Aaron Gillen - Yreka HS State Champ
Answers a few questions
Northern Section star of mid-1990's still active as Santa Barbara resident
Aaron Gillen (Yreka HS) was one of the State's top
runners in the mid-1990's, earning a State Div V Cross Country title
his senior 1995 year, then emerging as the State 3200 Champ that spring
1966 track and field season at 9:03.96. One time when traveling thru
Yreka on the way back and forth to Oregon for some reason back in those
days we stopped by to visit Jim Eckman, the Yreka HS coach at that time.
Jim took us on a ride around town, and took us just outside town and
pointed to some houses way down the side of some mountain, including
that of his top runner, Aaron Gillen. They were a tad off the beaten
path. Eckman described it as living "of the grid," which meant you were
off the normal electricity grid for the area, and were coming up with
power in innovative ways. Talk about "back to nature!" He showed me some
of the areas where Aaron did his prep training, and while many in the
state try to find spots off the cement to run, Aaron appeared as a prep
to have somewhat the other situation, dirt roads and trails galore to
train on!
Aaron headed off to Indiana University after graduation, and
underwent some frustration during his first few years there. A coaching
change that he describes below seemed to work well for him, and his
final (2000) year he led the team into the NCAA championships in
Cross-Country.
He showed up recently with some very good road racing results
in the Santa Barbara area and we asked him to answer some questions for
us. Always good to hear from someone who can lend some experience to
this running thing and all, with some of the personal ups and downs he
had along the way with their invaluable insight.
Indiana University Coach Robert Chapman adds comments below on
Gillen after he led the team in the 2000 NCAA Cross-Country
Championships with his 47th place for the 17th place team. Senior Aaron
Gillen finished in the top 50 at 47th (36 points). Gillen’s time of
31:17.8 beat his last time on the Ames course (Pre-NCAA’s-31:53.5) by 38
seconds. Chapman added about senior Aaron Gillen, who has led the team
in every scored meet this year, "I'm really proud of Aaron Gillen, who
was just a few spots out of All-American status. The race results don't
show it, but he was actually one of three guys to take a fall during the
race. He came through, however, and gave a really gutsy performance to
lead our team, as he always has."
1) Briefly summarize your successes as a high school runner at Yreka HS.
Man, does this question take me back. My four years running for Yreka
were incredible. I had so much fun and had the opportunity to see so
much of the state, which led me to see so much of this country later in
college.
I’m the type of runner who just enjoys running/racing. I don’t pay
much attention to the small details like a “track guru,” who knows every
runner’s name who has won the 10K or 5K at the trials or the same
events in the Olympics since 1964. I’m not good at that kind of stuff or
maybe it’s the fact that I don’t really care. Even back in high school,
I remember at the larger meets how it seemed so important to people to
know who was in whose race/heat. It somehow predicted a good or bad
performance from such a viewing. I never looked at those “things”
(“things” being the meet heat-sheets or entries) until afterwards on the
way home in the van/bus/or plane. I just enjoyed lacing up my shoes and
anticipating how difficult or long a particular workout or race was
going to be. Being out on the trails, hearing the rocks crush under my
shoes as I poured more energy into a hill along the way as my quads were
screaming at me to stop. That always seemed to fire me up!
My freshman year was fun training with our upper classmen. Just trying
to hang on in workouts and feeling like I was going to throw up. I had
climbed the ranks amongst our team. By November, I found myself in
Clovis, and there I finished third in Division IV. I had an amazingly
fun first x-c season. Just trying to absorb the information running has
to offer (training, nutrition, health, race tactics, experiences,
soreness, teammates, lactic acid, tempo runs, hill repeats, recovery,
long runs and just good ole’ team bonding, the list can go on forever).
In track I ran a 9:23 (3200m) at the Meet of Champions held in
Sacramento. I made it to the state meet in the 3200m, but didn’t get to
race b/c of…RAIN! I came back to race in Cerritos later in the month,
but at the time was dealing with a left hamstring strain. In order to
gain good experience racing at the state level, I chose to return to
Cerritos a few weeks later. I think I beat only 5 people. I was already
beginning to feel stronger and much more experienced by the end of my
freshman year.
My senior year, having three years of experience under me and more
importantly I think, was believing how much stronger I was (compared to
my freshman year) and as the older guys had moved on (graduated) I found
myself near the top of upper classmen. Being undefeated until the
weekend after the state meet (Footlocker), winning the Division IV x-c
championship at Woodward Park.
In track I ended my high school career at the Golden West Invit. in
the 1600m (not my best event), but sure had fun, I had nothing to lose.
The week before, I had won the 3200m down in Cerritos on that famous
(well at least to me) big blue track.
I had made it to the state finals four years in x-c (finishing 3rd,
6th, 4th and 1st). In track I made it to state my freshman year in the
rainy 3200m. I doubled in the 1600m/3200m both my sophomore and junior
years (never made it out of the prelims of the 1600m). Concentrated on
the 3200m my senior year.
2) Coach Eckman once drove me out of Yreka and showed me
roughly where you lived. Can you describe your situation while living up
there as a student and he showed me the mountain you made a yearly
effort to climb (was it New Year's Day - bit of background if you have?)
I grew up six miles North of Yreka (three miles on state route
263 and three miles down a dirt road) and within a rocks throw, a river
wound itself lazily past our property. On this dirt road, I had marked
every mile and knew every turn on it. I remember doing the occasional 12
mile run on it. It had some good up hills and well…down hills on it
too. We (my family) always had some dog who loved to run with me. I’d
play this game, on the way out (3 miles) the dog would lead me, I would
just try to relax, but keep within reasonable distance and on the way
back I’d try to stay in front of the dog at least for two miles or more.
Sometimes I’d be victorious, other times left in the dust. Either way,
my run would turn into this game of boy chase dog, dog chase boy.
Our house was “off-of-the-grid” (meaning no city hook-ups of the
sort). So, on our roof we had solar panels for electricity, a well for
our water, two wood stoves to warm us in the winter, and lots of trees
to shade us in the hot summers. I forget what year it was when we got
our first t.v., but a 10 inch screen was enough for a party. Inviting
our closest neighbors a half mile away to come over for the viewing…if
one were to stare at the t.v. long enough or for me after a few months, I
could make out the image perfectly on our one-channel t.v. But to an
outsider, one would laugh and squint at our home entertainment center. I
had enough things to keep me busy outside though; wood to chop and
stack, I raised chickens and sold their eggs, $1/dozen. I sold walnuts
(from our orchard) in the Fall to ladies in the school office for their
cooking. I hiked around in the mountains nearby or worked in the
orchard, mowing, pruning or watering. I was too busy to be bored or
watch t.v.!
3) How did the choice to head out of state to University of
Indiana work out - what did you achieve in your running for IU and how
was the midwest running scene any different than out here in California?
Picking Indiana University for my collegiate career was a learning
experience. During my high school years, I didn’t experience the true
meaning of an “injury”. I was fortunate that I was relatively
injury-free (not counting the slight muscle strains here and there). In
college, it did not take long for my body to break down and by the first
of September I was diagnosed with a stress fracture on the inside of my
lower leg (missed the whole x-c season and red-shirted). I think it was
a combination of running 65 miles (“base-running”) the summer after
high school graduation thinking those miles would prepare me for a
college cross country season. Then, arriving on campus and within the
next three weeks, shot my miles up to 75-80 miles, which were workout
miles, not the easy “base-miles”. Plus, the humidity just killed me on
every run. I felt as though I sweat out all possible forms of liquid
inside me, just trying to remain hydrated was not an easy task itself.
To make a very long story much shorter, I will basically say that my
first two years in college were filled with injuries (mainly stress
fractures). At times I felt as though maybe I was not supposed to be a
runner at a D-1 school. It was like I could not handle the workload and
it seemed as if I would feel better if I were to stop running and go
home. Those first two years, when I did manage to race some, my race
times were significantly slower than my high school times. Things were
not going well for me and the thought of transferring out became real
after my sophomore year. It was a difficult time, which really forced me
to figure out who I was and what I wanted to do with my running and
life too.
Good news did find me that Fall going into my junior year, a new
coach. I had planned that I was going to transfer my junior year, but
hearing a new coach was on the way, I decided I would give it another
try. What did I have to lose? Run slow or not even run? Ha!
The next three years under Robert Chapman were amazing! I found my
love in running again and for the first time since my 4:16 mile at the
Golden West Invitational in June of my senior year, I began to run
faster times than I did in high school. I was stoked! No more pool
running, no more sweating in the weight room on the stationary bike, no
more intensive therapy, I was part of the team again.
I think what coach Chapman built with the IU distance team is why I
chose to go back east all along. A program which was legendary back in
the day, which morphed to a “funk”, was saved. Coach Chapman believed in
us and more importantly we believed in him and his “big-picture”. What I
achieved in my running at IU was my love for the sport. Not necessarily
the hardware, breaking records, and being in the spot light, but
instead, I found my love for competing again. The team made it to cross
country NCAA's for the first time, which was long over due. I completed
my first x-c, indoor and outdoor track seasons all in a row (meaning I
was injury free)! I achieved how much running means to me and how much
of an influence it has had on my life. I think in order for me to
see/understand “the big picture”, I had to first deal with some major
set backs (my first two years at IU). These hard setbacks taught me to
not take simple things for granted as I fear I was doing before entering
college.
4) What was your academic major and what are you doing with that?
My academic major is “Environmental Management”. Right after
graduation, I was employed in Arizona with the forest service working on
an ecological study. The study included a locally threaten hawk species
(Goshawk), logging methods and harvest techniques, ideal habitat
management, prey abundance, juvenile Goshawk dispersal rates and their
survival.
Today, I am not directly using my academic major. For the past three
years I have been working as a special education instructional assistant
at a juvenile court and community high school. I have been thinking
about going back to school to get a single subject teaching credential.
Teaching had always been in the back of my mind; guess I should have
followed that little voice in college. I am also in my third year as an
assistant track coach at a local high school.
5) How did you end up in Santa Barbara?
Well, my mom was raised here and as a kid, my family use to drive down
to visit my grandparents during the summer. I always liked visiting
Santa Barbara, always so nice and warm. My last two years at IU, my
brother had transferred to and was attending Santa Barbara City College.
Working in Arizona with the forest service was a great experience, but
just not my bag of beans in the “big picture”. It was perfect timing as
my brother’s roommate was moving out, I packed my bags and waved goodbye
to the Grand Canyon and waved hello to the Pacific Ocean.
6) What are you training for, and roughly how much running are you
doing? What is the philosophical basis of your training or do you have a
coach?
Right now, I have been experimenting with marathons. I raced my first
one up in Sacramento this past December 5th, ran a 2:36.34 off of
relatively a conservative approach. I am taking some down time now, but
going to start training for “The Boston” in April. So far I think my
best successful races are anywhere from a 10K up to a ½ marathon, as I
feel like a road-race junkie since I have done a handful of such races.
Recently I have been able to keep 50 miles a week since July when
coaching high school cross country began. I sometimes miss some miles
b/c of a meet or just the time it takes to coach.
7) What advice would you have for high schoolers who may hope to have a
running career go as long as yours has (or longer?). What would you
have changed, if anything, in your approach to the sport along the way
that you think might have helped you or would be an aid to young runners
in high school?
For those younger high school runners hoping to have running be a part
of their lives, make sure you have some “down-time”. For example, being
able get away from running for awhile both mentally and physically. I
have seen too many cases where a runner who has been running since
elementary school and loses the desire to compete. Their fire is gone
and they are just going through the motions. They feel as if they have
always been a part of some cross country/track team and have grown
accustomed to going to practice at 3:00 p.m. everyday.
I do not think I would change anything of my approach to the sport. I
always had “down-time” in high school. I would spend it hiking, mt. bike
racing/riding, and/or tennis sometimes to stay fit and not lose
everything over the summer or winter months.
I think any high school runner before going off to some college to run
needs to really sit down and think realistically what they want their
running goals to be by their end of their college careers. It is on all
of our minds to go to a big school and to qualify for nationals and run
well there (well, maybe at least that was always on my mind since I
thought I would make it there several times, but college had a different
plan for me). Running in college, you will realize you are among a
breed of people not many people can relate to or understand. If you are
not happy in a current situation, learn from it or at least try to see
it from a different view (it can be very hard to do).
Train smart and hard, but always have fun while doing it! Sleep! Get
lots of sleep! One last thing piece of advice that I have found to be
beneficial for my training throughout my entire running career, is to
keep a runner’s log. This is an awesome resource to have when training
on your own. A log is also helpful to you when you are injured because
it allows you to look back at your previous workouts and piece together
what went wrong. Hopefully, you are able to recognize any
inconsistencies with your training and modify it so that it will not
reoccur.
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