Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Bradley C. Gantt

Bradley C. Gantt, 45

Occupation: Retail Management 

Multiple Ironman Finisher



How long have you been involved in endurance sports and what motivates you?  



What motivates me is a desire to find out what I am capable of.  My favorite quote is by T.S. Elliott who says “Only those who will risk going too far will find out how far one can go.”
I have been doing endurance sports since grade school.  I joined the track team when I was eleven and a classmate said there was no way I could run a mile.  I took that as a challenge and became a distance runner … since I always seem to be the best distance runner in the neighborhood growing up.  My first real endurance event was a one hour walk/jogathon in 1981.  It was on a track at the local high school in Federal Way, Washington.  I ran the whole time and did 7.25 miles tying the other top runner.  I was only 12 at the time and promptly threw up on the track after the run.  I ran track and cross county in junior high and high school until in 1985 I caught the IRONMAN bug when a friend of mine suggested I do triathlons with him.  I could run and started working on my biking but I didn't know how to swim.  I asked my high school coach if I could join the team so I could learn to swim and do triathlons.  He had me work with an assistant coach for a couple weeks learning to swim all the different strokes.  I went to SIU for college and wasn't good enough to join the swim team there but I did become a lifeguard and played on the water polo team to force me to become better in the water.  After college I quit triathlons due to constantly fighting injury and kept playing other sports such as racquetball and volleyball.  I had given up on my IRONMAN dream thinking there was no way I could ever develop the endurance and durability needed to do one...  In 2008 unfortunately my wife and I divorced and I decided to try triathlons again to give me some purpose when away from my kids.  I was depressed, had gained a bit of weight, my blood work was dismal and I knew I had to make fitness a central part of my life again.  I set out a 3 year plan to try to work up to IRONMAN distance, not knowing if I could even run distance again.  I decided I would be happy if I could just do short races but a dreamed of IRONMAN none the less.  I revamped my diet and started slow doing a sprint and Olympic that year.  Things went well so I upgraded my equipment and did a half IRONMAN the next year.  I was on track and triathlons gave me something to focus on when apart from my kids.  I signed up for IRONMAN Louisville in 2010 and trained hard all winter, spring and summer.  My motivation was thinking of my two daughters at the finish line cheering me on.  There was nothing in the world I wanted more than to see them at the finish.  That carried me through my training every day.  I put decals of their names on my bike and Zipp wheels.  They carried me to the finish.  Now four years later I have finished my fourth IRONMAN and their names are still there to carry me through every race I do.


How would you describe your nutrition?  Omnivore, veggie, vegan, raw, locavore…
 

I have adopted an athletic version of the Paleo Diet.  I focus on eating lean sources of protein and lots of vegetables with only a few starchy carbohydrates timed for recovery.  To help with my IRONMAN training and the diet I want to stick to I bought a Vitamix blender and use that after almost all of my long workouts.  My food choices are driven by my body’s training needs with a source of protein at each meal and low glycemic foods.  My post workout foods are high glycemic choices in the first 15 minutes and 90 minute windows then return to lower glycemic choices after that.  Specific foods I choose are selected for their ORAC values and blood PH effects striving to eat an Alkaline producing diet.  I truly believe this “anti-inflammatory” approach has enabled me to develop my endurance and minimize injury.  Something I was unable to do in my younger years.   


How do you feel your nutrition affects your performance during events and in daily life?


My nutrition is the reason I can perform at the level I do and has improved my daily life.  I truly believe that my “anti-inflammatory” diet has been a key factor in allowing me to develop the endurance needed to do IRONMAN distance.


What does it take to be an Ironman?  Can you tell us about time spent training, balancing family time and fueling for workouts?


To be an IRONMAN takes total commitment to the goal and a diligent approach to training.  For me I needed to establish a clear goal with a series of intermediate goals to reach as I progressed to ultra distance.  For 11 months of each year I am in one phase or another of training whether it is base work, a build period, race taper or peak.  Each week has a specific goal as does each workout within the week.  I typically work 55+ hours a week and training takes most of the rest of my time not spent sleeping.  Summer vacations such as trips to visit out of town family have been one particularly tough challenge as they always seem to occur right when I am in my final few big training weeks before starting to taper. This makes it hard but the challenge is that all those around you who are not ultra distance athletes really don’t have a clue about the level of training required and the level of dedication needed.  Without realizing it others can cause you to get behind on your training when they place demands on your time thinking you can just shorten or skip a workout.  While missing one or two workouts won’t set you back much, when it happens to a couple workouts each week it can really put you behind schedule.  If you miss your long workouts for the week it can mean that the week provided little or no gains at all.  So the support of others around you in the pursuit of the IRONMAN goal is critical.  My family really didn’t understand just what it meant to the athletes and what type of dedication we have until they watch the athletes in person at my first IRONMAN.  I believe it was a life altering experience for them as they saw the sport in a new perspective.
 
What does it mean to you to hear the words, “Brad Gantt, You are an Ironman!”?
 
After my first IRONMAN finish I wrote a blog about my experience.  I had the dream of doing an IRONMAN 25 years earlier and had given up on my dream after nearly eight years of triathlon racing.  It was one of the hardest days of my life and aside from the birth of my kids the best day of my life.


While this was my dream it was only an IRONMAN … not “THE” IRONMAN.  A year later I was blessed with a lottery spot to compete in Kona.  I had already signed up for IRONMAN Wisconsin and was racing there on 9/11/11.  I decided I needed to do this race despite it being close to Kona since I worked at the airport in Madison, and was on the airfield on 9/11/01 during the attacks.  Returning to where I was that day and testing my will to persevere would be my way of remembering the fallen from that day.  Over 150 first responders competed in Madison on the 10th anniversary of 9/11 making it far more memorable than I had ever dreamed.  I held back to save my legs for Kona.  Four weeks later I completed the IRONMAN World Championship in Hawaii.  I just completed IRONMAN Wisconsin again.  How would I describe the indescribable feeling to finish and hear the words “You are an IRONMAN” … I can’t find the words.  But I can say I am honored to be among the truly outstanding athletes who had the will and fortitude to prepare to succeed.