That was seriously one of the most painful meets I can remember. Well, I'd say the most painful meet was when at the age of 6(?), I swam the 200 free. Anyways, definitely in the running for the most painful meet in the last 10 years or so. The only meet I can remember that came close to this one was the Iron Man meet I did in highschool--in about a three hour time period, it was all four 200s, the 500, and the 400 IM. Now THAT was a killer meet!
Anyhoo, this was my first long course meet, and first time swimming in a 50m pool, since the OVC meet at Lakeside in Louisville in June 2005. Ow. To emphasize that point: Ow. Ow. Ow. And once more for good emphasis, ow! The pool is a pretty cruddy pool (not quite as sketchy as the long course one I practiced at in highschool, but pretty dang close. I swam four individual events and one relay--the 200 IM, 50 back leading off the 200 medley relay, 200 back, 50 fly, and 100 back. We had a pretty good sized crew (for us) at the meet, with seven of us swimming. That's about double the size of the contingent we normally have at meets, so I was quite happy about that! Here's my recap of the events and videos of them, too.
200 IM: I admit, I was really dang nervous before this event, even more so than I was at Nationals in March! I'd gotten in a decent warmup earlier, but still, I had approximately 5,000,000,000,000,000 butterflies in my stomach. And this wasn't even one of the events I was worried about at the meet! I had a decent start and a good 50 fly. Not terribly fast, but I wasn't trying to set any personal records or anything of the sort--with both the 100 and 200 back coming up later in the morning, I wanted to conserve enough energy to survive them and not blow out on the 200 IM. Pretty staid back leg, good breast leg, and then I just held on on the free. Effort wise, I'd say I was right where I wanted to be. I went a 2:51.68, with manual splits of 33.21, 45.04, 51.17, and 42.04 (no, they don't add up to the official time). I dunno what was up with the time--my entry time was a 2:41.00, an approximate conversion of my best short course time of a 2:19.62. I can think of three possible culprits for the time variance. 1) There's something funky with the pool, whether it's actually longer than 50 meters, or it's got some current thing in there. 2) My turns give me a lot more speed than I thought, and taking half of them out of the race made me that much slower. 3) I totally misjudged my pace.
My bet is it's a combination of #s 1 and 2.
On the plus side, just by swimming it, I set the team record for my age group! :-) I set the bar pretty low, so this looks to be nothing but a personal goal for me to beat each summer till I turn 30.
200 medley relay: This was far from the team's A relay, but we gave it our best shot! We had a lot of fun and placed in the middle of the pack. I had a decent back leg, although I went too deep on the start and started to fade on the last 5 meters--there wasn't a huge amount of time between the 200 IM and this swim. My split (all splits are taken from me timing the video) was a 35.89. Not that fast, but I think #s 1 and 2 from my 200 IM recap apply here. Debbie swam the breast leg, and as far as I can tell (I just met her today) she had a decent swim--her split was a 53.19. Erin swam the fly leg, and had a phenomenal swim. I've been trying to get her to come to a meet since January, I think, so I guess she finally caved in. :-) Anyways, her best time at (short course practice) was a mid 37 for her 50 fly. Her split today was a 39.31, which converts to a high 34 short course. Chris finished out the relay swimming the free leg with a 32.41 From the video, I timed us at a 2:40.80. Not too shabby.
On a side note, this past week in practice at one of the 25m pools, I went a 35 from a push in a 50 back during the main set, while wearing a drag suit. Methinks there's something fishy about my split in the relay, which certainly felt faster than the 50 in practice.
200 back: This was the event I was the most worried about. I've been working on my backstroke for the past couple months, and it feels quite a bit better than it did up through Nationals in March. My original intent for this meet before I saw the event order was to swim the 200 fly, 200 back, and 400 IM. Unfortunately, I found out in June that the 200 fly and 200 back were back-to-back, so I scrapped that plan and decided to finally stop putting off my much needed back technique work and decided to focus on the 100 and 200 back at this meet instead. Anyways, with the combination of this being my first long course pool and only my second time swimming the 200 back at a meet since 2005, I really wasn't sure how to approach this event. Over the last two weeks, I've been doing some pretty intensive kick practices and sets, trying to get my legs ready for the sheer brutality that is the 200 back. Umm, didn't work. I had a much better start than in the relay and took it out at a pretty good 200 pace, or at least that's what it felt like. From the video, my first split was a 39.60. The second 50 also felt pretty good, with a 44.92 split. I started to feel the burn in my legs at about the 125 or so, but still had enough left in the tank to split a 46.02. My legs burned out, and I mean BURNED OUT, at the 165 or so. The last 35 meters were pure hell, but I still managed to split about a 46.60 (hard to tell exactly when I finished, since the video wasn't zoomed in till after I finished). Overall, it felt like a pretty darn good 200 back--not per my highschool standards, but pretty darn good for how my backstroke is these days. However, I went a 2:57.67, which is a good ~13 seconds off my entry time, which was converted from my 200 back which I did back at the beginning of February (2:24.72), when I hadn't trained for it at all. I mean, come on. My backstroke has improved quite a bit since then, so the only reasons I can see for me adding that much time from a slow entry time is because of the turn effect or a funky pool. I really can't see my turns being that big of a factor, so it's gotta be the pool.
On a side note, I think my backstroke looks quite good, at least in comparison to what it used to look like before I started working on the technique. Not the fastest arm turnover, but I've got a good kick, good rotation (although my overrotation to the right is noticeable), good head position, and my hands no longer cross over the center line. From the head-on shots, it looks like I'm not dropping my elbows enough on the pull, but that's not that bad, all things considered.
Just by swimming it, I set the team record for my age group! I set the bar pretty dang low, so unless someone else in my age group who is faster than me starts competing, this should be nothing more than a personal goal for me to beat each summer till I turn 30.
50 fly: I haven't trained specifically for fly at all this summer. I think I've maintained, more or less, the speed I worked up to over the spring, but haven't worked on endurance at all, focusing my efforts on backstroke. I knew I didn't have the endurance, due to aforementioned training, for the 100 or 200 fly, so I figured the 50 fly would be about as much fly as I could handle. Unfortunately, this was only about 15-20 minutes after the 200 back, and I was still hurting pretty bad. Anyways, I had a decent start and felt really good for the first 35 meters or so...and then the 200 back hit me like a dump truck. I fell apart at the end of the race, and it's pretty embarrassing to watch. I went 32.50, which is way off my 29.60 entry time, which was itself a direct conversion of my 25.90 Nationals time. Seriously, what's going on with this pool?! My dying at the end shouldn't have added more than one second to my time for a 50, which leaves nearly 2 seconds left to account for. There's no way my admittedly not-the-greatest open turn accounts for that much time. And my conditioning isn't that poor to account for me adding that much time.
100 back: This was the other event I was nervous about. Unfortunately, it was my last event of the meet...and I was pooped. My legs were barely hanging on, even before I got in the pool, and I was just tired. For an event that looks so easy, the 200 back is really quite the torture device! Anyhoo, I had a pretty empty heat--lots of people had scratched, apparently. The videographer started the video...after...the start, so I'm guessing my first split was a high 37, but I got myself at a 42.46 for the second 50, for a 1:20.54 official time. I had a pretty good start, but couldn't get off the damn lane ropes to save my life! On top of that, I was definitely feeling the accumulated tiredness weighing down on me like a 50 pound weight. Still, all that aside, I thought I had a very solid race. Unfortunately, that 1:20.54 is a full 5 seconds off my converted time from the 1:06.03 I went back in February in my pre-backstroke training era. Again, what the hell?! If this had been a short course pool, I'd have been surprised if I couldn't have gone that 1:06 with how much my back has improved, even with how tired I was by that point.
Like the 200 back and 200 IM, I set the team record just by swimming the event. Well, that's not entirely true--Chris swam it a couple heats ahead of me and went a 1:37. Technically, he set the team record, and then I broke his record about 5 minutes later. :-)
The rest of the crew at the meet had pretty good swims. Erin, at her first meet, did the relay and the 50s fly and free. I think she was pretty happy with her times all three, so hopefully that'll be enough to get her to join the meet crew! Debbie swam a meet last weekend, but I don't know how her times compared. Simon had a pretty good 100 and 400 free, so maybe we'll be lucky enough to get him to swim a couple more meets here and there. Chris had some decent swims, too. Ray and Mark appeared to have good breaststroke swims, but I don't know enough about their backgrounds to say for sure.
All things considered, I had a great meet. Despite the fishy times, I enjoyed myself immensely and my backstroke felt far stronger than it has at any meet up till now, even with the lack of turns!