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Catching up with Valley Christian San Jose coach, Josh Small

Published by
DyeStatCAL.com   Aug 17th 2013, 2:04am
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Today we chat with Valley Christian SJ head cross country and track and field coach, Josh Small.  He has been the head cross country coach for several years and took over the helm of the track and field team this past season.  Josh has experienced it all as a high school, junior college, college and post collegiate competitor with the Nike Farm team.  He coached two time Collegiate 10000m. All-American Jen Bergman in high school as a junior and senior.  He's also a long suffering San Jose Sharks fan and one of these years, that playoff beard is going to work!

1.      How did you get your start in running?  What other sports did you play besides cross country and track and field?
I grew up in the small town of Hood River, Oregon which at the time had a population of about three-thousand people.  Sitting on the Columbia Gorge it is famous for windsurfing, apples and amazing fishing.  I guess you could say I was born a runner and was very active as a child.  All of us were.  The neighborhood kids ran around everywhere, we were always outside, when we weren’t on foot we were riding our bikes around town.  The only rule was to be home before dark; somehow we always made it back in one piece.
 
My first race was in sixth grade.  Every year Hood River Junior High (there was only one in the whole town) would have a scrimmage against the school from the next town over in Odell.  I entered the 400 meters, which was the second longest event of the day. I vividly remember the adrenaline of lining up at the start, the sound of cinder under my feet, and the cold wind in my face and the surreal feeling of coming down the home straight.  I have been at it ever since.  Running was an outlet for me, I just felt at peace out there on the trails.  I still do.
 
2.      Tell us a little about your high school experiences.  Highlights?  What did you learn from those experiences?
I graduated from Santa Cruz High School and humbly was an average runner at best, hitting 4:36 for the mile and 9:59 for 2 miles.  I had six different coaches through my four years of Track and Cross Country, many whom were knowledgeable and good athletes themselves but there was not the consistency you desire as an athlete.  I had to be internally focused and driven as a runner. From the start I was a student of the sport, reading and designing training plans for myself.  What I needed most was to close the books and trust my coaches and my training, but that was difficult for an impatient teenager with a new coach every season. I was always second guessing and trying something new. What I needed more than anything was to not over think it and just get out there with my team and be consistent day after day.
 
3.      What about your experience in college?  Highlights?  What did you learn from that experience?
After I graduated high school my parents made it clear that if I wanted to go to college I had to pay for it myself. All I knew is that I wanted to keep running. No one understood it, they said that running was a waste of time and I should get a job; that running wouldn't take me anywhere.  But I felt strongly this was what I wanted to do so I took a part-time job that worked around my practice schedule and enrolled in Cabrillo College to run for Coach Brock.  After one season the school dropped the track program so I moved to Monterey and transferred to Hartnell College, a top program in Northern California coached by Gary Shaw.  Things started to click in college, my times dropped and I earned a full scholarship to Fresno Pacific University where I graduated with a degree in Kinesiology.
 
I formulated a lot of my own training philosophies during this time from personal experiences and the amazing coaches I had. At Hartnell we won two Northern California Cross Country Championships, at Fresno Pacific we were ranked in the top 25 nationally and I won the conference title at 10,000 meters. The successes were memorable but what I value most is the time with my team.  I learned that there is power in a group of competitive individuals working toward a common goal, that selfish motivations are trumped by selfless ones.  There is no greater testament of this than the family-like bond you create with your teammates.  We were together all the time and are friends to this day.
 
4.      You ran on the Farm Team after college.  Who coached you and what did you take away from that experience?
After graduating I still felt I had not reached my potential as a runner, so I turned down a graduate assistant job and moved to the Bay Area in hopes of being able to train with the Nike Farm Team.  Much like High School I was an average collegiate runner who had no business being on that team but Jeff Johnson welcomed me into the group. After that summer Vin Lananna took over for the next few years. Gags and Jack Daniels came in soon after.
There were two training groups on the Farm Team, the "A" group that consisted of people who were shooting to compete at the world level and the "B" group that were shooting to compete at the national level.  Then there was the band of misfits I was a part of.  We dubbed ourselves the unofficial "C" team, for "Team Cutters," because quite frankly we should have been cut. One workout I remember well is when the guys in the top group unexpectedly joined us.  There was Brad and Brent Hauser, JJ White, Nathan Nutter, Jason Balkman, Greg Jimmerson (just to name a few) who were coming back from a summer of racing in Europe, others the Olympics.  Somewhere in the middle of the workout it was my turn to lead and what resulted were perhaps the greatest few intervals of my life.  We were the guys off the back trying to keep up.  We never asked questions, just put our head down and did the work. It was fun and I was running faster than I ever had before. The first thing I noticed was the talent and work ethic of the athletes there. I am thankful to this day for my opportunity to be a part of that day in and day out, even as an outsider just running for my life.
 
Out there I trained harder than I ever thought possible, but lost the idea of recovery.  In the zeal to keep up I pushed my limits and the miles.  I was running my personal bests in practice but my racing suffered as I left a lot out there in practice. A good friend and "training partner" Jureg Stalder (who owns a 28:06 personal best at 10k) took me through some of the most brutal workouts I have ever experienced but also emphasized the need to recover and adapt from the hard work. If anything the most valuable lesson is that you can train hard, and not to be afraid of it, but also train smart and listen to your body.  It is often an art as much as it is a science.
 
5.      What led you into coaching?  Who have been your biggest coaching mentors
The passion to coach has always been there.  Looking back, even as an athlete I had a coach’s mindset and approach to my training. Coach Greg Brock who is now at Santa Cruz High School has been an influential person in my coaching and my life. Not only was he an amazing runner in his day competing for Stanford, but he is a Zen like approach as a coach.  He always had an open door and I would often stop by his house just to talk.  He was a great mentor and still is to this day. It probably drove his wife crazy stopping by as I did.
 
He doesn't remember this but during one of our many conversations he once told me, "It is better to be 90% fit and 100% healthy than 100% fit and 90% healthy."  The principle behind that is coaching to the individual.  Consistency of training is key in distance running, you can't run your best over-trained and injured.  It is a delicate balance. Most importantly he taught me that coaching is more than putting together training. It is about being there for your athletes and taking an interest in their lives off the track.
 
6.      What was your first experience coaching?  Highlights?  What did you learn from that experience?
My first coaching job was as distance coach for Notre Dame Salinas during a redshirt season at Hartnell.  It was a great season as we set some school records and made it to the CCS Finals in the 800.  I also had a short stint at Harker, in which we qualified for the State Championships in cross country. Each school has its own culture and challenges, but at the heart of it all kids had this in common: they want someone to believe in them.
 
7.      What do you do besides coaching (ie. what pays the bills)?
I have been in education since 2000.  I taught Biology and Earth Science for 9 years before moving to Physical Education which is what I teach now.

 



Read the full article at: www.crosscountryexpress.com

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