04/17/2026
As you enter the part of the season where the weather is nice, the races will be fast, and you’re ready to PR…
don’t focus on running a PR.
“What? You said I’m ready to PR!”
Beat the people next to you and run down people in front of you. When you compete and focus on racing, the PRs take care of themselves.
Complete!
04/16/2026
I love this concept from
Everyone wants to run the big PR. It’s April and that’s the right aspiration.
But you should also want to keep racking up solid races. The “ceiling” - the big PR - is what we focus on. But if you raise the “floor” - your “I can run this any time I toe the line” - you’re going to run a big PR by the end of the year. Patience and consistency are important words in mid-April.
Thanks for this framework, Steve!
🔑
03/04/2026
High School Track Coaches
Be honest that if kids stay injury-free all season, and are fired up to race every time they toe the line, they will run BIG PRs.
You don’t coach Sinclaire Johnson or Cole Hocker. Their training requires complexity that your sophomore who is talented but didn’t run this winter doesn’t need.
Keep kids healthy and they’ll run fast.
02/23/2026
High School Track Athletes:
The opportunity to compete in high school track is a gift. Don't assume you'll have more fun as a collegiate athlete or as a fast adult road racer.
Focus on the next meet and savor the chance to compete in your school's uniform.
Let's go!
02/23/2026
High School Track Coaches:
"Coach: Why do you assign strides in the last 20 min of a long run?"
• We want athletes running with good posture when they're tired; strides help with this.
• We need to "Rev the Engine" as often as possible.
• Strides help athletes be mentally engaged when they're tired.
02/21/2026
High School Runners:
If you are assigned a run, post-run work, a cross-training day, a weight room session, etc., and you fail to do it, be honest that you're not following your coach's plan.
The best athletes do all the assignments.
Make sure you're doing the same.
Let's Go!
02/20/2026
High School Track Coaches:
We don’t do post-run general strength and mobility because we like it or for the sake of doing more work.
We do it to...
Decreases chance of injury
Which leads to...
Consistency in training.
The key is to value consistency, which makes the “why” of post-run work obvious.