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D3 Athlete of the Month Steve Bratton, September 2009
10/05/09
D3 Athlete of the Month Steve Bratton, September 2009
Please meet Steve Bratton, our D3 Athlete of the Month - wait until you read this story - it's not one you'll want to miss. It's inspirational and it's a great example of hard work paying off.
Who is your coach and how long have you been with him?
Mark Dillard has been my coach since March of 2009. When I signed up with D3 I put Mark on a fairly tight schedule from day one. I let him know in that first email that I had my first race, a 10 mile run in one week. I also informed him that with no run, swim or bike history prior to coming off the couch in September of 2007 I wanted to improve my HIM time at my 2nd HIM ever, Boise 70.3 only 3 months away in June, that I wanted to complete an ironman distance triathlon 2 months after that in August and then run a late season marathon, hopefully with a PR there as well. I am sure he got a chuckle from my goals, until it occurred to him that he needed to come up with a plan for how to get me in shape enough to meet those goals. Well the first thing he did was come up with a race strategy for my 10 mile run. It was to start off slower and then build for a strong finish. I knew that strategy, but he explained it in terms or heart rate zones that enabled me to actually accomplish it. I ended up with a 6+ minute PR on that race and finished very strong. The whole race felt great. So as to not waste time, Mark also used the heart rate data from that race to set up my run training zones.
What was your motivation to get started in triathlon?
I found myself with no dragons left to slay and started eyeing windmills. I had obtained the majority of the life goals that I had set for myself back in high school. I was happily married for 18 + years, had 5 children, owned my home, had completed my BA in Psychology, MA in Clinical Psychology, Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology, Certificate of Advanced Studies in School Psychology, had obtained the licenses and certifications and was secure in a job that allowed me to use all of these skills on a daily bases. I had essentially run out of goals to strive towards completing. Granted, furthering my spiritual life will be an ongoing challenge until the day that I die, but I also needed a tangible goal that I could pursue on a daily basis. One problem with getting a lot of education is that you tend to put on 5-10 pounds per degree, all that studying. So I found myself at 180 pounds on a 5’9” frame, the heaviest I had ever been, with some spare time and no real focus for my every day routine outside of work and family commitments. I live way out in the middle of nowhere with no athletic facilities, so I could not just go down and join the YMCA and get into a sport of any kind that way. After considering my options and what was practical given where I live and what would be a serious challenge that I could embrace that might also help me drop a few pounds, I settled on Triathlon and have never looked back. I have lost about 35-40 pounds and am now in the best shape of my life. I continue to work on improving the weave between faith, triathlon, work and family. I can tell you that at mile 18 on the IM run when my strength was fading and I was tempted to walk, it was God’s grace and the encouragement of my family with my wife saying “GO STEVE” and my daughter yelling “GO DADDY” that helped me move through that moment and keep running to finish strong.
How has your D3 coach helped you with your goals?
When I got started with my triathlon training, knowing absolutely nothing about any of the three sports, being able to jog 1 mile, ride my $45 K-Mart mountain bike about 5 miles and with only being able to swim breaststroke I started a couch to sprint plan in September of 2007 and completed my first sprint in December. I purchased a road bike and went on to train for a half marathon, an Oly and a HIM in 2008. In the back of my mind, even when I started training for that first sprint I was wondering if it would be possible to complete an Ironman. You know, not the kind of thing you want to say out loud to anyone because even admitting to thinking that way makes people look at you funny. After all, it is the Ph.D. of triathlon right? So after recovering from my first HIM I decided to take on the IM and signed up for Vineman in August of 2009 and well a HIM to hit as a good measure of fitness, pacing and nutrition 7 weeks prior to the IM. I had completed a marathon in January of 2009, but was starting to get a little nervous about completing the IM based on a generic training plan and not knowing how to make sense of all of the LT testing, time trials, HR training and nutrition information I was reading.
So a short story made long, I signed up with Mark at D3 and he figured it all out for me and got me going. It was a good thing he did, or I might not have been on such an emotional high right now. I had developed some thoughts about what training should be like, how many calories per hour I needed and such from what I had read. It turns out my training philosophy was not very efficient and may have been pretty bad for the IM. The three main things Mark changed was decreasing the duration and increasing the intensity of many of my workouts, doing workouts for a specific purpose rather than just to put in the time and I he doubled my calorie intake for the longer races. It turns out that my first effort at a HIM on 650 calories for a 6:48:29 effort was a bit low and contributed towards me having to walk the last 1 mile of it. Granted it was 105 F that day, the bike course was hillier than I had anticipated (front half of the Silverman course) and the water stations on the run were 2.5 miles apart, but I think the low calories was the final straw that got me walking.
So under Mark’s guidance and with only 3 months to the HIM and then 2 months to the IM we got to work. Mark helped me set up heart rate training zones on the bike and run, designed a plan to help me reach all my goals and let me know what pace or effort he expected me to do each part of each workout. He also helped me design a race pace strategy and made sure the race nutrition was where it should be. He evaluated my training and set up race time goals that I should be capable of if everything went well on race day. However, Mark’s frequent communication, sense of humor and actual caring about not just how my training was going, but how I was doing as a person was very centering and invaluable. After all, people who have never trained for any endurance sport really do not understand what it takes to train for an IM, so we do not tend to get much informed support from friends and family. Mark as an athlete who has been there and done that knows first hand what goes into that first IM attempt. He also sets pace goals for me that make me balk, until he gets me to surpass them.
His goal for me for the Boise 70.3 was in the 5:55:00 to 6:05:00 range based on my training. I wrote back, really, you think I can drop 45-50 minutes off my HIM time from only 6 months ago? He said that he believed my training was there to hold the pace on the bike and still have enough left to nail the run. He was right, even through whitecaps on the swim and 4+ hours of rain on the bike and run I ended up with a PR of over 1 hour (5:43:46). His goal for me for the Vineman was 15:00:00. He let me know what swim, bike and run paces he knew I could keep given my training. Once again I was taken aback a bit by the paces. I asked if I could really hit the bike that hard and have enough left for the run at that pace and he said that he was confident that I could. I ended up completing the IM in 12:16:29! I think he put in some slush time in the calculation thinking that I might have to walk some of the marathon, but thinking I could probably pull it off if I was able to stay mentally tough for the entire race. I finished the whole run with no walking, not that I wasn’t tempted to walk at around mile 18, and I had a kick for the last 3 miles of the race, finishing strong. I could not have written the book any better if I had tried. So amazing! Definitely in the top 5 as far as life experiences go for sure.
So now that I have the marathon coming up in January, Mark thinks I can Boston qualify. Once again my initial response is really, you think I can drop roughly 30 minutes off my first marathon time from last year? I trust Mark in setting tough but obtainable goals, but I still reserve the right to be amazed if he can get me there this year.
Favorite distance to race and what is your best race to date?
I enjoy the longer races, so full marathon, HIM and IM with IM being my favorite distance. The IM is just such an epic event that to accomplish it is just amazing. I could never say the same thing about a 5k race, although I am just as amazed when someone runs a 16 minute 5k as they might be of someone completing an IM. I am so new to the sport that I only have 1 race in each of the longer events except for the 2nd HIM. I equally value my 3:48:45 marathon, 5:43:46 HIM and 12:16:29 IM, although I am most proud of the IM. For me they were the very best I was capable of at that point in my training and I consider them major life accomplishments.
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