Eneko Llanos´ four fantastic months

By Iñigo Mujika on July 26th 2010
Triathlete Eneko Llanos

Triathlete Eneko Llanos (photo contributed by Finisher Triatlon)

Eneko Llanos has just finished the first competitive cycle of the season with another excellent result, finishing third in the prestigious Roth Ironman, Germany, with a sensational time of 8 hours, 2 minutes and 33 seconds. Eneko has been on the podium all season so far, although this time it was not possible to reach the highest step, which was occupied by Rasmus Henning from Denmark. The second spot was taken by German triathlete Sebastian Kienle.

This great race in Roth brings one of Eneko’s most successful cycles of his sports career to an end: he won the Abu Dhabi Triathlon four months ago; he then achieved the third position in the Wildflower Half Ironman, California, one of the most important in the World; he continued on with a victory at Ironman Lanzarote, second in his career; three weeks later he achieved his eigth win in Zarautz, then won the Long Distance European Championships in Vitoria-Gasteiz on June 26th, and closed the cycle with the podium finish in Roth. Eneko will now take a break for a few days, before starting his preparation for Ironman Hawaii and Xterra Maui, both taking place next October in the named Pacific Islands.

In these four months, Eneko spent 36 hours 52 minutes and 15 seconds competing. As can be observed in the table below, Eneko spent 4 h, 1 min and 3 s swimming (10.9% of the total competition time), 21 h, 22 min and 8 s pedalling (57.9% of competition time), and 11 h, 13 min and 35 s running (30.4% of competition time). In addition, Eneko dedicated a total of 19 min and 29 s to the transitions from swimming to the cycling segment and from this to the run.

Swim Bike Run
Race Week Pos. Time Distance Time Distance Time Distance Time
Abu Dhabi 10 1 6:34:37 3 0:38:00 200 4:44:56 20 1:10:00
Wildflower 17 3 4:03:34 1,9 0:23:56 90 2:19:26 21,1 1:17:23
Lanzarote 20 1 8:37:43 3,8 0:47:49 180 4:53:26 42,2 2:50:21
Zarautz 23 1 3:58:14 2,5 0:34:10 82,5 2:10:17 20 1:13:47
Vitoria 25 1 5:35:34 4,0 0:50:07 120 2:49:37 30 1:54:03
Roth 28 3 8:02:33 3,8 0:47:01 180 4:24:26 42,2 2:48:01
Total

36:52:15 19,0 4:01:03 852,5 21:22:0 175,5 11:13:35

Eneko’s average competition paces during this competition cycle were as follows: 1 min, 16 s per 100 m during the swim; 38.9 km/h on the bike; 3 min, 50 s per km on the run. It has to be emphasized that we are refering to average paces, achieved in different races, therefore against different competitors and under highly variable environmental conditions: swim in salty water lagoon, open sea, fresh water lake or canal, with or without a wetsuit; bike over flat, undulating or mountainous terrain, but always without drafting; run on flat or undulating terrain; variable temperature, relative humidity and altitude over sea level.

To be able to face such a demanding and successful competition cycle, and all along it, Eneko has swum a total of 448 km; he has spent 302 hours on the bike and has dedicated 104 hours to train his run, in addition to carrying out 40 sessions of strength training in the gym. Obviously, a training and competition program with such level of demand requires a very precise planning, with an exhaustive control of the training loads and the recovery processes, as well as a nutrition plan in accordance with the energy and nutritional demands of the athlete. All these factors, inseparable from Eneko’s extraordinary athletic quality, professionalism and mental strength, have been key to the consecution of the results obtained during Eneko’s four fantastic months.

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Interviews with the elite: Craig Mottram

By Iñigo Mujika on July 21st 2010
Craig Mottram and Victorian Institute of Sport triathlon coach Jonathan Hall

Craig Mottram and Victorian Institute of Sport triathlon coach Jonathan Hall (photo: Iñigo Mujika).

He was born in Frankston, Victoria, Australia, on 18 June 1980. He is one of the World’s fastest distance runners, and he is among us, training in Vitoria-Gasteiz along with a group of Australian triathletes in a three-month training camp organised by USP Araba Sport Clinic.

Craig Mottram, known amongst some African runners as the Big Mzungu (Big White Man), won the bronze medal in the 5,000 m at World Championships in Helsinki in 2005, and the silver medal in the same distance at the Commonwealth Games in 2006.

His running times need no comment:

  • 1,500 metres 3:33.97 (Zurich, Switzerland, 08/18/2006)
  • Mile 3:48.98 (Oslo, Norway, 07/29/2005, Oceanic Record)
  • 2,000 metres 4:50.76 (Melbourne, Australia, 03/09/2006, Oceanic Record)
  • 3,000 metres 7:32.19 (Athens, Greece, 09/17/2006, Oceanic Record)
  • 2 miles 8:03.50 (Eugene, Oregon, 06/10/2007, Oceanic Record)
  • 5,000 metres 12:55.76 (London, England, 07/30/2004, Oceanic Record)
  • 10,000 metres 27:34.48 (Stanford, United States, 05/04/2008)
  • 10 km (road) 27:54 (Manchester, England, 05/23/2004, Oceanic Record)

Craig is a big running star, but he is also a great guy, the kind of person that makes everyone around him at ease. When I asked him if he would agree to be my next guest in the series “Interviews with the elite”, it only took him a couple of seconds to reply “Happy to do it”.

Thank you for that Craig!

If you would like to ask Craig a question, you can do so by writing it down in the comment section of this post before July 31, 2010. I will choose the most relevant questions and pass them on to Craig.

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One comment

  1. Caleb

    Craig, how serious have you gotten with triathlon training, and at the moment which event are you hoping to do in London 2012?

    Thanks, keep tearing it up Buster!

    July 23, 2010

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Ainhoa Murua remains among the World´s best

By Iñigo Mujika on July 20th 2010
Ainhoa Murua

Ainhoa Murua (photo contributed by Finisher Triatlón)

Ainhoa Murua finished ninth last Sunday in the Dextro Energy-Triathlon World Championships in Hamburg, Germany. This is Ainhoa’s best placing in the World Championship Series, on the day of her 32nd birthday.

The winner of the event was Swedish athlete Lisa Norden, who beat in the final sprint Emma Moffatt from Australia, new leader of the overall standings with three more races to go (London, Kitzbühel and the Grand Final in Budapest). Ainhoa, who was fourth at the European Championships in Athlone (Ireland) two weeks ago, equals the result she achieved at the beginning of June in the World Championships race of Madrid.

The athlete from Zarautz that I coach at USP Araba Sport Clinic places herself 15th in the World Championships overall ranking and aspires to finish in the competition’s Top-10 in mid-September.

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Genetics, environment and sport, in the eyes of Richard Dawkins

By Iñigo Mujika on July 14th 2010

“Genetic and environmental changes can produce identical outcomes. If you wanted to rear a human child to win a body-building contest and you had a few centuries to spare, you could start by genetic manipulation, engineering exactly the same freak gene as characterizes Belgian Blue cattle and Black Exotic pigs. Indeed, there are some humans known to have deletions of the myostatin gene, and they tend to be abnormally well muscled. If you started with a mutant child and made it pump iron as well (presumably the cattle and pigs could not be cajoled into this), you could probably end with something more grotesque than Mr Universe.

Political opposition to eugenic breeding of humans sometimes spills over into the almost certainly false assertion that it is impossible. Not only is it immoral, you may hear it said, it wouldn’t work. Unfortunately, to say that something is morally wrong, or politically undesirable, is not to say that it wouldn’t work. I have no doubt that, if you set your mind to it and had enough time and enogh political power, you could breed a race of superior body-builders, or high-jumpers or shot-putters; pearl fishers, sumo wrestlers, or sprinters; or (I suspect, although now with less confidence because there are no animal precedents) superior musicians, poets, mathematicians or wine-tasters. The reason I am confident about selective breeding for athletic prowess is that the qualities needed are so similar to those that demonstrably work in the breeding of racehorses and carthorses, of greyhounds and sledge dogs. The reason I am still pretty confident about the practical feasibility (though not the moral or political desirability) of selective breeding for mental or otherwise uniquely human traits is that there are so few examples where an attempt at selective breeding in animals has ever failed, even for traits that might have thought surprising. Who would have thought, for example, that dogs could be bred for sheep-herding skills, or ‘pointing’, or bull-baiting?”

Dawkins R. The Greatest Show on Earth. The Evidence for Evolution. Bantam Press, London, 2009, p. 38-39.

Richard Dawkins´ website

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Video presentation on nutrition for team sports

By Iñigo Mujika on July 6th 2010

Six World experts and 100 sport nutrition practitioners gathered at the Robinson Club, Cala Serena, Mallorca in December 2009. Over two days they presented and discussed the latest findings in the broad field of sport nutrition and figured out ways to turn the theory into practical application.

This video is a summary of my own presentation, “giving you an insight into the thinking and the benefit of advice from the leaders in the field”, as indicated in the official DVD from the conference.

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