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Frank is 2012 Club Champion

FrankBurke2012ClubChamp

Club Champion 2012, Frank Burke

Frank Burke is our 2012 Club Champion.   The result was announced at the Racing795 end-of-season party in Ferns last Saturday night.  Frank was presented with the Championship trophy by last year’s winner, Lorraine Byrne. Frank had a long and busy season, starting early in the year with the long drive to Valentia in Co Kerry. He competed in 9 triathlons including 4 sprints, 4 Olympics, and just recently, a half Ironman.  Between races Frank is ever present at club training sessions, and is always on hand to offer help and support to club mates. That’s what Racing795 is all about, so Frank is a popular and deserving champion.

Club championship runner-up this year was David Furlong who scored well in early season Mountain Bike races. New boy Fintan Redmond took third place in his first full season with the club.

Frank Burke was also presented with the 2012 Summer League trophy to add to his Winter League success back in January. That’s a clean sweep for Frank in 2012 making him the man to beat next year. Looking forward to it already!

Tom Hogan was presented with a special award in recognition of representing Ireland at The World Mountain Running Championships.

Ironman 70.3 Lanzarote – 10th November 2012

PJ Dunne and Frank Burke successful in Lanzarote.

[PJ and Frank have just returned from competing in the Ironman 70.3 race in Lanzarote. Well done lads, from all your club mates. Here’s Frank’s report.]

This race was chosen by PJ last April and in a moment of madness, I agreed to tag along. Well, what an experience! Ironman branded races are known to be expensive, but I have to say they really pull out all the stops and make it a great event. PJ planned it with military precision from travel, to accomodation, bike transportation to training schedules and everything went like clockwork. I did read the race briefing on the plane though

Thursday morning’s view from the window brought sunshine and high seas – imagine Lahinch without the rain… and PJ had already assembled his bike Any idea of R an R on Thursday and Friday was quickly dispelled with reassembling bike, run, register, bike spin , swim, race briefing, racking the bikes, handing in gear and pasta party (for a bit of carb loading!)

Saturday morning finally arrived and at 6am (after PJ had his pre-race shower before getting into a dirty, smelly lagoon )we were busy making up the drinks and if anyone looked in the window, would have thought we were part of a drug cartel! Out the door and met by a wind that would have hens laying the same egg several times.. There was very little conversation after that.

Wetsuits on and out of transition by 7.30am. Yvonne and Louise (PJ’s sister) arrived at that ungodly hour to wish us luck having got a taxi from the other side of the island. They looked a little worse for wear…it must have been the early morning start!!!

The Swim:

Down to the swim start and the Pros were off first and I did debate going with them but said I’d hang on for PJ! Next thing we knew there was a hooter and off we went in the biggest wave of swimmers I’ve experienced todate – 700ish! Our trial swim proved very useful as a lot of swimmers got caught on the sandbanks during race day and ran aground as we passed by (yes, even me!) on the inside. Heard after that two competitors had a boxing match in the middle of the lagoon, as one guy lost his goggles and grabbed them off the next triathlete swimming by. He picked on the wrong guy by all accounts as he dealt with him there and then and handed him by the throat to the marshalls before continuing on . The swim went well and I couldn’t believe I was only 42 mins. Now where is PJ? Ran into him in transition. He was going out as I was coming in. Race on!!

The Bike:

Headed off on the bike at a steady pace and soon realised that it was going to be even tougher than we had previously thought. The cross winds meant energy was being used on holding a straight line. At one stage, I noted several triathletes leaning into the wind , so their bikes were at at a funny tilt. ??? At one stage, with the wind behind me I clocked 72.8Kph on the flat, but a lot of the route was crosswinds or in your face. Average speed in the crosswinds was 25kph at best. It was a relief when the turn off came for the climb to Haria. This was the most enjoyable part IMO – it was a bump in the road compared to Mount Leinster. Passed a lot on the climb and there was a bit of banter along the way as names and country of origin were on the race numbers. The descent was fast and had some serious switchbacks. I erred on the side of caution on this due to cross winds. One guy known as Johnny 56 from Gotri clocked 87kph coming of this stretch. On the home stretch, I got a hamstring cramp and stopped briefly to release. A spanish competitor stopped to help, however I ushered him on – what sportsmanship though. After a couple of more stops to water the dry ground, and investigate a strange bike rattle (long story…),back to Club la Santa and no sign of PJ. As it turned out he put in a great bike leg, so the possibility of catching him were slim to none, but it’s never over til its over…

The Run:

Got off the bike feeling reasonable but after a km, got a cramp in the hamstring and stopped to stretch it out. Thankfully that was the only occurrence of cramp and ran (shuffled) the rest of the 21k. Met PJ who was now 10 mins ahead and he was running comfortably, whereas I was suffering. Each time i met him, he was putting more distance between us. The support crew of Yvonne and Louise came into play at this stage with shouts of encouragement and some sports drink. The shouts of encouragement from Mark Lacey (who ran a serious half marathon) of PixelsPromotions along with PJ’s kept the spirits up. PJ only seemed to wane a little on the return journey of the last loop, but overall put in a sterling performance in all three disciplines. Final Results are as follows:

PJ Swim:40:03 Bike:3:27:33 Run:1:52:45 Overall: 6:12:21 Overall Rank:311/650 finishers

Frank Swim:42:14 Bike:3:33:31 Run:2:03:47 Overall: 6:30:06 Overall Rank:400/650 finishers

Immediate thoughts after the race from both of us….”How would you do a full Ironman?” Peter, Jim and James, while I always thought it was a great achievement, I now have a far greater appreciation of what it took to complete that amazing feat. Hoping to get some R&R now as PJ didn’t let me have a minute in Lanzorate. PJ’s taking up ironing for the winter

Very well organised race with a great after race meal and awards night. BTW at the awards night a 60+ lady and a 65+ man completed it in 7.5hrs– the mind boggles! Margaret Sills of GBR was the lady in question and she informed me that she does between 6 and 12 hours training per week! Overall it was a great adventure and we learned a lot from this experience – its now banked for the next one….

A word of thanks to all the 795ers on their good luck text, emails and posts – in the words of El Presidenta -Jim, we completed, competed and conquered!

Keywords over the last few days were: wind, cross winds and refuel. Even the plane on the journey home had to refuel in Portugal!

Results

World Mountain Running Championships 2012

Tom in action at the world senior trial in 2011

[The World Mountain Running Championships took place in Temu-Ponte di Legno, Italy on 2nd September. Tom Hogan was there for Ireland. Congratulations Tom, from all in Racing795. Here’s a brief report from the man himself.]

My first world championships started out with a 4am drive to the airport to meet up with the rest of the 20 strong team and catch the red eye to Milan. Tired but upbeat and optimistic we arrived in Milan around 11am to be told that we would have to wait till 3 for our bus to bring us to Temu. The tight Italians decided it would be best to squeeze two or three countries on each bus, so we were stuck until both the Canadians and the Ukraine shot putters arrived. A further 3 hours on a bus driving from the 30 degree sunshine of Milan to the hail of Temu we arrive at our hotel exhausted but the legs need to get moving so we head out for 40 min run to get the blood flowing.

Awake on Saturday morning to monsoon like weather and I’m seriouly worried as I only have racing flats with me that have zero grip. As anyone that’s been away racing will know the day before is unbelievably boring. A couple of short runs and a whole lot of lying around doing nothing and that’s about it. The only excitement of the day coming with the arrival of the drug testers to test one of our senior women. So bored I nearly wish it was me they came to test.

Race day and the clouds have gone and the temp is up, happy days. The juniors and senior women ( some serious talent in this group Sean Tobin 17 ran 3.45 for 1500 this year and Sarah McCormack 15.26 for 5k) left the hotel early to catch the bus and ski lifts to their respective starts but as the mens start is a 5 min walk from our hotel it’s more sitting around studying the course profile and pics and thinking what the f*^k am I doing here. Finally get to the start and spend more time looking at the Africans warming up than getting myself ready. They’re amazing, they jog around in military style formation dancing more than running.

11am, gun goes and the elbows fly, as we enter the narrow almost vertical streets of Temu. The first 2k are probably the toughest of the race as we wind our way through the town and up into the forests. 3k in we reach the races only decent 800m of twisting single track similar in steepness to the downhill track in bunclody. A couple of hundred in I came to a 90 bend the brakes don’t work and I’m off down the slope on my arse, crawl back up and I’ve lost around 15 places. The next 4 km is rolling hills and actually enjoyable but then we exit the forest and have a 300m hill that’s so steep I pass people who are crawling on all fours. Back onto more runnable ground and with the snow covered peaks all around us we climb up through the supporters who were amazing it was like the tour de France with the crowds closing in and running beside you with their flags and drums. With 500 to go its all level to the finish and I kick for home determined to catch a Swiss and Czech runner, pass the Swiss guy who gives up but the Czech guy kicks with me and we fall across the line in the same time. Lungs are on fire, legs are in bits, can’t stand up but I’m delighted, my own personal goal going out was to score on the team(4 to score) so job done.

Results

 

 

Caroline Kearney Triathlon – 11th August 2012

“Aul’ bull says to young bull…” (Photo copyright James Shelley/TI Media)

[Report by PJ Dunne]

The sunny shores of Lough Ennell was the location of the last Irish round of Bill & Ted’s not so bogus journey for 2012.
The Caroline Kearney olympic tri is famous on the circuit for its great atmosphere and organisation.
We were not disappointed. Well done to Midlands tri club.
In the car on the way up Frank amazed me with his knowledge of the race manual (he’s not known for reading them). Maybe the 3 hrs plus Barry & himself spent putting the Tri 795 manual together taught him. Unfortunately Frank and myself were in different start waves so would have to race our own races.

The Swim

The swim out to the first buoy was very choppy with the usual kicking and boxing.
Frank had his now customary tour of the lake and exited the swim in 39 mins and was delighted to not get the ” poor ba*tard claps” as he says himself.
I felt I swam well but was disappointed to see 34 mins on the watch as I entered t1.
Talking to people afterwards and Frank’s watch confirmed it, the swim was closer to 1,700 m.

The Bike

The 2 lap, 42 km bike route is undualting to say the least and the wind blowing never seemed to favour us.

Frank put in another legendary bike spilt coming home in 1hr 9mins 33sec. Avg speed 36.2kmph!
I was happy enough to knock 1min 25sec off last year’s time finishing in 1hr 14 mins 6sec Avg 34 kmph

The Run

The flat 9.8km run is, on paper, “handy” but with the  day hotting up and the heat taking its toll, it was anything but handy.
It was 50/50 road and trail surface. With about 6 km done I was starting to wane but saw Frank coming towards me and my focus soon came back, he shouted some words of encouragement so I must have looked bad  He told me later that he was in the hurt locker also, maybe the summer league 10km finale was still in our legs.
Despite that we both put in solid runs of 46.02 and 44.36.

Finishing in 113th place was Frank in a time of 2hrs 37mins and 29sec
And myself in 100th place in 2hrs 34mins 29sec.
As I’m writing this I have just discovered I had the quickest T2 of the day, 2 seconds quicker than the next person Trevor Conroy.
It was nice to finish the Irish season the same as I started on a lovely course and lovely weather.

Well done to Frank on his huge improvements this year most notably on the bike but also his swim and run.
Our road trips have made this year’s tri season the best craic ever despite what Frank says .
Roll on next year, hopefully we’ll need a minibus for the road trips.

Results

Photos

Tri795 Results

Thank you to all who took part in Tri795 today, and to all the marshals for making it such a great success.

Results