Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 129, April 2020 | Page 16

IN THE LEAD The Indoor Ironman Experience Triathlete: Tom Barlow, Cape Town Whilst on his final pre-lockdown ‘farewell run’ in nature, Tom’s mind drifted to the Frenchman who’d just run a marathon on his balcony. Not wanting many months of hard training to go to waste, he decided that attempting the first ever indoor Ironman was the logical way to beat the lockdown blues, and raise money for a good cause at the same time. The announcement of the Solidarity Fund during President Ramaphosa’s speech to the nation on 23 March resonated with Tom. He explained, “The word solidarity can be defined as unity of feeling among individuals with a common interest. Covid-19 has led us to bear witness to the world having a common interest for the first time in my lifetime.” Also, as the CEO of Ampersand Asset Management, Tom knows a worthwhile investment when he see one, saying that supporting the Solidarity Fund enabled him to “marry a worthy stated objective with great people to implement – the best chance to make a lasting positive contribution.” Getting a Good Start On Sunday morning Tom followed his normal race routine, waking up two hours before the start for a big breakfast at his Cape Town home, including pancakes courtesy of his wife, Nicole. This allowed him to relax and mentally prepare for the day’s challenge, and trying to match actual race conditions as closely as possible, he began his journey at exactly 7am. He slipped into his wetsuit, strapped himself to a harness and listened to the National Anthem, before jumping into the pool to get his journey underway. This was a far less turbulent, frenetic and chaotic start than he is accustomed to in Port Elizabeth, and Tom quickly got into his rhythm, smoothly stroking his way through a 65-minute swim. (He chose this duration, since it was his “worst case scenario” for this year’s Ironman). Swim done, Tom had a hot shower, got dressed into his cycling kit and proceeded to hammer out the 180km bike ride in 5:50. During this leg, 50 riders from his triathlon club, Trifactri, joined him on a virtual ride on Zwift, on the Watopia route, which has a bit more climbing than the Port Elizabeth route. In addition to his wife and two step-daughters, who ensured that he was properly hydrated and catered to his culinary desires, he had installed a fan on either side to help keep himself cool during the indoor bike ride. Following another shower during his transition from the bike, Tom set about running the marathon on the treadmill that he had managed to borrow from friends the day before lockdown. With no real experience running on a treadmill, he was concerned about this leg, but managed to polish the marathon off in a very creditable 3:50. This gave Tom a total active time (excluding transitions) of 10:45. However, he says it was much more about the experience, and doing something special for the country, rather than chasing a result. Whereas most Ironman finishers rattle off their detailed split and transition times, Tom had to look up his times when I chatted to him. Miles and Maths for the Animals Runner: Thomas Marais, Port Elizabeth When he finished running his 100-mile lockdown run on his driveway, to raise funds for the the Animal Welfare Society in Port Elizabeth, Thomas Marais was asked by a friend if the scenery became a bit monotonous during his run of nearly 26 hours. “I answered it wasn’t too bad, because the moon was amazing and I managed to get two sunrises, as well as a fitting end to probably the toughest thing I have ever attempted mentally, a rainbow framing the driveway and a little shower with 200m to go. The only problem was that it took me 70km to figure out what the GPS couldn’t!” The problem arose because the Garmin he was using to log his distance was reading short on each lap due to the small area of triangulation for the satellites 16 ISSUE 129 APRIL 2020 / www.modernathlete.co.za to mark his progress. The loop he had marked out, running up and down his driveway and turning on the front of his property, outside his front gate, was 112m long, but the Garmin was giving him an average of just 90m per loop, which meant that Thomas had to do some tricky calculations in the middle of his run to try and work out how far he had actually run, versus what the Garmin said he had done. He and his wife even remeasured the loop, just to be sure. Having run 70km, according to his Garmin, Thomas stop briefly to update viewers on the live-stream feed of his run – and he made remarkable sense for somebody that far into an ultra-marathon. “If you take the 161.9 kays I’m doing and you divide it by 112 meters per lap that I’m supposed to do, you get T om is an accomplished triathlete who already has eight full Ironmen under his lycra chaps, and had been training hard in the build-up to 29 March. After an excellent half Ironman in East London, he was eyeing a 9:45 finish in Port Elizabeth to qualify for the Ironman World Championships in Kona, Hawaii.