Paul Regensburg of Lifesport and myself will be putting on the Friday morning open water swims again at Thetis lake - in the water at 8 AM - starting on May 28.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Thetis Open Water Swimming
Paul Regensburg of Lifesport and myself will be putting on the Friday morning open water swims again at Thetis lake - in the water at 8 AM - starting on May 28.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
I seem to have put my carbon footprint on your ass.
If you want to go green, save the polar bears and use your sewage to heat the sauna - go for it. I try to recycle - but let's stop with the false modesty. We are, as we always have been - looking after our own sorry asses.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Foster Parents
Today Sara and I rescued a dog (Zoey) and when we got home we found my mother there with these two little jewels in need of a home. If you know someone who might have a good home for either or both let me know. The vet bills for them are $500 each - so that includes everything they need to introduce them to the world.
They're very playful and loving.
Zoey meets Jackson.Thursday, March 18, 2010
Training Camp In Noosa
The Noosa pool at 5:30 AM
The girls have been training hard and I've managed to get in a few sessions myself.
The weather has been the big story though. Neil Finn must have spent some time here when he wrote Four Seasons in One Day. You can start your session in fine warm sunshine, move to 80kph winds, then find yourself smashed by sideways driven rain and finish up in the sun again. I guess we're just missing snow. Truth is, it never really gets cold but that rain can be distracting and I've never seen such unrelenting wind.
Girls getting ready to lay down some 400s on a grass track
The culture of fitness in the country – or at least this part of the country is certainly admirable. You just don't see as many heavy people here. It's immediately evident. Like my home based pool, Crystal, back in Victoria, the morning finds the public lanes filled with older people getting in their morning exercise. The difference here is the older people tend not to be massively over weight and they know how to swim. It's not uncommon to see some grey haired gal holding 1:30s as she rolls out a couple K.
An early morning open water swim session for young and old.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Job opportunity
Anyone looking for a job?
This of course would be "Western Canada"
CHAMPION SYSTEM WESTERN SALES MANAGER
Leading customized apparel company outfitting both the mainstream and elite triathlete, cyclist, runner, swimmer, etc. is seeking to contract an Western Sales Manager. Compensation is salary plus commission.
Must be:
* Knowledgeable about sport attire
* Strong sales background
* Personable
* Able to travel to key competitions during season
* Have a strong desire to grow with a world leading company new to Canada
Contract terms to be negotiated based on experience
Interested parties should submit a resume complete with references to
sleckie@goldmedalplates.com
Closing date: March 15, 2010
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Sometimes Good Things Happen
All unearned money will be redistributed to those who finished within the 8%.
The WTC has really stepped up and done the right thing here and should be commended.
To those people who said the pros should just stop complaining and take it - shame on you!
These people had their livelihoods attacked and for some reason many in the sport or on the fringe of the sport, thought it poor form for them to protest this.
I'm proud to have been a part of the movement to correct this ill thought out rule.
The situation is not ideal but this is a great improvement. The situation is still tougher on the entry level athlete, or the age grouper thinking about stepping up but the insentives to improve just got bigger!
Monday, March 1, 2010
It's About the Economy Stupid
Now this development would have come as no surprise to Biscay, as the rule change was announced near the end of last season.
When I heard this I responded emotionally, as I so often do, and posted a status on my Facebook - something to the effect that the 8% rule was shameful. Thirty nine comments later the thread died out. Paulo was first on with the statement “The total prize package is shameful and the % rule is spot on.” Peter Reid agreed.
Before I gave myself a chance to think it through I disagreed with them – but of course Paulo is mostly right. The total prize purse for Ironman is the shame but I still have troubles getting my head around the 8% rule.
Another poster wrote “It’s absolutely fair, so long as it’s known at the outset. A 2nd or 3rd tier pro does not bring in the same attention and thus dollars to a race as a more competitive athlete. The business model would fail if payouts went to athletes that no one watched or knew of. So no, it doesn’t hurt the sport to reduce prize money in this way…“
Whereas my thinking is simple economics – reduce the prize money – reduce the number of pros.
Here is how Ironman presented the new guideline as a positive for the sport:
“(it’s) an effort to streamline and enhance the quality and athletic standards of Ironman branded events as a global brand.”
I would buy that line had it been followed with – “The unearned prize money would be redistributed to the real pros”
But here’s what it was followed with:
There will be NO redistribution of the unearned prize money.
So they’ll be keeping the cash.
It is my opinion that the Ironman organization is moving to phase out the pro field.
I draw this conclusion based on the above points and a few more as well.
If I wanted to cull the number of pros racing, here is what I would do:
I’d make it harder for them to race and I’d do that first by increasing the cost of racing and decreasing the ability to enter races. And then I’d decrease prize money.
These actions, based on laws of human behavior, would virtually guarantee to reduce the participation of any professional endeavor.
And what did Ironman do?
* Introduced a $750 annual racing fee for pro athletes.
This fee grants the pros free entry into any official Ironman race(save Kona and Clearwater) – something, with very few exceptions, they have enjoyed for years.
* Introduced entry deadlines for athletes.
In the past professionals have had the ability to jump into a race at almost any time, within reason, before the gun goes off. I know this offends the sensibility of many an age grouper who has been forced to stand in line for hours, a year ahead of the race start to pay close to $600 to race, but for the professional to plot their season out a year in advance and stick to that plan is virtually impossible. There are simply too many variables to factor in. You can hit you’re “A” race on the Saturday and have a mechanical pull you from the event ten miles into the bike. You fail to qualify for the championships, make any money or promote your sponsors with a good result. If you’re a real pro, you are on-line before you’re in bed booking a flight somewhere across the globe and prepping to race again in two weeks time. You need to be able to gain entry into that race and it seemed race organizers were operating under the assumption that a deeper pro field brought positives to the race. They wanted the pro there.
Of course, under the new guidelines, the intrepid pro can simply sign up for all the races and have their bases covered.
* Reduced prize money.
Now here’s where the absolute brilliance of the 8% rule comes into play. With this one simple line the law of averages dictates that the race organizers will, on many occasions, pay out less money to fewer athletes. And even if you do manage to finish within the 8%, the races are now only paying out five deep as opposed to the eight deep that most used to pay – and remember, the unearned money is kept by the race organizers.
So if the top level pros gain nothing by schooling those behind them, what’s to stop them for standing before the finish line and waiting for the next fellow pro? I suspect they’d be a crowd favorite in a hurry but I also suspect the keepers of Ironman would lay down some swift and stern penalties before it happened again. I believe that if the WTC was truly trying to “streamline and enhance the quality and athletic standards of Ironman…” they would roll that unearned money back to the pros who did finish within the 8%. This would serve two purposes. First it would clearly demonstrate that the policy was not simply a move to save money and secondly it would encourage the tier 1 athletes to really lay it on the line when they were out there. There’d be no more pulling up once safely in the lead. Granger and Niederfriniger would have had an additional $9,000 to divide between them. With that kind of money at stake we might see more athletes coming to the sport, even it was harder to make a living on the way up.
Is the Ironman organization a pit of greedy vipers? No, they’re board of directors looking at the bottom line, as is their duty to shareholders. There is no good and evil here – just a business model.
I understand the WTC is currently owned by a hedge fund that has made no secret of it’s intention to increase the value of the race over the next seven years then flip the brand for a substantial profit. We live in a free market society and this is a perfectly legit endeavor.
If I were handed the task of increasing the value to a potential buyer I would look at the obvious places to increase income and decrease costs.
Many of the races are filling up a year in advance within days of going on sale. With this kind of demand I’d increase the supply and increase the price. This clearly has been done.
I would further look at ways to decrease the costs of putting on the events. One obvious expense to look at would be the cost of the pro field. The prize purse paired with the fact that the pros bring in no measurable value to the event, after all they get free entry, would make it a no brainer.
In a flurry of twitters over the weekend, Jordon Rapp pointed out that these races are filling up before a single pro has entered the race. This, he felt, was evidence that the age grouper doesn’t care if there are pros in the race. I would argue that there is an expectation by some that there will be a pro field come race day.
Time and time again, we hear that one of the enjoyable aspects of the sport is the ability of Alan Ager to line up with Percy Pro.
When Percy Pro is no longer lining up at the Ironman races will Alan Ager fly across the country, rent a car and stay in a hotel for a week to do a race he had to stand hours in line and pay close to six hundred dollars to enter? Or will he choose to just race locally? Some will. Some won’t. I have not the foggiest idea of what kind of numbers we’re looking at.
One thing I’m certain of though, is I would not for one moment trust what people “say” they would do. I would only trust what they did – and I believe it would take several seasons before the true effects, if any, would become apparent.
During the course of this weekends barrage of social networking discussions I learned there are great many people who encourage this shift at Ironman.
Greg Nicholson of
I don’t know Hillary in the least but to suggest she needs to STFU and train harder seems a little ill informed.
But is he right? Do pros (and apparently age groupers) have a sense of entitlement unearned? Again, the free market society will sort it all out.
If Ironman continues to diminish the participation of the pro in their races, will an alternative rise to fill the void?
Many will point to the failed 101 series. They worked hard to attract the pros – too hard some said, and it resulted in the quick demise of the events. It’s evidence that surely must give the WTC some comfort.
Maybe the Rev 3 series will succeed where the 101 failed.
One of the early conversations I had concerning the new guidelines came after Ironman
In the future I hope there’s a place for the pros, both entry level and top tier, but if, as so many seem to believe, there is no need for them then I’ll settle for being grateful to have been involved in the sport during a time when it was believed otherwise.
As Adrienne Stedford of
For now the ability of the athlete trying to make the next step to pro has become more difficult. It follows then that there will be fewer athletes making that step. Ultimately that will mean fewer truly elite athletes. If the current economy and economic models in place can not support these new athletes then there is little to be said about the matter. Supply and demand will win the day.
If, however, an alternative for the long course professional triathlete surfaces, and the age groupers follow, then many a finisher may have to look to a new corporate logo to tattoo on their ankles.
Monday, February 22, 2010
My day
I got married today. I figure I'm pretty lucky.
Also - here's an interview I did about the movie I directed. Click on picture to read.
Friday, February 12, 2010
I'm Back
Well, I actually did go somewhere. I was in Los Angeles on and off for almost two months. I was directing a super low budget movie. It was a hell of an interesting experience that involved very little sleep.
Now back to my regular scheduled programing.
Read in the paper today that some guy with entirely too much time on his hands had been banned for life from going into Tim Hortons. This blessing in disguise came as a result of his repeated (3 times) complaints about the quality of the decaf coffee. He claimed it had a burned taste. First of all - it had a burned taste because no one drinks decaf and it sits on the burner for a long time.
So this guy actually writes a letter to head office - gets a meeting and then is stunned when he arrives at the meeting to find a letter ordering him to keep his distance from the coffee joint. Next he takes his cause to the press and the press actually takes up the torch!
I read two accounts and both leaned in sympathy towards the dumb ass.
Can you imagine the fervour with which this idiot must have lodged his complaints?
The press made no reference to any such behaviour but anyone who has worked for minimum wage in a place like Tim Hortons knows the fury with which Joe and Josephine Public can come at you.
I'm not a fan of Tim Hortons but my opinion of them has gone up a few notches for now.
As I type this, I'm watching Rob Zombie's Halloween II. Very disappointing. His remake of the original was one of the best horror movies I'd seen in years. This is almost unwatchable. He's changed the nature of the characters. That's just something you don't do. The heroine is the foulest, nastiest, whiniest little bitch I've seen since they let Ann Coulter have a microphone.
I'm hoping he(Zombie) further betrays the fans and franchise and kills her off before much more film rolls by.
I like Zombie but I think he must have been pissed off at someone when he wrote this one.
That's all for now.