We have been working with Stefhan since December 2018 as he builds towards Ironman Italy, as part of these preparations Stefhan returned to Holkham Half (a race he previously completed in 2018) and returned with massive 53 minute PB.
Read below for Stefhan's account of the race:
6.50am...standing in my wetsuit by the lake. In silence we all start to walk into the water ready for the 7.01 wave.. making eye contact with other athletes we exchange nods and the odd few words of encouragement. All the fast guys getting to the front. I notice how big they all seem compared to me. I see a gap near the bank... so I creep forward. For some reason this area is empty. All of a sudden I'm at the front and the horn goes off and we start. Its mayhem as swimmers plough forward through the water. I've still got plenty of room around me so I start to swim. There is zero visibility so I'm holding my head up to sight... sticking near the bank, I knew I was OK. All of a sudden I make contact with someone... an arm has come across my head and dislodged my goggles. The right side has filled with water. I swim on for a few strokes but realise I need to sort out the problem, as I can't swim with one eye shut. Swimming with one arm I left and empty out the water and replace. All's good and I can see again. I manage to swim on. Bumping into a few swimmers, but mostly I can swim on without any trouble. We swim around the island and then the long swim back. Everyone has spread out and I've got plenty of space. I relax and concentrate on swimming.. all's good, I feel I'm doing well. About a third of the swim to go, a swimmer appears from nowhere and I get kicked. It didn't hurt but the shock made me stop and tense up. My right hamstring cramped. I thought... NO! This is game over. If I showed any signs of distress, I know the safety guys would have pulled me out . My options were to flip over and put my arm up for help or carry on. I decided to carry on with one leg, trying to relax the cramped leg. It worked. Although painful, it did ease off and go after about 5 minutes.
I climb out of the lake.... swim completed! I'm feeling great... I'm on a high. I can't wait to get on the bike... This is my chance to make up some time. I shoot through transition. I decide to take it easy for the first mile or two... fuel and hydrate. I'm feeling great. I'm in my comfort zone as I start to peddle. This is the easy bit.... my confidence is sky high. I know the course from last year and the TT bike is like an old friend now, after all those hours we've spent together. I start picking of riders one by one as its safe to do so. The conditions are perfect. Signage is good, marshals at road junctions. The ride is mostly interrupted as I ticked off the miles. We all got caught in some traffic at times but it was mostly clear. Fuelled and hydrated regularly throughout the ride.
Riding back to transition, I thought through what I needed to do to get through as quickly as possible. Racked the bike, changed shoes and got on with the run. Had a gel. The first mile is up hill, so ran/walked it. Once at the top I was able to start running. Got to first drink stop and hydrated. Then ran to the next, walked for 100m and hydrated. I followed the same routine for the 3 laps. On the last lap, i was aware of the time and knew if I put in a final push I'd get to the finish in under 6h15m.
Lessons learned..
I was really pleased on the whole but think I pushed a little hard on the ride which left my legs tired for the run. I should have managed a 2h10m half.