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IAAF Winter 2013, Vol. 8 No. 7 Featuring Kim Keenan-Kirkpatrick 8 Dr. Norbert Sander 12 Ray Treacy with the members of the 2013 NCAA Cross Country Championships winning team, November 23, 2013 Tim O'Dowd

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Winter 2013, Vol. 8 No. 7

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Coaching Athletics

IAAF

Winter 2013, Vol. 8 No. 7

FeaturingKim Keenan-Kirkpatrick 8Dr. Norbert Sander 12

Ray Treacywith the members of

the 2013 NCAA CrossCountry Championships

winning team, November 23, 2013

Tim

O'D

owd

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������������Whenever the world’s elite marathoners toe the start line alongsidepopular U.S. runner Meb Keflezighi, they know they’re in for an hon-est race. In fact, the Skechers Performance sponsored Keflizighibrings new meaning to the word ‘consistent’, with a remarkably ho-mogenous series of marathon times.

Consider Meb’s seasons best times since he took up the 26-miler in 2002: 2:12:35 (2002); 2:10:03 (2003); 2:09:53 (2004);2:09:56 (2005); 2:09:56 (2006); 2:15:09 (2007); 2:09:29 (2009);2:09:15 (2010); 2:09:13 (2011); 2:09:08 (2012). There are Kenyanswho’d give up their racing flats for this staggering string of times!

Some distance runners are known for their fast times andtheir inability to win or place in the “big show”, but Meb proves youcan do both and do them well. His performances—starting withAthens Olympic Silver and NYC runner-up in 2004—and followedby none-too-shabby 3rd (NYC, 2005); 3rd (Boston, 2006); 1st(NYC & US Champs, 2009); 5th (Boston, 2010) and 6th (NYC,2010); 6th (NYC, (2011); 1st (Olympic Trials, 2012) and 4th (Lon-don Olympic Games, 2012) indicate that Meb is always a forceto be reckoned with.

Not bad performances for one of a family of eleven children,who emigrated to the USA from Eritrea to escape war and pursuean education. Now living in San Diego, California, Meb has returnedto his hometown but still plans on going back to Mammoth, Californiafor altitude training. Meb continues to cruise through workouts thatwould cripple most young runners and looks to continue to "Run ToWin" to his last race....whenever that may be.

Skechers Performance Division signed another endorsementcontract in 2012 with Meb. Relatively new to the running shoe mar-

ket, Skechers Performance is primarily known for their innovativeand unusual curved sole that encourages mid-foot strike, versusthe standard heel strike.

Meb’s NYC victory in 2009 made him the first American towin in 27 years (he was sworn in as a US Citizen in 1998) andnow that he has a taste for winning the NYC marathon, he’s eagerto repeat his victory.

With 2012 Olympic Champion and 2013 World Champion,Ugandan Stephen Kiprotich, committed to running this year’s NYCMarathon, plus super-stars like Boston and NYC record holder Ge-offrey Mutai, Chicago runner-up Wesley Korir, and American RyanHall, Meb’s going to have to work hard to outpace these guys.

One consistent rule about marathons is that anything can gowrong at any time, even to the favorites. This year, Meb, who hadfallen very hard in early August training run, and missed five weeksof training, had a tough race.

“This year, the race was not about me, it was about the sport,”noted a tearful Meb Keflezighi just after his race on November 3,2013. Meb has fallen very hard in early August, missing five weeksof training. Meb showed what he was made of this year, staying withthe leaders through the halfway. “When they took off, I just could notkeep up the pace, but I was not going to quit. I had to finish this year.”And finish he did, in twenty-third position, after experiencing someof what most marathoners feel in marathons, both good and bad.

“I know that there is another personal best in my legs," Mebnoted right after the race. Anyone who watches Meb, knows thathe will line up once again, and run his best, in his SKECHERSGoRun 2s.

By Roy Stevenson��������������� ���������

Photorun.net

Sponsored by Skechers Performance Divisionskechersperformance.com • Facebook: @SkechersPerformance • Twitter: @skechersGO Instagram: @SkechersPerformance

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times since he took up the

2

and 6th (NYC,

2 indicate that Meb is always a force

t

� � � �

CA7

COACHINGCOACHINGCOACHINGCOACHINGCOACHINGAT H L E T I C S qua

rterly

Ray Treacy won his second NCAA cross country title asthe head coach at Providence (RI) College this past No-vember. Treacy is a bastion of knowledge on running andhe’s a oun of solace and confidence to his athletes. He hascoached some of the best runners in the world.

At this time, besides his Providence team, Treacycoaches Kim Smith and Molly Huddle. Huddle is the5000 meter AR and, when we sent her an email recentlyasking for her thoughts on how he has influenced her run-ning, she had this to say:

“I feel lucky to have been guided to Ray as a post col-legiate coach. He has a wealth of experience and knowl-edge in athletics so we call him ‘the guru.’ I can’t tell youhow many times I have wondered what he was talkingabout regarding an explanation or prediction for a work-out or performance only to find out a few days later thathe was right on. You can tell he coaches for the enjoymentof seeing the athletes run well and not for acclaim orawards and that has motivated him to years of success.”

Ray Treacy is a shining example of what coaches do:ey encourage, cajole, listen, educate. Does he providemagic? No. Treacy would tell you that he’s pretty old style,and that’s how his athletes describe him: chatting about runsand workouts and enjoying his athletes’ successes.

We are honored to have Ray Treacy and his Provi-dence team on our Coaching Athletics cover this month.

Larry Eder

Publisher’s Note Vol. 8 No. 7

Group PublisherLarry Eder

[email protected], ext. 112

Group EditorChristine Johnson

[email protected]

AdvertisingLarry Eder

[email protected]

Writers/ContributorsMark WinitzDave Hunter

PhotographersIAAF

Photorun.NETAlex Larsen

Layout/Design, Art ProductionAlex Larsen

ProofreaderMarg Sumner, Red Ink Editorial Services

EditorLarry Eder

Pre-Press/PrinterW. D. Hoard & Sons Company

Fort Atkinson, WI

Phone 608.239.3785

Fax 920.563.7298

Coaching Athletics Quarterly is produced, published and owned by Shoot-ing Star Media, Inc., PO Box 801, Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin 53538-0801.Publisher assumes no liability for matter printed, and assumes no liabilityor responsibility for content of paid advertising and reserves the right toreject paid advertising. Opinions expressed are those of the authors andnot necessarily those of the Publisher.

Copyright ©2013 by Shooting Star Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Nopart of this publication may be reproduced or stored in any form withoutwritten permission of the Publisher. Coaching Athletics Quarterly is notrelated to or endorsed by any other entity or corporation with a similarname and is solely owned by Shooting Star Media, Inc.

Publisher recommends, as with all fitness and health issues, youconsult with your physician before instituting any changes in yourfitness program.

Ale

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ars

en

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8CA

U S A T FPrepares for

By Mark Winitz

Kim Keenan-Kirkpatrick was electedto a four-year term as chair of USATrack & Field’s Women’s Long Dis-tance Running Committee in 2012,succeeding Virginia Brophy Achman.Keenan-Kirkpatrick started workingwith the WLDR committee in 1996 asa volunteer for USATF’s New Jerseyassociation. After working on thecommittee for several years she wasselected to serve on the WLDR Exec-utive Committee and became thewomen’s LDR vice chair in 2004.

Keenan-Kirkpatrick has workedfor USATF at major international com-petitions. She was an assistant [en-durance] coach at the 2008 Olympicsand the 2005 World Outdoor Cham-pionships in Helsinki, women’s headmanager for Team USA at the 2006NACAC Under-23 Championshipsand the 2011 Pan American Games,and head coach at the 1999 Yoko-hama women’s ekiden. She has volun-teered on USATF’s Law & Legislationand Women’s Track & Field commit-tees and was named Women’s LDRContributor of the Year in 2004.

Keenan-Kirkpatrick has an exten-sive background in collegiate sports,including positions in the athletics de-partments of Lafayette College, Kutz-town University and Drew University.She is currently associate athletic direc-tor for compliance at Seton Hall Uni-versity in New Jersey. She was theMid-American Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year in 1988–89 for KentState, where she was a standout trackand field and cross country athlete.She received a law degree from SetonHall in 1993.

Mark Winitz: Kim, what are yourthoughts about your new position aswomen’s LDR chair?Keenan-Kirkpatrick: I want to makesure that all constituencies who cangive advice, direction and support tolong distance running—both womenand men—are tapped. Ten or 15years ago a bunch of us asked our-selves, “How do we make Americandistance runners better?” We cameout of the room with [an emphasis on]training camps, just like the Kenyansdo, which is one of the big reasonsthey’ve reigned supreme for so manyyears. We started to study and learnfrom them.

Then distance training centersstarting popping up in the U.S. Nowmy task and vision for the next fouryears are: How do we continue and en-hance our support for distance run-ners—to maintain the medals we’vebeen winning and win more?

I want to make sure that our [eliteand emerging elite] long distance run-ners are taken care of over a wide ex-panse of events. We have 5000 and10,000m runners who are going to be-come our marathoners down the road.We need to make sure these runnersare looked after through USATF Foun-dation grant support, training campsand our championship road circuit.

I also want to make sure our mid-dle distance runners—the 1500 run-ners and steeplechasers—aren’tforgotten on the LDR side just becausethey’re track athletes. For example,Leo Manzano wins a silver medal [inthe 1500m] at the London OlympicGames, and it helps us across the

board with the U.S. Olympic Commit-tee. [Ed: See Part 1 of this series inwhich USATF High Performance Divi-sion chair Sue Humphrey talks aboutthe USOC’s standards for high per-formance/developmental funding.]

MW: These are ambitious undertak-ings. Tell me about your additionalpriorities as women’s LDR chair.KK: I’m big on communications and in-volving all our constituencies. I’mreaching out to the head coaches andadvisors at each U.S. distance runningtraining center and getting input abouttheir needs. The USATF Foundation iscommitted to supporting these cen-ters, and a few big race organizationssupport them through the foundation.I’ve talked to a few USATF nationalroad championships, and some that arehoping to bid, and asked them to lookat what they can do for their local train-ing groups and clubs.

I want to form an LDR advisorycommittee that can speak for each con-stituency—one from our training cen-ters and one from medical services—tomake sure we’re offering the best med-ical support and sports science pro-grams for our LDR athletes. I’d like aprominent road racer on this commit-tee who can approach races and askthem to support our athletes and helpus boost USATF membership.

MW: Regarding boosting USATFmembership, I interviewed Bill Roerecently, and he feels the USATFBoard of Directors will welcomeLDR’s help.KK: Yes, it’s really a marketing job and

NewHeigh  stKim Keenan-Kirkpatrick, USATF Women’s Long Distance Running

DYNAMIC OLYMPIAD

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educating the public about membershipbenefits. This might be down the road abit. Some people may say that we’ve tried[boosting membership through road racepartners] before and it didn’t work. But itmight be worth another look.

MW: How about our U.S. LDR nationalchampionships? Any priorities or goalsregarding them?KK:Not yet. First I want to touch base withthe authorities in that area. I’m not in-volved in [organizing road races] for a liv-ing. But these [organizers] are the people Iwant to get back into the fold regardingour athlete development efforts. Some ofthem are already involved. For example,Brant Koch [Chevron Houston Marathonrace director] supports our athletesthrough USATF Foundation grants. TheTwin Cities Marathon and New York RoadRunners are also committed.

MW: I’m not sure if anyone has gone toour athletes and asked if our LDR cham-pionships are serving them sufficiently.KK: Yes, one of my strengths is that I’veknown many of our athletes since the early’90s. I can call these athletes and get theiropinion, and I do. Fortunately, I’ve workedwith many athletes as a coach and man-ager for our U.S. international teams, sothey have a trust level with me. They feelthey can call me at any time. I’m going tomake sure their needs are met.

Regarding our LDR championships,we need to approach [more race directors]regarding the possibility and benefits ofchampionship. We have some newcomerson the USA [championship] running circuitand we’ll have to see how they work out.You don’t want to lose that interest [inhosting championships]. It’s also importantto promote our championships to the ath-letes and make sure there’s enough [prize]money so it’s worth it for them.

MW: Let’s talk about coaches and theirlevel of involvement in USATF.KK: I sometimes see a huge disconnectbetween USATF and the college coachingworld. I’ve always said that even the NCAAneeded to be better on top of things withUSATF. There’s this great avenue for edu-cating athletes and coaches about the re-sources available after college. I’ve workedwith USATF and the NCAA on agent infor-mation to athletes so they’re aware aboutwhat’s available. I’ve dealt with this issuerecently for some midlevel U.S. distancerunners who don’t have a shoe companycontract, but are on the cusp. How do Ihelp them find the right agent?

I struggle with some agents who say,

“I only go for the big dogs.” We need tofind people who are willing to help ourmedium dogs to make them big dogs. It’ssomething I want to work on with USATFbecause they have an agents’ pool. I wantan agent on the LDR Advisory Committeewho can tell me the pulses of the agentsso I can get this information to the athletes.

Regarding coaches, in my job [as as-sociate athletic director at Seton Hall],where I also serve as our conference li-aison, I get to know some of our futureOlympians and their college coaches.There needs to be a connect betweenthese folks and USATF because oftenthese athletes are planning wherethey’re headed after college whilethey’re still in college.

MW: One of the USATF Foundation’smissions is to assist Olympic hopefuls re-alize their dreams of competing in theOlympic Games by offering develop-mental grants. Any thoughts here in re-spect to distance runners?KK: Yes, we need to make sure we’re iden-tifying and supporting [future] Olympians.So many times in the Olympic Trials theathletes who finish fourth through eighthcome back four years later and make theteam. It’s crucial to support these athletes,to take them to the next level as they ma-ture. The foundation is a great avenue fordoing this.

It’s difficult, however, to raise financialsupport. We need more people poundingthe pavement and saying, “Give back tothe sport.” Last year, I went to my runningclub. None of us are going to make anOlympic team. We’re old and slow. But theNew York Athletic Club trains in our back-yard. I convinced my club to donate oursurplus—a couple thousand dollars—tothe NYAC to help Julie Culley go to lastyear’s U.S. Olympic Trials. Plus, individualsin our club donated. Julie won the 5000mat the Trials and made the team. This is agreat example of the support we can gen-erate in this country.

MW: Funding for our emerging elites isparticularly important. Sue Humphrey[USATF High Performance Division chair]described how the USOC allocatesfunds to sports federations like USATFonly for the development of athleteswho already have a good chance at anOlympic medal.KK: But take a look at Leo Manzano. In2006 he just graduated from college, andI was the head team manager for theNACAC Under-23 Championships in theDominican Republic. Putting together thatteam, we went down the collegiate list of

performances. No. 1 would say no, No. 2would say no, etc. We ended up with a lotof fourth through sixth performers who ac-tually wanted to go. Leo was one of them.He got the silver medal in the 1500mdown there. The following year he placedat the USA Track & Field outdoor champs.Then in 2008 he made the U.S. OlympicTeam and won silver in Beijing. He stayedin the sport, got the right coach, got a newshoe contract—not a killer contract; he’snot making millions—and progressed.Four years later he’s a medalist in theOlympics. We need to make sure we iden-tify athletes like Leo and give them asmuch support as possible so they can pur-sue their dreams.

MW: Let’s talk more about our U.S. dis-tance teams in international competitionother than the Olympic Games. Do youhave any priorities here?KK: Bill Roe and I have talked about it. Wesend our team over for the World HalfMarathon Championship two days beforethe event, and they’re so jet-lagged theycan barely get up on race day and jog. Thisputs our team at a disadvantage.

We need to interest our better ath-letes in running these events, even if itmeans putting up some money to attractthem. If we want to field our best teams,maybe this is something USATF needs tolook at. There is a developmental compo-nent in these teams, and I don’t want tolose that. But we want to be able to com-pete and we want to win. What does it taketo motivate our elite athletes for theseteams? More money? Getting to theiragents? We have to look at the best placeto put our money to help our athletes.

MW: Anything else regarding your toppriorities for USATF women’s LDR aswe head into an exciting four-yearOlympiad?KK: Ed Torres [USATF men’s LDR chair]and I are looking forward to working to-gether and making sure we have a unifiedvision. A team effort is crucial. I also wantto involve the USATF Cross Country andMountain/Ultra/Trail councils in women’sLDR affairs. I want to let them know theyaren’t going to be left behind. t

MARK WINITZ is a longtime writer forAmerican Track & Field. He sits onUSATF’s national Men’s Long DistanceRunning Executive Committee and Law& Legislation Committee. He also sits onPacific Association/USATF’s Board ofAthletics and is a certified USATF master-level official/referee.

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12CA

Dr. Norbert Sander

Dr. Norbert Sander typifies the gracefully agingathlete that every older runner wants to be: burst-ing with energy, fully animated, articulate andarmed with an engaging personality. But there ismore to Dr. Sander than just a great first impres-sion – much more. Sander – an accomplishedphysician–has blossomed in the later stages ofhis professional life as a primary architect of therebirth of track & field – particularly the indoorvariety – in the greater New York area.

Sander, who grew up in Yonkers, has livedhis entire life in the NYC metropolitan area. Whenat Fordham Prep and Fordham University, Sanderfell in love with running while competing in track& field. After medical school, he entered privatepractice as a pediatric physician, eventually run-ning two successful New York medical offices. ButSander still made time for his running – even win-ning the 1974 New York City Marathon in 2:26:30– an impressive time over the hilly multi-lap trackin Central Park.

But the late 1980s brought an experiencethat would forever change the direction ofSander’s life – and would ultimately help a NewYork neighborhood avert what appeared to beinexorable decay. “Twenty years ago, I was in myoffice and a patient came in and asked, ‘Do youknow anybody who could help us get back intothe Armory?’” the doctor reflects. Sander knewthe fabled Armory well. Built in 1909, it had beenthe site of performances by virtually all the greattrack & field performers, from Paavo Nurmi for-ward. The Armory’s record-conducive facility alsohad produced an abundance of pinnacle per-formances, ranging from high school bests toworld records. But Sander also knew that thegrand facility had succumbed to an absence offocused leadership, a lack of funds and flat-outneglect. “At the time, the Armory served as ashelter for 2,000 homeless people. It got sochaotic and out of control [that] track & field hadto leave. We had no track. And the sport wascompletely in decline because of this.”

Sander – never one to back away from achallenge – started to think about his patient’s in-quiry. Sander wrote letters and met with city lead-ers. “You couldn’t get into the Armory – even justto look at it. It was dangerous,” notes Sander, al-luding to the then-present drug trafficking andrelated crimes that were rampant in WashingtonHeights, the Armory's neighborhood. “Those af-filiated with the Armory were afraid that someonein the press would write an exposé about theplace. When we finally got into the Armory, everywindow was broken, the ceiling was black, and

there were no lights. Most of the seats were miss-ing,” explains Sander. “The state once ownedthe Armory. But it was in such bad shape that thestate handed it to the City for a dollar. Really, thebuilding was a wreck.”

Sander immediately saw the need and knewwhat had to be done. But could he realisticallylead the massive rehabilitative effort that wouldbe necessary to rejuvenate the dilapidated facilityat Broadway and West 168th Street? “At the timeI was maintaining two pediatric offices. I wasunder a tremendous amount of stress. I endedup running the newly created Armory Founda-tion out of my office,” explains Sander of theearly days of the emerging community effort tosave the tarnished jewel of Washington Heights.“Ultimately, we needed an executive director andCEO. And I thought, ‘Geez, I got this far – 10years into this thing. I kinda know it better thananybody.’ Plus, we weren’t there yet. We had alot to do. So I put my name forward and I be-came the CEO.” Just like that, Norbert Sanderwas all in: He was heading up a growing neigh-borhood effort calculated to rescue the Armory– and the community of Washington Heights aswell. “I closed my Manhattan office,” says Sanderon the career changes his new responsibilities re-quired. “But I kept my office on City Island. NowI go there twice a week. But I also have a youngerguy who is running the office.” And with a smile,he adds, “No worries.

“When I first came here in 1990, this neigh-borhood was a very dangerous place. We had alot of crime up here,” Sander reveals, in explain-ing magnitude of the challenge he then faced.“It took three years of lobbying. But we dedi-cated the new track in October of 1993. The Cityhanded me the key and said, ‘Go to it.’” And withzest, Sander adds, “This is our 20th season.”

To view the gleaming facility that is the Ar-mory today, it’s hard to believe that 30 years agothe oversized building was a decaying eyesorethat served as a homeless shelter – a place whereragtag track meets were held in a neglected andravaged structure and where impoverished indi-viduals sought refuge from the mean streets ofWashington Heights. Today the track facility isstunning, featuring a brand new 200-meterbanked Mondo track surrounded by intimate, el-evated seating for 3,500. “We seat 5,000 for theMillrose Games because we bring in temporaryseating on the turns,” notes the executive direc-tor. “For the New Balance Games for highschool, we get 5,000 kids participating in theevent. Sometimes there is no room for the par-

Track & Field’s

VISIONARYDr. Norbert Sander: Armory Savior

By Dave Hunter

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ents.” Sander takes obvious pride in pointingout a sparkling new trackside café, an adjacentglass-enclosed media communication center,even a retail store selling Armory-labeled track& field merchandise. “It’s a nifty place,” headds with a smile.

Every detail counts for Sander – even thefour-story stairwell, replete with plaques dis-playing the names, dates, events, times,heights and distances of every record-settingArmory performance. “These are all records –every one of these is a record that was set inthis building – high school, American andworld records,” he notes, gesturing towardthese visual kernels of track & field lore and in-spiration for those who come here to competeand to spectate.

Twenty years after its rebirth, the Armoryis still evolving, as ongoing renovation is trans-forming the massive old military facility.“We’ve got a ways to go here, but we’re get-ting there,” says Sander as he enters a mu-seum-like display room. “These are going tobe display cases, each with a different theme.One will be dedicated to the Penn Relays, an-other will be for the Pioneer Club, New YorkRoad Runners, etc.,” he explains. “We have allkinds of memorabilia, videos and other itemswe have collected. So this will be an archive forthis museum.”

Even beyond its function as a premieretrack & field facility, the Armory also is thehome of the National Track & Field Hall ofFame. The names of all the inductees areprominently displayed and categorized byevent.

The Armory also serves as an archive oftrack & field memorabilia: Steve Prefontaine’strack shoes and Oregon singlet, a Tigerbelle’swarm-up top, video clips of Dave Wottle’s stir-ring stretch drive for the 1972 Olympic gold inthe 800 final, black and white photos of ayouthful Wilma Rudolph at the Millrose Games– it’s all there.

Hockey great Mark Messier, intent ontransforming the Bronx’s Kingbridge Armoryinto a national ice center, recently visited therejuvenated Armory seeking ideas and inspi-ration. “You know what is great about this?”Messier marveled. “Every time you turnaround, you see a little piece of history. We’vegot to do this for hockey.”

The type of breathtaking transformationthat has occurred at the Armory requires cap-ital – and plenty of it. Over the years, Sanderhas had success in marshaling the economicsupport to fuel the ongoing renovation of theArmory, raising more than $25 million frompublic and private sources since 1993. “Weget money from wherever we can find it. I getit from the City. New Balance helps us a lot.The New York Road Runners provides assis-tance. We also have a good financial planner,”notes Sander.

The primary focus of the Armory’s renais-

sance is track & field. But Sander – a realist –knows that a successful, fiscally sound Armoryrequires a multi-use vision. “In order to supporttrack, I have to do other things. I don’t want toleave a void here. I want to have somethinggoing on all the time here,” explains Sander inoutlining how the facility is also used for otherevents such as Columbia University com-mencement exercises, trade expos, corporateconferences, even movie shoots. “The Citygave us this building for track. But we have tokeep the entire community happy,” he notes.

“It’s hard to get money for track. If youtell people the funds will go just for track &field, you can’t get the money,” says Sander.But over time, the executive director of theArmory Foundation has discovered a moreeffective approach to fundraising. “If youmerge the request around track and educa-tion, that’s a different story. If you show thatthis sport takes you somewhere – that you’renot just running in circles – and that you cantake the discipline, the mentoring from yourcoach, and you can put that together with aneducation, that’s what people want to see.”One such funded initiative – Classroom 2Everywhere – is a marquee Armory-basedprogram that assists more than 300 New Yorkhigh school students. “To get in this pro-gram, you have to be on the track team. Youcan come from any place in the city – Brook-lyn, Staten Island. They come here to the Ar-mory on Tuesdays and Thursdays, they [do]their workout, and then they do SAT prep orfinancial planning. We go over their collegeapplications. Sometimes we take them onbus trips of colleges. And we get nearly100% into some college,” beams Sander.

Twenty-three years after Norbert Sander’sinitial visit to the 168th Street Armory – andafter years of unrelenting effort and lovingrestoration – the Armory now stands as the re-juvenated hub of Washington Heights. Pro-moting excellence, fitness and community, theArmory hosts more than 100 track events eachyear, maintains the National Track & Field Hallof Fame, operates the largest after-school ac-tivity center in New York and offers a variety ofcommunity support programs in what is rec-ognized as a world-class facility. The Armory isnow much more than a state-of-the-art facilityfor indoor track & field, a shrine to the sport. Itis living testimony of what a single visionarycan accomplish when supported by an in-spired neighborhood and, indeed, the entiremetropolitan area. The Armory is now an ac-tive, bustling community center that payshomage to yesteryear – and fosters hope fortomorrow. “As we stand here behind this wall,we are viewing the past,” explains Sander,looking at the Plexiglas wall displaying thenames of the National Track & Field Hall ofFame inductees. “But we can also lookthrough that wall out onto the track to see theyouth, the kids running. That’s our future.”

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CA-VOL8-7__Layout 1 1/7/14 8:07 AM Page 15

Page 16: Coaching Athletics

MORE CUSHIONING...

MORE MILES...

MORE RUNNING...

FROM HOKA ONE ONE.

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INTRODUCING THE CONQUESTDesigned with 50% more cushioning material than standard running shoes for protection.

DEMAND MORECA-VOL8-7__Layout 1 1/7/14 8:07 AM Page 16