Monday, December 29, 2008

Santa Claus Cup, 2008

So it has arrived, Peter's first real shorttrack race. Santa Claus Cup 2008, Budapest.

And in fact a very proud dad reporting, you may expect a very much biased report here :)
It was a 2-day race, with a warm-up session in the evening prior to the first day, so we had to drive to Budapest early afternoon on Friday, 12th December. Peter enjoyed the evening session quite a bit, he especially liked the quality of ice in the rink.
Saturday morning the race started with the smallest ones, so he had to get on ice quite early, in Heat 3 of 500m. He finished 2nd in his heat so he made it directly into the final, though I was not too much satisfied with his time, he clearly eased up in the last 2 laps, giving away 2 seconds per lap. It is quite uncommon from him but I told myself it must have been the stage fright.
In the finals he finished 6th but no problem, as he was smallest & youngest so grabbing a 6th place from 14 competitors is a very nice achievement.

Then came the heats of 222m and he made it to the semis in a nice way, it was a big fight to claim 2nd but he missed it by 0.2 seconds. In the semis he finished 3rd so went to the B-final and finished 3rd there (7th from 14).
After all these heats and finals he had to do the 333m quarter-final in the evening but again, showing a superb form, got it under his belt coming 2nd.

The next day he was simply - tired. He was lacking concentration and was yawning while I laced up his boots - not the best state of mind to get on ice at all :s But I think I must not blame him for that, he had to fight in 6 stages the previous day and this kind of pressure was quite unknown for him so far - but remember, he is only 7 years old...
He fell in the 333m semi-final so went into the final B, where he met the mats again so finished 3rd there (7th from 14 again).
Then there was only 1 commitment left for him, to cover the starting 1.5 laps in the relays for cat C-D-E boys, so we could start a relay team, otherwise there would have been only 2 boys from the team, missing the criteria of 3 starting... He started (looked bit comic compared to 14-yr-old boys...) and made a nice relay, so he did what he had to do for the team :)
Overall he gained 7th place and everyone finishing ahead of him was significantly older - just click and check out the age of the others on the overall classification list. He ran super times, personal bests in all distances and very promising ones - now I am very very curious about his season-ending times due in March or so.
Generally speaking about the race itself it was very well organized, with a good speaker and nice people all around.

Complete results are here, or you can see them filtered for Cat F boys, too.
I'll try my best uploading videos to YouTube and link them here ASAP.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Transition...

...to ice was going on since October. In fact, Peter says he likes skating on ice more than on inlines. He managed to adopt well, though many times he is not low enough, but... he is only 7, has quite some time to refine his position skills.
There was a small local race together with another club, a good opportunity to check out race times and gain some experience. Peter - as youngest in his category - finished 2nd (from 5) in 3 heats, and 3rd in one, where he clearly missed overtaking opportunities. But we talked it over and he showed the next heat he can fight.
You may check out the videos on YouTube, in cronological order:
400m 222m 333m 500m
(the camera ran out of memory in the last lap of the 500m but nothing happened there...)
When running alone, against the clock, he is now 6 seconds quicker on 222m than he was in March - we will see next March how he will develop during the winter season.

Santa Cup is going to happen this weekend in Budapest, so, his first real shorttrack test is near :)

... my transition to winter mode is like:
  • got back to going to the gym 3 times a week
  • running 4-5 kms 3 times a week
  • an hour-long indoor training, once a week
I generally refer to these as 'pre-season' - I myself wonder when the base/season would start at all :D:D

Oh almost forgot - convinced Aniko to start skating, so she already had 2 lessons and she says she had fun :)

Friday, October 17, 2008

2008 inline season review

All the race events of 2008 are over, it's time to make a quick summary.

I've started the season at absolute 0 level. My goal was to learn to skate and gain some racing experience. So we can call this year a development year, starting from scratch.
I've attended:
  • 4 track races
  • 1 half-marathon
  • 1 super-marathon relay
Initially I wanted to go to Kosice as season closing but due to other factors I did not manage to get there this year.

It started with the half-marathon of Wink Marathon in Siófok. Lacking actually everything I'd have needed even the fact I've finished can be seen as a good result. I missed my target time of 1:25 by 4 minutes, but that did not put me back at all. Instead it made me realize what I should do - train! Train systematically, work on drills and gain endurance. Sound like a lot of work and no fun, but - it seemed like fun :)

The track races were quite a bit of challenge, lacking crucial skills like proper crossovers or nice lateral push. However I never wanted to skip them, I thought of these as laying down some base to measure development later. And in fact there has been some development, I was able to takeover Feri once! He trains regularly with the club, along with the kids, so obviously he should be ahead of me - but still a good target ahead...
Well in fact I finished last every track race except one (due to a fall ahead), but the latter 2 races I finished less metres behind the others. And that is an advance.

The super-marathon relay came as a surprise event just the moment I was feeling down not being able to go to Kosice. So I did not think about it but entered. In fact it was about a half-marathon distance and I was quite pleased how it went.

All in all I am happy with the progress I made this year.
Next year I want to cover more mid-distance races and work on my technique to get competitive on track events, too.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Turul Cup 2008

The closing stage of the Hungarian Cup was held at Tatabánya early October.

There was uncertainity until the last week exactly where it would take place - they've built a new, 200m banked track in Tatabánya recently but we heard news the asphalt cover was terrible, bumpy and uneven, so the club leader wanted it to be redone completely. That would put us back on the industrial roads near the city that were used in the previous races - see my spring opening review...
Well the last week it was confirmed the new track is a no-go :( Sad but at least understandable.

We decided to go a day early, do some shopping in Budapest (looking for some furniture elements and sportswear - for Peter of course...) and spend the night in Tatabánya, do a comfy wakeup and miss out the early-morning rush. Everything went fine but - the morning we woke up to see a day of slow, steady, un-forgiving rain under a grey grey sky. Bammmm. Now if there is an idea I don't like that is surely the idea of skating in rain in 8 C or so, with 25-30 km/h winds. Definitely not loving that.
Anyway we drove to the meeting point while contacting everyone else in the team so we met 4 other cars there and one local. He lead us to a school as we were told the amateurs will compete indoors. Wohoo, not a bad idea at all, I thought. Until I saw the gym :D

It was tiny! One round was about 70 metres all in all, and it had plastic cover. Skating on it it felt like skating on melted chewing gum until a point where it totally lost grip and you were off in the air, heading for the walls sooo close. I was like... erm... scared :)
We had 4 and 10 laps to cover. Completely missing warmup we started with the shorter one. Feri took the lead but suffered in the turns on his 100mm wheels, so in lap 3 I overtook him from the inner side. He made a nice recovery and it was a draw I think on the finish line - a photo finish would there be such a device around :) However a few good photos were shot where both of us are smiling, almost laughing while skating around.
For the 10-lap race we were joined by the ladies (so we were 4 on the track...) and this time he seemed to find a good trajectory and gained a small advantage lap by lap, I finished half a lap behind him.

It was early afternoon when the podium ceremony has finished and we all went out to the edge of the town - leaving everything behind you could associate with comfort.
It has dried until then (result of the heavy winds, not the heat) and Peter had his first distance, 200m, quite early. He missed warmup totally and suffered all the 200m, finishing with a face usually known only from the end of training sessions. Right after that we put him back in the car and (oh well forgive me all enviroment-friendly ones around) turned the heat full up with the engine running.
200m finish with same cat girls, sprinting along with teammate Reka

His 400m was a suffering one again - but he made it, won all 5 races in this year and became a champion with 100%!!!
He had a relay with Bence (2 years older), 3 * 700m. Bence started and was in pos. 2 when they changed:
On the headwind part of the course Peter was caught and overtaken but he managed to not fall back significantly and came in about 15 metres behind that guy:
It was Bence's turn again and he quickly reclaimed position #2 and held onto it until the finish. So it was a good race claiming a silver medal and remember, Peter was the youngest of all participating. But not the youngest one present :)
Moira fighting the winds

We had 2 series of podium ceremonies, first for this particular event (individual/relays), and the latter for the overall championships. In fact the team had quite a few times reason to cheers, seems like all the hard work is beginning to show in results.
Winner of XVII. Turul Cup
Cat E-F relays - silverHungarian Champion 2008, Cat. F

Gosh it was so good to get in the car... no wind and no chilling cold in there :) We had our usual post-race McDonalds visit, packed and headed home - it was a silent drive since both our small elves fell asleep quickly :)

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Supermarathon

There was a 56-km running event held nearby, called 'Homokháti Szupermarathon'. The small villages and towns wee bit west of Szeged are commonly called 'Homokhát', means 'sandy part' or something like that.

I was not insane enough to cover that distance by myself so we entered the relay. We were 3 in the team (called 'Kiribati Turbo 608'), and there were 5 etaps to go, so Feri did the first (7 km) and the third one (12 km), myself the 2nd (13 km) and the 5th (7 km), Szilvi had one distance to go (15 km). The main difficulty of the race was not the distances but the road surfaces. Etaps #1, #3 and #5 were quite rough, someone called it a hazelnut choc...
Weather was fine if you like windy overcast 10C, after a rain... there were a lot of runners and hurdes of schoolkids running a 1km distance. We've met some skaters from Budapest, from Kori2000 and had a nice chat with them. They opted for skating the whole distance, but as a pleasure run, not as a race.

Well we left Feri behind for the start and drove to the first relay point and waited quite a lot. It turned out the start procedure was repeated for some reason so everything was postponed half an hour :) Anyway Feri arrived at some time and then came my 13 km. The first 2 kms were very rough & tough: headwind, bad surface, even wet at some point. But then the asphalt turned quite smooth and after a big turn westwards headwind wasn't a factor anymore. I tried to catch up with a guy skating about 300m ahead of me but with no success, in fact the gap has remained the same by the end of my etap. My back was aching badly after 20 minutes but... I've reached the next checkpoint and it was Feri's turn again.
Quick drive up to the next meeting point and talking to Feri meanwhile, he suffered very much on the rough asphalt. He turned up at some point though and Szilvi started. We drove to the last meeting point - and then disaster came.
The race route was a loop, like a lasso - the first and last distance were the same route but opposite direction. We were waiting and waiting and then decided something has happened to Szilvi. Feri got in the car and went off searching for her. Later it turned out she missed a crucial turn and got lost. Feri found her though sometime later, she must have covered 10 extra kms by then... Anyway she got to the meeting point and I was on my way to finish. Though the asphalt was rough still I quite enjoyed this second distance, and during the last 3 kms I was quite happy, skating smooth style with big strong sidepush and nice recovery. I was really having fun then.
Crossing the finish, line Szilvi and Feri were waiting for me there and we were given a gift package each. There was no prize for the skate relays but that's no problem.
I've checked the race times and I was over 20km/h - hooraaaay!

3 kids of the club were also doing a relay, namely Petra (10), Balázs (16), Marci (10, Feri's son). They handled it professionally, but they also had trouble on the 3rd part. Balázs covered distances 1,3 and 5, while Marci ran the 2nd and Petra the 4th. When I asked them after the race, they were not tired at all!
Some photos of big numbers of crazy runners and small numbers of crazy skaters here.

After all, it was a pleasant ride (minus Szilvi getting lost) and we may do it again next year, but I think we could do it as individuals. Now do I sound insane? :D

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Jász Cup - Jászberény

Second time this year it was racing time in Jászberény, this time to compete for the 'Jász' Cup. The surroundings there are inhabited by the jász people since the 13th century and they celebrate their identity this time of the year with a festival. Anyway, a nice setup for holding several sport events. And drink a lot in the evenings :)

We were still on hols, in nearby Parád so it was an hour's drive or so to get to Jászberény. Weather was hot hot hot throughout the week but right before the racing day a cold weather front hit the region so it was cloudy and windy in the morning. Not too windy and in fact it looked better than another day in 35+ C...

The race began with yet again some organisational problems, turned out the racing numbers of few of the team members had to be changed - don't ask me why. It is completely unclear to me. I thought they've put it in some database when they handed them out first. Obviously they did not, and now every coach had to fill in the race numbers of his team on a piece of paper. What can be soooo difficult handling about 100 people's name/bday/racing number???

Anyway, then came the usual chaos of 'now we will do the F category girls, then amateur men cat D, then pre-heat prof. B men'... so you sit there, all dressed up, skates on and you don't know how much time you have until the next run, or when you can go and do some warmup laps. I really don't get it what does it take to make up a race program, a schedule, and stick to it.

Well somehow it started, first it was my 500m. We went to the start and... came a 10-minute shower, raining cats and dogs. After 5 mins however all 4 of us (soaking wet) voted to run the race and get back to the tent :) So off we went, one guy from Serbia fell at start but then went on to win, Dani (14 yr) was second, and I was able to keep the pace of Feri (at last) and was 1 meter behind him at the finish line. It may be the difference in our wheels though, he suffered with his 85A 100mm wheels while I didn't even notice any slips on my 82A 84mm wheels...

Then came Peter's 400m, however they were only 2 starting :( The track was still bit wet and slippery and in fact he almost fell at start but then it was a smooth, clear win ahead of Hazafi Ádám from KDSE.

It was my turn again, 2000m (10 laps) this time. The track has dried up but the wind was quite strong. Senior women & men were starting in the same heat and I was quite happy to perform a smooth start. Then I was in position 6 (out of 8) and after 2 laps decided to move up a bit and overtook 2 ladies. Well... my energy lasted until lap 7 and from then on it was pure horror, I felt I was slowing down lacking any power and then those 2 ladies left me again. It was a bad decision to move up early it seems...

Then soon came Peter and 300m, and a super performance again, skating nice style and an easy win. It is a year like that it seems.

We saw some great elimination and points races then for the upper age category boys and girls, too bad Tomi from our team produced a huge & spectacular crash and had to be taken to the doc for serious checks. Later he returned smiling but... I wonder how he put on normal clothes or slept in a bed...

Oh and we seniors raced relays, 1800m (9 laps). It was nice, quite uneventful and we came second, the ones beating us were those youngsters from Serbia allowed to run in amateur despite being pros, so no problems begin defeated by them :)

There is a very fine pizzeria close to the track so it was obvious we had to visit that and refill our carbohydrate stores, then came the 'usual' waiting time and then the ceremonies. Peter won a nice cup, I've collected a silver in relays, and the team has performed quite well, we had quite a few podium appearances.

Then came the overall prize and... tadaaaammmm... the overall cup was won by our team, KDE Szeged!!! Wohoooooo, last year the team was 3rd, now you can see the cup in the middle of the pic, in the hands of Sonja.

Moira was having a good time in the team tent playing with the younger ones about her age. Interestingly, she was most impressed with a boy's Ferrari matchbox car - she may be influenced by his brother :)

Aftermath - Bearings dead. Though we put tons of WD-40 on them, most of them went dead by the time we got home :( The only cure is - throw them out and put in new ones. Well well well, no fun racing in the rain indeed :s

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Savaria Cup - Szombathely

The 3rd round of the Hungarian Championships, called Savaria Cup, was held at Szombathely.

Szombathely is a very pretty place. We've been there 2 times already, so both Moira & Peter were delighted to get there. We like the city itself, not too small, not too big, kinda general 'small Austria' feeling we have in & around the city. The air is much more clear than at home, so Aniko likes it more, too.

Anyway, to the race now. As there is no speedskating track (yet) in Szombathely, the race itself was held on a double, asphaltous, open-air handball track, in the backyards of a newly built sports arena. Don't believe everything on the satellite map, it must be a 2-3 year old photo - so believe me, the middle of the sat map is a handball track now :)

So there are no elevated turns, and one round is 140 meters. It imposes some technical difficulties as it is easier to loose the grip in the turns, and it is much more difficult to overtake as the straight sections are very short, about 2-3 pushes for a junior age speedskater. It has a 'short-track' feeling for this reason.

It was very hot and sunny all the day and Peter was a bit nervous - he wanted to defeat the local guy Hazafi Ádám and he feared the track a bit. He had 2 distances to compete, 1.5 laps and 3.5 laps, about 200 and 500 meters, and 4 challengers.
It wasn't until noon his races have come, first the shorter distance. He started perfectly, negotiated the first turn leading the bunch and was increasing his lead from then on.


Then about 1 hour later, he was devastating - starting the last lap with comfortable lead, by the sound of the ring he started a sprint as if it was a 1-lap race. He finished half a lap ahead of the others, his coach called him the 'skater of the day' and that made him so proud.

The team was not in top form, frankly :( Due to the specialities of the track, we didn't see much takeovers and most races were like modern-era F1, where a start could decide the finishing order. Well, let's see what the team will do next week, as they will spend 6 days in training camp.

Me... well I've started, and finished 4th (of 4) on the 200m, and 3rd on the longer distance (cca 500m), due to one falling out on a turn :) I didn't even notice that fall but I was told later only, after finish :) So... still have room to develop :)

Friday, July 25, 2008

Crossover week

This week I've managed to train a lot at last, and it ment I could practice crossovers a lot.

I've managed to do 4 crossovers each turn, too bad I need one extra sidepush to recover before starting the next one - but hey, I'm starting to get a grip on this. I noticed that I don't slow down in turns so much as before, and also I am not fighting the turns but flowing with them. And I don't have an underpush yet... now I can imagine why it is so easy to accelerate out of a corner. It also has the effect of less back pain, the muscles seem to like it more than regular pushes in the banked turns.

I did 15-20 laps at a time, changing directions then and off to the next portion, summing up 60-70 laps a session. That with a nice warmup section gave 12-14 kms each day. Although I record each portion's time ridiculously I don't bother with pace much, I just keep it nice & rolling. I'll start to look at that issue seriously when I can do the crossovers more naturally, using them as a tool, not as an aim.

One may wonder how come I've not mastered this skill earlier. In fact I've read a nice tutorial about skating and the vicious cycle is outlined very very nicely there: you need to use outer edges before you can do crossovers, but to use outer edges for real you should do crossovers. Wicked, right?

Friday, July 11, 2008

Skill drills week

I've been trying to practice basic skating drills the last week - it was too hot to spend much time on the track anyway, so long tempo sessions were out of question.

After warmup, I've been doing very basic skill drills, eg: rolling in position, inside/outside edges, low position left/right, one-legged pushes, scissors, one-foot glides, parallel turns. It was about 20-24 laps each time, then some 10-20 laps on moderate tempo. It was just enough to cover, in 32+ Celsius... then some laps to cool down, and stretches. Bill & Nicole Begg's videos help a lot I think, I watch the technique-related ones each night to prepare mentally for next day.

I was alone on the track each day, at least it was silent, no constant rolling laughter around :)
Anyway, I wonder when and how I will do my first crossover... I am feeling a little bit 'paused', cannot feel any progression with my technique. But my conscious part keeps telling all this tech training will pay off sometime.

Let's hope so!

Monday, June 30, 2008

Hungarian Junior Championships - Part Two

Although it is called a 'Junior' Championship, there was a senior age category, too.
And it was too tempting not to enter :)

We spend too much time beside the skate track each week just looking at our kids doing the hard work so it is quite logical to turn that time into something useful - like skating. And with speed increasing, stability growing, our aimes get higher and higher each week :)
So another dad (Feri) and myself decided to enter - in fact we were three originally but then the third one played football a week before the event - and of course injured his knee. I've always known football was a bad sport :D

Feri on the left, me on the right

So we were two then but luckily a mum (Szilvi) jumped in so we could even enter the relays... wohooo. Well we practiced some relays the day before the race, I've fell right at the first one but nothing serious, just a little road rash on my right knee.

And then came the big day. In the senior men, there were 4 starting. We had 500m and 1600m to cover. I finished... erm... 4th :) but enjoyed it a lot. Then the relays started soon after, and there were 2 teams only - a sure silver \o/ as the other team had an ex-iceskater so it was no question who would win. But all our relays went nice, we all had 3 laps to go. The other team chose another strategy, 1 lap each for 2 of them and the rest was covered by Robes, the ex-iceskater.


Nevertheless, it was fun, and the kids were so supportive. It was good to race and I think it is something I'd like to do some more in the future. So.. better learn skating :D

Hungarian Junior Championships

The Hungarian Junior Championships were held at Jászberény on 21st June.

It was damn hot that day (too). I guess we've seen 35C or so, effectively no clouds during the day... Luckily the team's new tents (the blue Powerslide/Core/Matter type) have arrived and served well. We looked sooo professional... And again the race was an administrative catastrophe ballet, the start was set at 09:00 but no professional racer hit the track before noon :( And all those kids suffering in the heat... Damn. How on earth can it be done right in Germany or in the Czech or Slovakia? And how does it happen each and every time here in Hungary? An age-old curse sitting on us or just plain stupidity???

Anyway, Péter had 3 distances to race and 4 contestants in his age category. On 200m, he started awfully and came in the first turn 3rd, the guys behind him made it a clearly dangerous situation, almost crashing into him. Then he fired up the rockets and overtook Remete Botond from TDKE (in blue/white suit) in the straight, then the guy from KDSE, Hazafi Ádám (in red/black skinsuit) in the first half of the 2nd turn. From then it was a clear run but when he crossed the finish line his face told it all - "phew that was a tough one but I DID IT!"


Then on 300m he started much much better and dominated the race from start to finish (check his new helmet):


And at last he had a longer distance to race, 500m. He produced a wonderful start and had a nice lead soon.

Then after 1.5 laps he started to stand up a little bit but I was just there and shouted at him "You are getting slower, Pete" and those words worked like magic, he tucked in a wonderful low-sit position and produced a delicious flying lap, humilating the others so obviously.

So all in all he claimed unambiguous gold, hurray!


The team produced bit too few podiums or good results but they were right after a week-long training camp, putting many many miles in their legs on bikes for 7 days, so obviously they were all worn out and tired.

And at last, the federation has decided to have personal race numbers for a season, so we won't have to collect them and give them back at each race...

Monday, June 9, 2008

Helmets

We've been looking for a helmet for Péter for ages now, tried all kinds but with no success.

There were ones that would just sit on top of his head, too high.
Then the ones that looked good but did not hold on his head enough, I could push a finger between his head and the helmet, above his ears.
Then some others that almost covered his eyes when sitting properly.
Ah and of course the ones he disqualified at first sight.
So we saw all kinds, from cheap to expensive, big names, no names, etc...

But now - at last - LAS!
Fits perfectly, looks great (dark grey+white), is of the right size. Perfetto!


Phew...

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Gold!

Friday Péter took part in the national student's championship and earned two golden medals!!!

We started to Tatabánya at 8:20, the drive (220 kms) was easy and un-eventful. We were only 2 to go so I've organized Tomi and Balázs to travel along with us, sharing the car and the costs. But how slow we went we couldn't arrive late enough - the amateur's events have just started off so we had plenty of time to do... erm... nothing. So we did exactly that. Of course the skates had to be on all the time :)

The track is just outside Tatabánya, on some industrial roads, a quadrangle of 700m length. It has some elevation changes, too, and the quality of the asphalt is quite good. The organisers had some illustrious buffet set up, with yummy muffins even...

There were many amateurs. So it meant a lot of time to waste. Then at last, around 14:00 the professionals' turn has come. Péter had to race on 200m and 300m distances. There was a 'dark horse' between the opponents we knew nothing about - the other ones he had beaten already previously, in the regionals and in Groß-Gerau. And in fact, on the shorter distance, that guy (Hazafi Ádám from KDSE) was the first at 100m, then - as the track has some climb until the finish line - Péter was able to overtake him, using his strength and nice technique.
The longer distance was much more obvious, Péter won by at least 20m. Double gold!!!

The team earned quite some podium finishes, more on that when I receive the protocols.

We set up for home around 18:30 and had a nice & smooth & fast drive again. And one can imagine what Anikó was like when Péter was in her hands at last :)

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Half-marathon sum-up

In short:
I've done it, finished my first half-marathon - but missed my target time.
Péter has also finished - and earned a podium again.

In detail:
The 5th Wink Marathon in Siófok, Hungary was a total mess, lacking much in organisation.
We had to cover 3 x 7 km, but the road conditions were very very bad on at least 3 kms each round. The route was planned taking the competitors down to the shores of Lake Balaton, however while the 30*30 cm concrete tiles may fit runners, they are totally a pain to skate on. Several racers lost a wheel or two, my left 1st wheel got completely loose by the end of the race. There was another part of the track with gravel scattered all around, it didn't help skating conditions either. While the organisors cannot be blamed for strong winds, that thing didn't help either. OK, must admit there was some nice 2 km smooth asphalt road with a tailwind, but that was only enough to rest a bit.
With these conditions in mind, I am not dissatisfied with the time of 1:29 at all. It could have been better by a minute or so if I did not fell the last round, of course on the 'resting' part of the track... Luckily it is only a sore butt, no bruises at all.
Physically, I felt OK throughout the race and wasn't too tired after the event either. I tried it and now I'd like to have some more... :)

Péter finished 3rd in the junior rankings, 3 minutes ahead of me. For 2 rounds he followed an 'older' girl (2 years...) but he missed out her draft starting the 3rd round, so he had to fight 7 km all alone. He did great but was extra tired after finish, that could be cured with some chocolate of course. In 2 hours he regenerated completely and returned to doing what 7-year-old ones should do in open-air events - running around chasing eachother.

Tomi - as promised - tried to win the race and, hmm, well he did. Too bad he missed the turning point in the first round so he went for a 14km, then a 7km - and then those **** organisers sent him away to cover yet one more round. Even this way, racing 28kms, he finished overall 2nd by 3 minutes, and if we subtracted his last round's time, it would give 0:52 for the 21km, a clear win by 20 minutes ahead of the rest of the field. But he was declared 2nd... no glory, no prize money, just bitter taste in the mouth :(


Oh btw those *** ****** ***** organisers registered me as a junior so they hindered my podium finish (ranked 3rd) :(((

Now let's find another event, a decently organised one!

Friday, May 16, 2008

Murphy's laws

LOL I've strained my biceps femoris on my left leg, when 'jumpin' out of the car this morning.
When else? Aaargh :)

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Marathon preparations

In fact half-marathon but the title sounds better that way :)

We had a long weekend again and I had the opportunity to trains some more on all 3 days.
Saturday and Sunday a qualified trainer joined us (the mum of Tomi, a kid racing in the same team as Péter) and she taught us 'beginners' a lot. I know I must learn quite a bit but damn, it was hard ;) Anyway I won't give up easily.
This way, practicing technique we covered 12 kms only on Saturday and about the same again on Sunday.
Then on Monday I hit the oval and covered 90 laps in 1:05 all by myself, that is 16.2 km so the goal I've set initially (finish the half-marathon) is easily covered I think. Now I think I should aim at covering it in 1:30. Or should it be 1:25? Ok, let it be 1:25. I put it down here so I won't be able to deny:

Target time for half-marathon 17/05/2008: 1:25

BTW Tomi wants to win the junior's event. Being 12 that is a nice goal but if all goes well he can do it. And when I told my son about it, his eyes turned toooooo bright... :)

Regionals

Wednesday Péter had to take part in the regional qualifiers for the student's national championship, due in two weeks. His races were 180m and 270m and he had no difficulty dominating them. So on 23 May we must travel to Tatabánya and face the challenge there. I forgot to time the shorter distance, but the longer one was 39.6 secs. I don't know about his opponents this year yet - he is in good form, so let's hope for the best :)

The event itself was very poorly organized. Registration was scheduled at 14:30 and it lasted until 16:00... Then the amateurs started and their races finished at 17:30. So we could have come only at that time - 3 hours lost waiting for nothing. The whole event finished at 19:15, but at least the weather was nice (yep it means getting more than enough UV rays again). About half of the team qualified for the national event, which sounds nice but in fact at least 2 more kids should have had better luck. We saw epic fights and again, we saw lack of race experience, takeover attempts at wrong places and lack of self-confidence. And these should be cured somehow.

So I talked to Endre (the coach) and we agreed I'd look around for more races in the nearby countries (Austria, Slovakia, the Czech at first shot).

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

New skates

Hmm seems like this is a week of new things.

In short: bought a pair of K2 Power 7.0 skates for myself, tested them, fell and bruised my hip and now I'm recovering.


In detail: I thought (see below) and I was quite right my old Roces skates weren't the best for covering a half marathon distance. So last Wednesday I've found this K2 skate and bought them.
I must say it is a quite new world, it is fast and rolls very smooth. It is a typical long-distance recreational skate, provides more ankle support than low-cut racers' skates but makes covering long distances quite easy.
I got rid of the brakes immediately and then took it for a 10-mile ride on Thursday, with Peter and some more adults on skates and some kids on bikes. It felt great and rolled nice, however approaching the car-park, about 200m to go I crashed and 'succesfully obtained' a palm-sized bruise on my left hip. Or thigh. Ok, let's confess, on my left butt :)

At home, Anikó provided 'medical support' - oh well, it was cca 18 years ago last time I had bruises this size, so it almost felt nostalgic :) However, I've covered an hour on the oval on Friday, and some 12 miles on the road again on Sunday, just to get used to the skates - the half-marathon is getting closer and closer and I definitely need to train some more. Got to polish my technique some more while strength and endurance seems to be quite OK.

So here I am, a happy child with new toys :D

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Groß-Gerau 2008 - Part 3

Travel home
Well it felt much much longer than the other way. The kids were more anxious and had too much energy sometimes. We stopped in Vienna for some looking-around & quick shopping. Arriving home, Moira jumped in my arms and sobbed for 5 minutes - Peter did the same with Aniko but a little bit shorter :)

Aftermath
Well I wonder what each of the kids will earn from the races.
For Peter it is simple - he is flying, after a nice winter season finish he carried on and earned silver medal on his first race in the spring. A really nice start, I hope he can make it go on this way.
The others I think could gain a lot in experience. We miss race experience, there is so little field action in Hungarian races it is very hard to learn tactics or best practises that way.

Columbia
It was 'devastating' to see them racing. They were skating such an easy style, one could think they were not having their heartbeat rising at all. And they raced very clever, too. They showed a nice teamwork, eg in the women 10km elimination they managed to grasp all top 5 places with 3 or 4 laps remaining. They received a standing ovation and earned it well.

Meteo
Meterology... bah. Both weather.com and met.hu forecasted sunny/cloudy weather, 30% possibility of rain and low winds. Well - Saturday we had no clouds at all so we turned red, and Sunday was only a little bit easier. Oh yes, it was raining. On Friday, in Austria...

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Groß-Gerau 2008 - Part 2

The event / Day 0
The kids were enthusiastic to test the track and spent an hour or so skating around.
Later we watched some of the sprint cup event, individual start 300m rush for grownups ;)

The event / Day 1
In the morning our team was involved in the longer distances.
Schuler B Herren 1000m - Bence started like he was racing on 200m sprint. He was caught at 400m, dropped back continuosly and finished 10th (out of 24).
Schuler A Damen 2000m - Barbi had a bad start (as usual), dropped back a lot but then she came up steadily, she seemed fit and strong. She should have been more aggressive though, she slowed down instead of overtaking at least two times, anyway she finished 7th (out of 48).
Jugen Damen 3000m - Szonja was in the middle of the field most of the time, but she also lacked aggression and missed the opportunities to switch to the outer train that moves forward, finished 28th (out of 60). Both girls are strong and skate a very nice way so they shouldn't be afraid to move a bit more forward in the pack.
Jugend Herren 3000m - Roland started rollerskates only 1.5 months ago so it was a good result for him to overtake at least one (55th from 56). Tomi raced exactly like Szonja, with the same mistakes and finished 23th.

In the afternoon we watched and enjoyed the 500m and the relay events for the adults.
As we recorded all our races we had the opportunity to watch them again in the evening and analyze each run, so Endre (the coach) asked for more active, more aggressive racing the next day.

The event / Day 2
Again, our team had to race almost all the morning, first with the middle distances, then the relay qualifiers and then the short runs.
Schuler C Herren 300m - Peter started well (after the first start, which ended in a crash) and finished 2nd (from 7 boys+4 girls). The guy who won was a real sprinter type so no chance to catch him on distances as short as this.
Schuler B Herren 500m - Bence couldn't repeat last day's 2-lap sprint but finished 7th after all.
Schuler A Damen 1500m - Barbi was fighting hard, she managed to stay in the top group all the time, even moved to 2nd position once and finished 8th.
Jugend Damen 2000m - Szonja was more active than on Saturday and managed to place herself in position 23 on the finish line.
Jugend Herren 2000m - Roland overtook 2 times as many racers as previously (ie 2 :) ) however that meant he did not qualify for the last race for the top 40. Tomi was active but lacked the power to move really forward and wasted a lot of energy in position fights in the middle of the group, he finished 20th.

In the relays we could launch only 2-member teams so we were handicapped compared to the 3-racer teams. However it was a good training opportunity.

Soon afterwards the shortest distances followed:
Schuler C Herren 100m - Peter had a very nice start, he was undisputed 2nd after 5 meters and finished 2nd with a nice gap behind him.
Schuler B Herren 300m - Bence made a bad start and fought himself back to place 10.
Schuler A Damen 1000m - Barbi couldn't make use of her long-distance skills and finished 11th after the better sprinters.
Jugend Damen 1500m - Szonja made a nice progress and came in 17th.
Jugend Herren 1500m - Tomi had a bad luck with position fighting and finished 29th.


I couldn't persuade Peter to jump out of the skates until the awards ceremony, so he climbed up the podium still on wheels. Damn I was very proud to see him standing there, shaking hands with the winner and receiving a nice silver award.
Barbi and Bence, being top 10, also were called to stand on the podium of theri category.

The afternoon we watched some great action, the 10000m elimination races of the adults/juniors and the relays. It was around 19:00 or so when we left the track, after all the ceremonies were finished. Back to the B&B, pack up, shower and bed.

It was a long day but an eventful one.

Groß-Gerau 2008 - Part 1

In short: Peter gained 2nd place in Groß-Gerau, in the category Schuler C. Wohooooo!!!

I will compose a more complete description, cut in several posts so they won't be too long.

The Team
Our team consisted of 6 kids, aged 7-13, two girls and 4 boys.

Travel
It was a long ride, 12 hours, but went smooth. We feared traffic near Frankfurt on Friday afternoon but luckily we did not meet any. Google Maps' route plan worked great and helped us get to our destination easily, almost exactly to the house we were looking for.

B&B
We stayed in Worfelden, just about 4-5 miles from
Groß-Gerau, in a nice B&B (Frühstückspension Riegel, Worfelden, Wilhelm Hammann Str. 45). It was so typically German, 'alles in Ordnung' style. Comfortable rooms, nice and helpful landlady, super breakfasts. Frau Riegel did everything she could to make our stay comfortable and showed great patience and tolerance towards our (sometimes noisy) team.

The track
The track itself consists of a 200m banked oval with a concrete center place, and a 304m long, 4-corner, unbanked flat track. Most of the races were held on the 304m track, only the adult/junior sprinters competing for the 300m sprints used the banked track.
The surrounding area is very nice green, just behind the local hospital. The event was organized professionally, with 20+ international judges, 2 ex-racer speakers performing really well throughout the 3 days, olympic-style opening ceremony, all kinds of facilities and a lot of merchants.
The kids spent a lot of time in the boots, checking out every detail of any equipment - but if you do a technical sport, you know exactly what I mean, what great pleasure it is to take even the 100th wheel in your hands... :)

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Size matters

Anikó is feeling better and stronger with each day, 6 days now since her cholecystectomy, so we took a nice light walk in the morning, the kids on bike (of course).

The afternoon I've joined the other Gábor to skate some, in preparation for the half-marathon in May. I don't really remember whose idea it was to enter but with each day I feel like we are insane to try that :) The kids will have no problem finishing but as it looks now, we grown-ups will spend some time at each refreshing station to collect each and every bit of energy to continue.
We've covered about 1.6 miles on street and 30 laps on the track, then 1 more mile home - a half marathon is 117 laps. And I suffered all the way. I think it must be the boot, I falter in it. I don't feel safe, I must change it ASAP. In fact it is a Roces one, not a bad one at all, but it may be a little, very little bit too big. Some millimetres only, but too big.
Pfff, time to start trying new ones.