How to Find a Running Coach

COACHING

Introduction

Who Needs a Coach

Finding a Coach

Why You Need a Coach

What to Expect From a Coach

Checking Out Your Coach

How to Find a Coach

List of RRCA Certified Coaches

About the Author

WHO NEEDS A COACH?

MANY RUNNERS COULD BENEFIT from a coach. Most do not have one, nor have they had one. While some runners received coaching in high school and college, and others got a start in beginning running classes, perhaps 95 per cent or more of the runners in America train unguided. They run on their own, obtaining help where they can from friends, or attending pre-race clinics, or reading books and articles in running magazines.

Elite runners often are no different. Even the best of them find that once they graduate from school, they are set adrift to compete as teamless individuals. They must take control of their own training. Some gravitate to clubs where they continue under the guidance of a coach. Others hire personal trainers. Many just flounder, not making the best of their running ability.

Yet good coaches (and good coaching) can make good runners.

Coaches can provide inspiration and information, analysis and applause, support and sympathy. They can design daily workouts and stand beside the track holding a stopwatch. While the availability of coaches for out-of-school athletes is, at best, spotty, more and more running clubs--including many member clubs of the Road Runners Club of America--have begun to provide coaching as one of the perks of membership, and the RRCA has established a program of Coaching Certification for Adult Distance Runners.

ASSISTANCE FOR RUNNERS
Increasing numbers of coaches now provide assistance for runners, both full-time and part-time, both paid and unpaid. Some examples:

Mary Reed is among the 60 certified coaches the Atlanta Track Club makes available for its members. "When a runner has a coach," says Reed, "they can bounce ideas off each other. You get to be a smarter runner faster. You don't have to make all the mistakes; you can hear about them and avoid them."

Bob Glover heads the New York Road Runners Club's coaching program. Along with his wife and exercise physiologist, Shelley Glover, he coaches 100 coaches. "The reasons people need a coach vary according to their experience," says Glover. "At the beginner level, people benefit from being enrolled in a fitness program, because they tend to do too much too soon. For a person making the transition into racing, a coach can encourage them. The faster a runner gets, the less need to push. At the elite level, runners have so much drive they don't need a coach pushing them, they need a coach holding them back."

Jim Fischer has coached at the high school and college level for 30 years. Currently, he serves as coach for men's cross country and track and field at the University of Delaware. Once a week, Fischer welcomes adult runners to his track for interval workouts. He says: "I started my group, because a lot of adult runners, particularly women in their 30s, never had run competitively in school and never had trained on the track."

On any given week, two dozen runners appear to run under Fischer's supervision. They range in abilities from 16:00 to 24:00 for the 5K. Fischer structures training more loosely than he does with his collegiate runners. "I go with the flow," he says. "I spend a lot of time asking people, `When's your next important race?'" Fischer charges no fee; he does his weekly sessions for fun, and as a challenge to expand his knowledge.

It's probably unreasonable to expect free coaching advice, however. Ski instructors and golf pros charge for lessons. As demand for their services has increased, running coaches have begun to charge modest sums for their services. Compared to what participants in other sports pay for "lessons," runners get a bargain when they seek a coach.

ONE-ON-ONE COACHING
Finding a coach--particularly one willing to provide the one-on-one counseling service that many runners demand--is not easy. The American athletic system mostly provides coaching assistance through high school with only the most gifted continuing into college programs. After graduation, even the stars are condemned to a post-collegiate existence of finding coaching help where they can. A few post-collegiate coaches operate also as agents and charge a percentage of their athletes' winnings in this era of run-for-pay, but in most coach/athlete relationships, financial rewards rarely equal the investment of time and energy. "Our system breaks down when it comes time to provide coaching for post-collegiate athletes," admits David Martin, Ph.D., an Atlanta-based exercise physiologist, who serves as a training consultant in track and field for the U. S. Olympic Committee and also coaches a few individual runners.

Two athletes supervised by Martin--Bob Kempainen and Keith Brantly--finished second and fifth respectively in the 1993 New York City Marathon and also competed in the 1996 Olympic Trials. Martin does most of his coaching by phone, seeing his runners occasionally for testing and hands-on advice. That works if you're an experienced runner working with a knowledgeable coach. Most coach/athlete relationships probably involve the coach and runner seeing each other at a workout session at least once weekly, if not daily. The RRCA's Road Scholar® program, begun in 1995, has raised over $98,000 and funded 24 post-collegiate athletes who need financial help to train for road races.

The greatest need for coaching, however, is not for those with Olympic potential, but rather for those with more modest talent: those who finish marathons, and other races, far back of the Kempainens and Brantlys.

Some coaches work with school runners and advise out-of-school athletes as an add-on. An example is Pat Savage of Oak Park, Illinois, coach of the track and cross-country teams at Niles West High School and Oakton Community College. Savage also works with a group of adult runners, the Niles West/Oakton Runners Club, planning their training and supervising them at area road races.

Other qualified coaches arrive at their trade from a different direction, outside the school systems. They translate their running experiences into information to be shared with new-time runners. It doesn't matter whether they are, or were, elite runners--or even runners at all. A good coach mainly needs to know what it takes to excel at running, at whatever level he or she coaches.

An example is Bill Wenmark of Deephaven, Minnesota, a former ice hockey player who decided on a whim one year to run the Twin Cities Marathon, despite having trained for only a few weeks! Wenmark finished--barely. His muscles were so sore (he admitted afterwards) that he had to drive home in third gear, because he couldn't use the clutch pedal. Wenmark claims to have made every mistake in the book, but learned from his errors and now teaches one of the most successful beginning marathon programs in the U.S. Through his American Lung Association Running Club (ALARC), Wenmark has guided more than 3,000 first-timers to finishes at the Twin Cities and Grandma's Marathons.

Between Savage and Wenmark, there are other coaches of adult runners with varying levels of experience and differing degrees of qualifications. Indeed, there is a danger for the adult runner seeking advice. Although USATF offers well-designed educational programs for track coaches seeking to improve their skills, the emphasis is more on sports science and individual track and field events rather than road racing. Only since 1998 has the RRCA begun to offer a certification program that defines who is qualified to coach road runners and who is not.

GUARANTEEING COMPETENCE
Even if certification provides no ironclad guarantee of a coach's competence. "Certification helps, but it doesn't certify anything except that a person has sat through a series of classes," admits Joe Rogers head coach at Ball State University and chairman of the USATF's coaching education committee.

Diane Palmason of Blaine, WA, a coach of adult runners and a member of the RRCA coaching committee, sees a great need for determining who is qualified to coach. "Particularly this is true," says Palmason, "in the area of Wellness programs, teaching people healthy lifestyles and guiding them toward running as a simple and pleasurable means of achieving fitness. At the moment, this area is pretty well owned by various aerobics or fitness instructors--many of whom don't know nearly enough, perhaps because they lack personal experience with competitive running programs."

The truth of the matter is that not everyone who claims to be a coach is qualified to serve in that capacity, and not everyone who is qualified may be the right person to offer advice to you!

Do you need a push, or do you need to be pulled? Do you merely need motivation, or are you looking for a day-by-day training program? Do you want to achieve a personal best, or peak for some major race? Are your goals related more to physical fitness, or maybe you want only an opportunity to run with others of equal ability? Not to be overlooked are the social benefits of running with a group of like-minded individuals.

A coach can be helpful in guiding you toward your running goal--or the wrong coach may send you in the wrong direction. You need to be careful in selecting a coach who will be right for you, although the major problem for most runners is finding any coach to help them

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