Ed Eyestone has been close to the center of USA distance running for nearly 4 decades, and never more than now. He's coach to American Olympic marathoners Conner Mantz and Clayton Young, and also the guiding hand behind undergraduate steeplechaser James Corrigan's improbable--no, impossible--road to Paris.
Eyestone himself ran in two Olympic Marathons with a best finish of 13th in the Barcelona 1992 Games. In 2016, he coached Jared Ward to his 6th place marathon finish in the Rio Olympics.
And he does all this while holding down a fulltime cross-country and track coaching job at Brigham Young University, his alma mater and that of Ward, Young, and Mantz.
In this deep and revealing interview, Eyestone talks about:
# how to have 6 daughters
# how much faster than 2:10:59 (his personal best from 1990), he could run today with super shoes, super drinks, super cooling methods, etc.
# how Corrigan improved this year from 8:52 to 8:13
# where he was, and how he reacted to the U.S. Marathon Trials last Feb. when Mantz and Young placed first and second
# how the twosome is training right now, with a month to go before the Olympic Marathon
# his philosophy of marathon training
# and why C(squared) = E(squared) is an excellent way to look at your training/racing development.
# and much more.