Ironmaning Into Lamar
Head swim coach Laura Neville, Lamar’s newest addition, is without a doubt bringing some achievements after she competed in the Kona Ironman on Oct. 14 in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii.
The competition is a 140.6-mile (226.3 km) race, which consisted of a 2.4-mile (3.9 km) ocean swim, a 112 mile (180.2 km) bike ride with an approximate 5800 ft. of elevation and lastly a 26.2 mile (42.2 km) run.
“I would say I was pretty emotional and pretty excited about going,” Neville said. “I was excited and disarmed because I had been dealing with gastric ulcers, so it was challenging. However, they are very addicting as there’s a lot of people that compete in these competitions, around 45,000 and only 2000 make it to the World Champs.”
This triathlon is certainly not for the weak, as it needs at least a year or two of training to be able to bear it. However, similar to any competition, training varies for each individual.
“If you're going from couch to training, you need about a year to two years; and if you're already in shape, it's about four to six months,” Neville said. “On Saturdays, it was a lot of five-to-six-hour bike rides, and Sundays were two to three hour runs. During the week, it's swimming, biking and running.”
Although physical strength is what an Ironman requires, mental strength also plays a role in not only training but the actual competition.
“That’s something I've been working on quite a bit lately and trying to master,” Neville said. “Growing up in high school and college swimming, I would always get nervous before races, and it started again when I started doing triathlons, but I've managed it over the last two years now and I would just tell myself that I'm going to remaster my nerves and I've been able to do that.”
Introduced to triathlons in college by a teammate, Neville instantly fell in love with it and hoped to one day compete in an Ironman.
“I picked it up and did a few after college; however, I stopped because life got in the way and I had a child,” Neville said. “My sister told me one day that she had registered me for a relay race, and I was going to swim. I hadn’t swum in 13 years, and she gave me two months’ notice, so I started training and got hooked on it again. In college I told myself I wanted to do an Ironman one day. However, at the time I thought to compete in it you had to train five years, which was the belief in the ‘90s.”
Neville is overjoyed to have completed an Ironman, as it is not an easy thing to accomplish. It requires both effort and money to be able to even bear the physical and mental strain that this competition puts these athletes through.
“It had been a lifelong dream of mine to complete,” Neville said. “After I crossed the finish line, the emotions became overwhelming, and I started to cry. It was just an immense amount of joy and happiness.”
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