Did the Pacific Open Water Challenge in Long Beach yesterday. Haven't been training long long yet, so opted for the 1 mile swim. They were still setting up the buoys as the RD was describing the course. "Are those big round ones the buoys?" "No, the triangular yellow ones....... waaaaaaaaaaaaaay down the beach." I've done a bunch of Half ironmans, Alcatraz, 2 mile pier to piers, that wasn't no mile we were looking at.
Ah well, no big deal, since everyone has to swim the same distance. I know OWS are often off, but almost double? Someone in an official looking shirt said she heard it was 1.7, and i also heard someone apparently had a garmin measuring 1,7, but since there was no buoy between the start buoy and about .75 of a mile, sighting was all over the place, so who knows. Looking at my usual 100 yard pace, it was somewhere between 1.5 and 1.7 miles.
I didn't time the swim, and didn't look at the clock when I got out, so other than "gee, this seems a little long," it didn't bother me much (and doesn't now). Looks like the guards lined the buoys up with guard towers, just the wrong ones. Lucky for the 5K swimmers they moved them way in, lined up with the next closer set of towers. Otherwise they were looking at a good 4-5 mile swim.
Winning time was THIRTY minutes for the "mile." Friend was 12 minutes off last year's time. I was happy, won 40-44 AG with a ridiculous 37!
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Yes, the course length will be corrected next year. FINA World Cup officials will visit Long Beach on July 23 (this year) to inspect the course and to discuss issues brought up by participants in this year's race. The course setting and course design are the major issues to be discussed with the FINA officials. The course was set correctly the night before, but the buoys moved throughout the day and were not precisely adjusted thereafter.
Yes, the course length will be corrected next year. FINA World Cup officials will visit Long Beach on July 23 (this year) to inspect the course and to discuss issues brought up by participants in this year's race. The course setting and course design are the major issues to be discussed with the FINA officials. The course was set correctly the night before, but the buoys moved throughout the day and were not precisely adjusted thereafter.