Athlete Profile: Eddy 'Stud-muffin' Tai
Athlete Profiles, January 25, 2018
I am a 43 year old Singaporean, married with no kids. I have three beautiful dogs at home. I was fairly active during school days with swimming and Judo, but after I started working in a business development, with frequent traveling, entertainment, social engagements and unhealthy eating, my weight ballooned from a 67kg in 2002 to a 96kg. On numerous occasions, doctors had advised me to consider regular high blood pressure control medication.
1. First up - Tell us a bit about yourself. short background on work/ life/ sport etc etc / how did you come into tri?
I am a 43 year old Singaporean, married with no kids. I have three beautiful dogs at home. I was fairly active during school days with swimming and Judo, but after I started working in a business development, with frequent traveling, entertainment, social engagements and unhealthy eating, my weight ballooned from a 67kg in 2002 to a 96kg. On numerous occasions, doctors had advised me to consider regular high blood pressure control medication.
In 2012, I moved to my new home near The Central Catchment Area, which was ideal for long walks with my ‘hyper’ dogs. The walking then gravitated toward running, and this -kick- started my venture into triathlon.
2 What do you like about triathlon, what keeps bringing you back fro more.
I remember a more experienced triathlete sharing that triathletes are all sadomasochistic SOBs. I often wonder whether I seek gratification from persevering through 'suffering and pain' Hahaha.3. Tell us abit about the journey so far - memorable highlights / low points. What are your big dreams?
4. Briefly talk us through the race. High/ low points during the race. Standout thoughts at certain points in the race.
Challenge Iskandar Puteri 2017 was the build-up race for my 1st full Ironman in Busselton December 2017. I was planning to use this race as a ‘progress report’ for my relatively short triathlon career. I went for the race with the goal of learning how to manage unforeseeable and difficult conditions such as the stiflingly hot and humid race conditions.Instead, at the end of the 2nd loop on the bike, a thunderstorm brewed and hit hard. The winds were howling and I remembered telling myself," Ahhh great, this is like practicing to tackle the infamous headwinds in Busselton!" Huge pellets of rain fell and puddles formed on the uneven and sandy Malaysian asphalt roads, but ultimately I still managed to put out a 2’27hr bike split!
The sun came up on the run, humidity was high and in fact it turned steamy. I remember telling myself to ignore the pace and focus on cadence and executing my race nutrition plan. I was very glad to complete the run below 2 hrs, at 1’56hr - my bestrun off the bike so far.
5. How did your physical training prepare you for the race? Talk a little bit about your training. Can you briefly describe your weekly training schedule. How and why that's working for you.
I work with Shem on my training program. It’s a 7 day/week training program comprising at least 1 hour per day on swim, bike or run and with longer sessions built on my free days and the weekends for long outdoor ride or endurance runs. I used to swim predominantly when I first got into Triathlon. Slowly I added the runs, then track sessions and eventually the grind on the bike.With my coach, I have been able to progress
6. I always stress the importance of communication in the coach -athlete relationship. Your thoughts on this please.
Yes absolutely. In my opinion, the coach is not merely a training schedule generator. He needs to be able to assess/understand how the athlete is progressing and feeling. And in order for the coach to do that, it takes both hands to clap: the coach being able and willing to listen and the athlete being open to peel off his layers and being honest with his coach. This is communication.7. Any 'life lessons' you've picked up along the way?
Too profound. But honestly ‘Never say something is not my thing till I really give it my best’
8. What are the benefits of having a coach? What are the characteristics for a good coach to look out for?
When I first started triathlon, I think my training on my own was really haphazard. I tended to pick a discipline I feel like doing for the day and that ultimately geared towards the discipline I enjoyed the most. With a coach, he reels you in. Ultimately triathlon is not merely 3 sports. It is 1 singular sport with 3 disciplines raced and gelled together as one. We report our race timings as one. Not just as individual splits. I think my coach helps me understand this.9. Think you can go quicker... ?
Hahaha.. would love to go sub5 at the half distance and hopefully below 12 hrs for Busselton in less than 2 months’ time. Ideally sub- 11 - overly ambitious? Hmmmm.....
I have also signed up for Challenge Roth July 2018.