USATF on Tuesday hosted a national media
teleconference with Nick Symmonds, the seven-time NCAA
Division III champion who will compete in the 800 meters
this Saturday, January 27, at the Reebok Boston Indoor
Games. In his first career indoor race on January 13 in Seattle,
Symmonds posted a time of 3:56.72 for the mile. He first
proved his mettle on the elite level when he finished
runner-up in the 800 meters at the 2006 AT&T USA Outdoor
Track & Field Championships in Indianapolis. His time of
1:45.83 was a personal best for the Division III national
record holder.
He was a seven-time NCAA Division III outdoor track
champion, winning every NCAA championship race in which
he competed. He won both the 800 and 1,500 each year of
his college career except his sophomore season, when
injury limited him to only the 800.
A 2006 graduate of Willamette University in Oregon, where
he studied biochemistry, Symmonds is a native of Boise,
Idaho, where he attended Bishop Kelly High School. He now
competes for the Oregon Track Club, where he is coached
by the legendary Frank Gagliano.
Below are excerpts from Tuesday's call:
Q: How do you feel coming into this weekend?
A: I am extremely excited. I'm real strong from the base
we've been doing. The 3:56 was a big surprise. I thought I
could get under 4, but to run 3:56 was a surprise. I'm really
excited about the 8. I haven't run on a banked, 200-meter
track before. The field in Boston is great, and the meet
record could go. I think the meet record is 1:47.9, so I'm
excited to get out there and run.
Q: Obviously, you ran the 800 and 1,500 a lot in Division III .
Which race will you focus on now?
A At this point, we're so far out from the [2008] Olympic
Trials, it's just about getting in shape. I have huge love and
respect for both races. They both represent individual
challenges. It's nice to mix it up. Hopefully this summer I'll
run a couple of fast times.
Q: Did you really see that kind of performance happening in
Indy, where you ran 1:45 and placed second at the 2006
AT&T USA Outdoor Championships?
A: No, actually. That's why I was so surprised. I'm a pretty
good racer, pretty good tactically. My main goal going in was
to make the final. Once I got in there, I thought if I could race
my PR, 1:47, I could beat a few people. To run 1:45, I had no
idea I had that in me. I held back on the first lap. I held back
in the semis. I don't have quite as much natural speed as
some of the other guys. I need to go out slower and close
hard.
Q: Did you run indoor track in college?
A: No. Willamette doesn't run an indoor season, and up until
two weeks ago I had never run an indoor race.
Q: What are you doing to get ready for tight races?
A: At the Oregon Track Club, we've got a lot of guys. We've
been doing work to get my speed up, to make moves on
those tight turns. I think I have a short, powerful stride that
will help me out indoors.
Q: When you came off the track in Indy at the USA Outdoors
you were wearing your high school singlet. How did you get
from there to a sponsorship?
A: At Indy I was wearing my high school singlet because my
coach had been writing a lot of my workouts for me. At
Outdoors, I met up with a couple of agents and made a
couple of calls. [Former college coach and 2000 Olympic
assistant coach] Kelly Sullivan put me in touch with Chris
Layne at Total Sports. We really hit it off. I liked what he was
doing in Tennessee ... he placed some calls to the shoe
companies and he secured me a contract with Nike.
Q: Tell us more about your training group.
A: We're in Eugene and we are the Nike Oregon Track Club,
sponsored by Nike. Frank Gagliano is the coach. We've got
a great group of guys from 400 guys through 5k. At
Willamette, toward the end, I had to do workouts on my own,
which was very physically and mentally taxing. Out here I can
jump in with a group of guys.
Q: What is your background in sports?
A: My family was never really involved in track and field. Dad
played ice hockey and my mom ran. In high school I played
ice hockey and soccer for the most part. My freshman year I
ran cross country because I was small - only 5-feet tall, so I
was too short for soccer. I got a stress fracture in the spring
doing both sports, so I had to choose one sport - running or
soccer. I stayed with running and played ice hockey in the
winter.
Q: How tall are you now, and when did you start growing?
A: I'm 5-10. The biggest growth was sophomore to junior
year.
Q: What are your plans this indoor season?
A: I think I'll run the mile at the Tyson Invitational, and we
might run a DMR. I'll also run the USAs [Indoor
Championships]. I'm not sure which race I'll be doing there,
though.
Q: How is training different now?
A: It's a lot more intense. I ran 60 miles per week in college,
and I'm doing about 70 now. It's the little things that are
more emphasized. I lift more, do core strengthening and
stretching.
Q: With the 1:45 and 3:56 indoors, where does that take you
for possible personal bests outdoors this year?
A: I don't know. Hopefully things will go well and I get into
some good races. I'd like to see myself with Khadevis
Robinson, maybe running a 1:43. Don't know if I'm ready for
that yet, but I'd like to be up there with him at USAs. I'd like to
be down in the mid-3:30s in the 1,500.
Q: Who are some of the runners that you looked up to in
high school and college?
A: I remember looking up to Ryan Bak [of Trinity College]
and Matt Groose [of Wisconsin-Oshkosh] as Division III
guys. I remember following them from my freshman year
and wanting to race them. After that it was Alan Webb,
Dathan Ritzenhein, Ryan Hall. I wanted to know what they
were doing and wanted to do the same thing. Oregon and
Nike have made it possible for me to pursue that dream.
Q: Before your performance in Indy, did you want a pro
career in track?
A: I knew I wanted to keep running but wasn't sure how I
would be able to make it happen. It's been a dream of mine
for a long time, so I wasn't ready to give up on it. Running
1:45 made it a lot easier, for sure.
Q: How did you start working with Frank Gagliano?
A: I met him at the Stanford Invite when I ran there last year.
When I heard they were coming up to Eugene, I got hooked
up with him. He's got to be the best distance-mid distance
coach in the country.
Q: You sound confident and experienced - you don't sound
intimidated to be racing against top competition.
A: What it comes down to is that it's a great experience for
me because I come to races so hungry. I believe I can run
with these guys and know I can run with them. It's a matter
of proving to myself and others that I can do it, and being
ready to do that.
Q: What are your long-term goals?
A: We talk a lot about making teams out here. I want to make
an Olympic Team and a couple of world teams. That's what
we focus on is making U.S. teams.
Q: How long do you want to stay in the sport?
A: As long as I can.