Showing posts with label hindsight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hindsight. Show all posts

Saturday, March 24, 2012

The Critical Post-Race Self-Evaluation

Photo-credit: Fireviewer
A race is a test, of sorts. It is an event that allows us to measure our performance both physically and mentally. Most coaches, including mine, strongly advise that we review what we have discovered and learnt after our race. Upon reflection, we can discover useful things that can assist us in our future training and racing plans. These insights and hindsight can certainly benefit us, when we apply them with purpose. Here are questions you can ask yourself:

1)    What went well during the race? Why?
2)    What could have been better during my race? Why not?
3)    How did my nutrition plan go? Did I experience abdominal discomforts? What would I do differently the next time? What would I not change?
4)    How sharp were my transitions? Which ways did I delay myself? How could I slice seconds off the next time?
5)    Which mechanical issues did I face? Where and why? How able was I to solve these problems?
6)    What was my mindset during the race? Which was my lowest point, and how did I deal with it?
7)    What was my sense of awareness during the race? How alert was I? Was I ‘in the zone’ or ‘zoned out’?
8)    How did I show my appreciation and recognition to the volunteers and spectators? Did I recall thanking them?
9)    Which is my area of focus for most improvement? How would I approach it?
10) How would I tweak my preparation for my next A-race? What can I learn from others?

By reviewing your performance, you can earn valuable lessons from your challenging event. Triathlons and endurance races are no walk in the park – until you experience the ‘bonk’ or fatigue. Our investment in the sport is high in terms of physical effort, emotional stress, and social impact. Make each attempt at a race count. Be accountable for your actions, so make the post-race review a strategic part of your long-term strategy to sustain yourself happily (and for as long) through your active lifestyle.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

It's So Easy to Say 'I Could Have...'

The wisdom of hindsight includes clarity of thought.

Looking back, we could have avoided certain oversights, shortsightedness and being blind-sided. However, all these 'I could have...' and 'I should have...' may, if unchecked, build a structure of regret and disappointment.

Over the years, I have learnt to 'Move on, and get on with it!'. It is great to bask in glory and achievement, but pitiful and pointless to wallow in shame and regret. If we believe that 'things happen for a reason', then whatever happened, did. If you skipped a workout, or reduced your mileage, or did not stretch for a few days - so be it. Do something different the next time. I think discipline is not about compliance, and 'following the rules'; it is about being clear why we become disciplined. Blind allegiance is not loyalty. Compliance is not about having to follow the steps. It is about sticking to a routine or a regimented lifestyle for a while, but not forever. Your call; your choice.

You need not bring the discipline of work back home. Work and personal life may be a part and kept a-part of each other. You can solve and absolve problems when these arise. Reeves Leong wrote about this today.

Congratulations to Grace Chan for getting second for her age-group yesterday at the OSIM International Triathlon. We raced at the 70.3 Ironman World Championships in 2008. Well done, Hui Koon for his PB of 2:42 at the same race. Our Coach, Craig Holland should be pleased with Hui Koon's sense of discipline over the past few weeks.