Bordine the Bullet
Transcription
Bordine the Bullet
Bordine the Bullet: Pro Cyclist to Pro Triathlete Stor y and photos by Mark Johnson K arl Bordine is fast. How fast? Last year, race organizers disqualified the 34 year old from the Encinitas Sprint Triathlon because his bike split was faster than the pro and elite riders. The directors assumed Bordine, then unknown to the tri world, had pulled a Rosie Ruiz. Only after Bordine explained that he was the 2007 USA Cycling Elite Time Trial Champion did the powerful, 6’3”, 190-pound rider get his age-group win. While an undergraduate at Indiana University, Bordine spent a summer studying in Europe and saw Miguel Indurain win the Tour de France on the Champs-Élysées. “I didn’t yet understand how the guy who didn’t come across the line first could have won,” Bordine recalls. “But I thought, that cycling thing is pretty cool. I’m going to ride across the country with my brother next year.” And they did – in 28 days – averaging 113 miles a day. In 2008 the Minnesota bike and tri shop Gear West created the DKT Challenge: they would award $10,000 to any triathlete who could take the fastest bike splits in five selected races across the country, or $800 per race, if no one took all five. Bordine came out of nowhere and took the fastest split in three of the Olympicdistance races: Life Time Fitness Triathlon in Minneapolis, the Accenture Triathlon in Chicago (fastest by two minutes), and the Toyota U.S. Open in Dallas. Oh yeah, he also qualified for the 2008 Ford Ironman 70.3 World Championship in his second triathlon ever. Riding across the country at a century-a-day pace was Bordine’s introduction to bike racing. Today he is one of the fastest and mostrespected bike racers in the challenging Southern California racing scene. Bordine had 13 bike race wins in 2008, including the pro races at Arizona’s Valley of the Sun stage race and the Tour of Murrieta stage race. He also claimed both the California State Elite Criterium and Time Trial Championships. But after a decade of racing bikes, three of those years as a pro, last year Bordine decided to dabble in triathlon. And dabble he did. Along with his bike split records in Encinitas, Chicago, Dallas and Minneapolis, in his first season he had the fastest amateur bike split at the Ironman California 70.3 triathlon. With those results, Bordine decided he might have a future in this new sport. So he made it his goal to be a full-time professional triathlete by the end of 2009. Audacious for a 190-pound 34 year old, yes. But so too was Bordine’s entry into the world of bike racing. After his ride across the U.S., Bordine entered the Little 500 bike race (made famous by the movie Breaking Away) and placed second. It was the second bike race he had entered in his life. After graduating and passing his CPA exam, he worked in accounting in Chicago for two years. “Then I decided I didn’t want to look back on life and not have given it a chance, so I did my first official USA Cycling race the summer of 1999,” he says. That fall he moved to San Diego with one goal: work enough to get by, then become a pro cyclist. Three years later, Bordine inked a pro contract with the Colavita Cycling team. Today, going into his first season as a focused triathlete, Bordine has already picked up sponsorships from Shimano, PRO, Nytro, Oakley and Fluid. In 2009 he will target the half-Ironman dis1 COMPETITOR MAGAZINE | APRIL 2009 tance, including the Ford Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Clearwater. Matt Hoffmann fits Bordine’s bikes to his Indurain-like body. The Carlsbad, Californiabased bike fitter has worked with other professional triathletes and cyclists including Michellie Jones, and he says Bordine’s biggest challenge in transitioning from cycling to triathlons is patience. “He’s going to need to learn to hold back on the bike. And that’s a very hard thing for cyclists, especially at his level. He’s one of those guys who I believe will gain by easing off on the bike and running faster.” In terms of training, Bordine is spending less time on the bike now that he has three disciplines. Has the reduction affected his bike speed? “I did not notice it last year, which I was very happy with. But I had a solid base of just cycling before I got the running and swimming involved… I had a little less snap, but the power was still there. The running definitely helped with increasing my oxygen improve your cycling time with less money than going and buying the newest and most aerodynamic equipment. Now, if you are at the point where those 30 seconds or a minute matter, then you have to go buy that equipment.” Aside from upgrading to more aerodynamic equipment, Bordine cites getting in training time and a professional bike fit as important ways to improve bike speed. In time trials, form on the bike can also harm or help racing speed. “An Getting Fast on the Track “Training with some of the bigger guys who come out to San Diego, like Normann Stadler and Jurgen Zack – I realized my pro days as a cyclist were behind me, but the possibility of being a professional athlete could still exist in the world of triathlons.” flow. It helped me sustain longer efforts and it transferred over to the bike.” Bordine switched to triathlons for personal and family reasons. “I was looking for something new. My wife had always pushed triathlons. She was a swimmer growing up – swam at UCLA. And I swam when I was little and I did have some background in running.” Bordine was also inspired by some of the superstar triathletes who train in San Diego’s hilly backcountry. “Training with some of the bigger guys who come out to San Diego, like Normann Stadler and Jurgen Zack – I realized my pro days as a cyclist were behind me, but the possibility of being a professional athlete could still exist in the world of triathlons.” Today, Bordine has his eyes firmly set on that world. “My main goal for this year is to race Clearwater as a professional.” When asked what advice he would give an amateur or novice who wants to go faster on the bike, Bordine says, “There are definitely ways to and building upper body strength. He is working with a swim coach to fine tune his stroke. Bordine compares swimming to golf: “If you tweak it just a little bit, the golf ball goes way off, and that’s how swimming is, too. It’s a lot of technique. But it’s also that I haven’t used my arms in eight years. I’ve actually tried to lose body mass in my upper body. And now it’s like, oh, I could use some of that back!” ■ underrated part of cycling is pedal stroke. It’s something to focus on when you are time trialing. I still catch myself not doing the perfect pedal stroke, not pulling up all the way or pushing forward all the way.” According to Bordine, “the best drill for that is single-leg intervals.” By riding with one leg either on hills or a trainer, Bordine maintains that he has smoothed his pedal stroke and improved his time-trialing speed and efficiency. In 2009 Bordine will focus on the half-Ironman distance races. “I don’t think my body is ready for an Ironman. But the 70.3, the fourhour race, my body is used to that from road cycling. The 56-mile bike lends to my abilities more.” “Swimming is my weak point. My mentality right now is that I lose time in the swim, I gain a lot of time back in the bike, and I try to hold on with the run.” With regards to swimming, Bordine says the biggest challenges are improving his technique We spoke to one of the other speediest cyclists in Southern California, Shaun Wallace, about what cyclists can do to work towards blistering bike times like Bordine’s. Wallace raced for Great Britain on the track in two Olympics and has eight World Masters Championships track titles to his name. “The best training for time trialing is time trialing,” Wallace observes. “But what people often don’t do is take it seriously enough.” Putting out a hard, steady time-trial effort for the same distance you will be racing, Wallace notes, is the best way to get faster. Wallace says that even when he was training for road races and time trials, he trained on the velodrome. “As far as physiology is concerned, your heart and lungs, they don’t know if you are on the track or on the hills or riding up and down the coast. All they know is things like the power you are developing and your leg speed.” Workouts on the track “are the sort of efforts you couldn’t do on the road, because there are always cars or stop signs or weather conditions. The track has always been a key part of my training, even when I have no intention of racing on the track.” California has velodromes in San Jose, Los Angeles and San Diego. All three have programs that introduce cyclists to track riding. Pam Jorgensen has been teaching track classes at the San Diego Velodrome in Balboa Park for 24 years. Open to riders of all levels, the classes meet once weekly for six weeks and track bikes are supplied to the students. “It is a step-by-step program,” says Jorgensen, a friendly cyclist who clearly loves to teach adults and kids how to ride. “Even non-cyclists feel very comfortable. It’s a great way to get riding with a group without feeling threatened or scared.” And she adds that she sees riders make dramatic leaps in their cycling speed just four weeks into the six-week program. “Adults come in as recreational riders. And especially people who are new to cycling, they make huge improvements in their times.” For more information about the San Diego Velodrome and to register for classes, visit www.sdvelodrome.com. Information about Los Angeles’ ADT Event Center Velodrome is at www.lavelodrome.org. San Jose’s Hellyer Park Velodrome is at www.ridethetrack.com. CompetitorCA.com 2