo: That’s so insane.

Lee: You’re doing this in a very public, very visible way. You’ve got friends and family coming over…lot of pressure there.

Apolo: That’s okay. The way I look at it, this is a very emotional and spiritual experience for me, and I like the idea of being able to share it with people close to me. They’ve been helpful and supportive, and without them I couldn’t have done it, so I want them along for the ride, no matter how it turns out.

Lee: You’re going to have a lot of people along for the ride. So good luck.

Apolo: Thanks. See you out on the lava.

Apolo Ohno, Alex Zanardi and Madonna Buder. (Hawaii 24/7 photo by Karin Stanton)

Apolo Ohno, Alex Zanardi and Madonna Buder. (Hawaii 24/7 photo by Karin Stanton)

OTHERS TO WATCH

By Jennifer Ward Barber | Special to Hawaii 24/7

When American NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano met, they discovered that they had more than just their career in common. They had triathlon. The two men met in training for Expedition 36, a six-month stay on the International Space Station which traveled 2,656 orbits of earth totaling over 70 million miles. On Saturday, joined together by another common goal, the two men will travel a much shorter, yet potentially even more demanding, 140.6-mile trek.

As the two astronauts got to know each other during their training and expedition, they hatched a crazy idea: they both loved triathlon and wanted a goal to pursue upon their return. Why not try to complete their first Ironman triathlon within a calendar year of coming home? On Saturday, Parmitano and Cassidy will accomplish their goal—11 and 13 months out from their return, respectively.

Parmitano came to the U.S. in 2010 as something akin to an “exchange astronaut.” He was exposed to triathlon while serving in the Italian Air Force, through some of his colleagues. He put a triathlon on his bucket list, knowing full well he didn’t have the support or time at that point to train for one. Then, when Parmitano moved to the U.S., the stars aligned: He began to attend spin classes, in addition to the swimming and running he was already doing as part of his training. And then, he met his neighbor, an Ironman athlete himself, and coach.

“He convinced me to try a local race,” Parmitano remembers, and the rest flowed from there, with the slight interruption of having to spend six months of valuable training time in space. “A lot of people come back from a long expedition and need rehabilitation,” Parmitano says, who adds that getting used to gravity again can be challenging. “I wanted something that pushed me out of my comfort zone.”

Parmitano, never one for popular sports, says he’s always been drawn to triathlon.

“I’m always rooting for the underdogs,” he jokes. This year, he’s been racing local shorter events, including two half-distance races, to prepare. He says the most difficult discipline for him is the bike: “Most people would say the swim, but am from Sicily, and I grew up next to the Mediterranean. For me, swimming in open water is very natural,” he says. “With running and swimming you’re just using your body—it’s something you know. A bicycle is an instrument you have to learn how to use.”

Cassidy, who’s been competing in local events for a few years, feels the same way, though he says he’s now feeling more confident. “I’ve done the full distance now over three or four weekends. Now it’s just a matter the little nuances. All I know is last month I did 100 miles and I starved, so I need to eat more. Since then I’ve gotten smarter.”

In their training and preparation, Cassidy has noticed many parallels between space travel, and the journey of completing an Ironman triathlon.

“It’s like taking small bites of a big elephant,” he says. “In both cases, there’s a momentous event at the end, and a long lead up. At the beginning, it feels almost fake,” he adds. “When the chief astronaut assigns you to a mission that launches in two years, you say OK, and you start training. You start going through this catalog of courses in electrical power and environmental control, all the different aspects of the space station, space walk training, Russian language training, and more. When you first start out, it’s hard to focus on the launch. It’s very analogous to ‘hey, congratulations, you’re going to be doing an Ironman in October.'”

The trip to Kona will be the first for both Parmitano and Cassidy, who says he’s looking forward most to the pre-race excitement. “It’s the same feeling when you’ve done all the preparation, and you’ve got your space suit on. You close the hatches, and open this valve that vents your area to the vacuum of space. Then you open the hatch and watch the pressure gauge drop, and then the earth is below you and it’s time to go outside the space vehicle. It’s all about executing the plan, and not screwing things up.”

Wondering how a fitness buff stays healthy in space? “You train hard every day,” Parmitano says. “We set aside two and a half hours every day for training—biking and running with a special harness that keeps us attached to the ground, and weight lifting with a special machine.” In terms of recovery and nutrition, he says you tend to sleep a little less in orbit than on the ground, because you’re body is more relaxed and needs less rest. “Dietary-wise, it’s really up to you! We have a pretty full pantry in orbit,” he adds.

On Saturday night, you can guarantee the two men will be putting in a full night’s sleep, not to mention a slice of pizza or two—just hold the freeze-dried anchovies.

—

Hawaii 24/7 Staff

* Madonna Buder
Spokane, Wash., 84, nun

Buder is dubbed the ‘Iron Nun’ and is the oldest woman ever to finish an Ironman.

“I’m just glad to be breathing,” Buder laughed Thursday when asked how she’s doing.

Buder shared a few favorite memories, including the 2012 Ironman Honu 70.3 race in Waikoloa.

“The winds were horrendous that day,” she said.

Buder followed a school of fish during a particularly rough swim and was led astray.

“I got so tired from fighting the waves,” she said. “I asked myself ‘Is this worth it?’”

Buder, of course, is not one to give up and finally ashore, she headed out to tackle a wind-swept bike and run course. Already spent from the swim, Buder said she needed to get a little creative on the run.

“I bent over and clasped my hands behind my back. I remember thinking, ‘If I didn’t look like a little old lady before, I sure do now,’” she said. “I thought I had invented a new running style, but really it was exactly the same way Apolo races when he skates.”

With hundreds of races already in her own personal record book, Buder is looking to write another line in the Ironman record book Saturday.

* Dave McGillivray
Boston, 60, Boston Marathon race director

McGillivray, director the Boston Marathon, is back on the start line 25 years after he first competed in Kona.

He’s been busy, though. Each year, he runs the Boston Marathon course every year after the last participant is off it.

He has completed that route 42 times, along with other marathons and Ironman-distance triathlons. Plus, he started a personal tradition by running 12 miles on his 12th birthday. He ran 60 this summer.

However, in October 2013, he was diagnosed with severe coronary artery disease.

“I thought I was invincible. I started suffering some breathing issues, and found I had a disease and I didn’t even know it,” he said.

McGillivray set Ironman 2014 as a target date to get healthy.

With a change in his diet and attitude, McGillivray said in that year the disease has reversed more than 40 percent and his cholesterol is 100 points lower.

“This race, this year, I can honestly say helped save my life,” he said. “People who aren’t fit probably know they are not healthy. People who are fit think they are invincible. We think every pain is a challenging pain, not a warning pain. Athletes are the most vulnerable. Fit isn’t always healthy.”

* Alex Zanardi
47, Italy, former race car driver and 2012 Paralympic Games gold medalist

TOUCH THE SKY from tim hahne on Vimeo.

Alex Zanardi is an inspiration, even if he doesn’t know it. He turned a disaster into awe, his private pain into public revelation. A racecar driver — and a legendary one at that — he turned a life-altering injury into exalting triumph.

In September 2001, at the EuroSpeedway Lausitz, Zanardi was involved in a horrific accident that cost him his legs.

He resumed racing for some time and then turned his attention to handcycling. In 2011, at his fourth attempt, Zanardi won the New York City Marathon in his handcycling class.

This is his first Ironman Kona.

“This definitely adds a lot to my life. It’s a dream come true. I am a lucky boy,” he said. “I get so many opportunities. But I don’t know what to expect.”

Zanardi said he will be concentrating on pacing himself.

“I’m a decent swimmer. I know I have strength in my arms, but the key work for me will be controlling my pace. Cycling is where I feel strong but also where I might get greedy,” he said. “I’ve done a lot of half-Ironman training. We call it the ‘aluminium man.’ But here will be different. Boy, will it be different!”

— Find out more:
www.ironman.com

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