Showing posts with label Return to Glory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Return to Glory. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Back in the Pool

My last official swim meet was likely sometime in 2003, the year I graduated from high school. I didn't swim competitively in college and only did laps for fitness periodically. The story I always told myself is I want to keep swimming the rest of my life. Casual down-and-back or racing, it didn't matter.

Two years ago I started practicing with the US Masters team that trains at the pool where I coach. The swimmers were generally gung-ho about going to meets and competing, and asked me a few times if I wanted to join them. And I generally answered them, a la Seinfeld's "I choose not to run!" excuse for why he never agreed to re-race his former classmate Duncan.


I hope you enjoyed the Scandinavian subtitles as much as I did.

It's not that I didn't feel the swimmer's/racer's competitive itch any more -- I don't think that ever leaves you. But I just didn't feel a desire to race at that point.

But after continuing to coach high school and club swimmers, feeling and feeding off the energy at meets, and feeling myself improve at practice, I decided to give a meet a try again. For the first time in 12 years.

It didn't hurt that the open-invitation Colonies Zone Short Course Championships took place at George Mason University, about 15 minutes away from my house.

I registered, finally, with US Masters swimming and signed up for a pretty tame slate of events. No need to go out of control the first time out.

As for entry times, I made them up entirely, based on what I've either done or think could be done in my present condition in practice. Turns out I set the bar a little low.

Swimming between 5 and 20 seconds faster than my seed time was, admittedly, a little ego boost: It felt good to win decisively. Then again, I was typically the youngest in my heats by at least a few years. There was a 70-year-old a few lanes down in the 200 free.

No, I didn't only race senior citizens. But honestly I wasn't paying too much attention to either side. This was about going out and racing for me, myself and I -- seeing what was there, what happened when I pushed on the accelerator.

I had simple goals, starting with the 100 freestyle. I just wanted to go under a minute. The first time I was 12. Once in college I managed to push a :59. Since then, nowhere close. In the last few months in practice, I've pushed as fast as a 1:05. At this meet, I went 55.73, good for 10th out of 16 in my 30-34 age group. Goal achieved.

The rest of the events, by the numbers:

200 IM:                                   2:26.04
50 Breast (200 medley relay)    :35.64
200 Free:                                 2:05.63
100 IM (YES!)                        1:05.44
50 Free:                                     :25.1