|
|
|
2013 Track Coaches
Mike
Collins, Ph.D.
Head Coach, 16th
Season
Boise State '93,
Utah '96, Idaho '99
mcollins@lcsc.edu
When Mike Collins
started coaching at
Lewis-Clark State he
thought it would be a
short-term engagement.
Little did he know that
he would fall in love
with coaching and the
athletes. Now entering
his 16th season with the
Warriors he has taken
this short-term project
and helped to turn it
into one of the premier
running programs in the
country.
In the past 13 years
Collins’ teams have
produced 61
All-Americans, eight
conference
Runner-of-the-Year
winners, one Region I
Runner-of-the-Year and
champion, and numerous
all-conference and
all-region selections.
Additionally, the
Education Division’s
Student of the Year has
been a cross country
runner four times (2001,
2003, 2008 and 2010) and
in 2009 the President’s
award that goes to the
outstanding graduate was
awarded to a cross
country runner (Rosa
Bautista). Additionally,
his teams are always
amongst the best in team
GPA and academic
accomplishments. Coach
Collins earned Frontier
Conference Men’s and
Women’s Coach of the
Year honors for the
third consecutive year
in 2009 and added the
Men's Coach of the Year
honor again in 2010 and
2011.
For the past 11 years
the women’s cross
country team has placed
in the top-25 at
nationals each year,
finishing
(chronologically) 15th,
9th, 19th, 17th, 19th,
21st, 19th, 14th,15th
18th, and 11th. A full
men’s team qualified for
nationals for the first
time in 2003 and
finished 23rd. The men’s
squad has also competed
at nationals in each of
the past six years,
finishing 21st, 18th,
22nd, 22nd, 19th, as
well as a very
impressive 4th-place
finish in 2011.
Collins works hard to
stay on top of the
current research,
science and methods in
regards to coaching his
runners. He has a
Master’s degree in
Exercise Physiology from
the University of Utah
and a Ph.D. in Sport
Science from the
University of Idaho. All
of his research at both
schools dealt with
improving the
performances of
endurance athletes. He
is also a USATF
Certified Level II coach
with a specialization in
endurance and is working
towards his Level III.
Although Collins works
hard to stay on top of
the latest in the sport,
he is a big believer in
the heart and work ethic
of his athletes. No
matter what they may or
may not have been
“gifted” with, if they
are willing to work
hard, they will get
faster.
He is also a part of the
leadership within the
sport of running,
serving as President for
the NAIA Cross Country
Coaches Association and
has been a national
rater for the past nine
years as well as a
member of many coaching
committees. This
leadership also extends
into his other campus
work where he is a
member of the
Lewis-Clark State
College Faculty Senate,
a committee member on
the athletic advisory
board and other campus
groups.
In his spare time
Collins enjoys fly
fishing, running, doing
triathlons and spending
time with his family.
His wife Tracy is the
head athletic trainer at
Lewis-Clark State and
assists with the team.
His two daughters
(Kassie – 11 and Emily –
8) provide a great deal
of fun and have already
indicated that they want
to run for daddy some
day and be a “country
kid.”
From an athletic
standpoint, Collins has
qualified for the USA
Triathlon National
Championships eight
times and completed his
first Ironman Triathlon
(2.4m swim, 112m bike,
26.2m run) in 2005,
finishing in 11:06.24
after cramping up 13
miles into the run. He
also completed Ironman
competitions in 2009 and
2012.
Collins also believes
that he should be
willing to walk the walk
and not just talk the
talk. In addition to the
triathlons, he runs on a
daily basis and pushes
himself to stay fit.
Although he doesn’t run
at the same level of his
athletes, he works to be
a good example of what
it means to be committed
to your sport, to work
and train hard to be
better.
Assistant
Coach
Tracy Collins
Boise State '93
tcollins@lcsc.edu
Tracy has served as an
assistant coach since
the beginning of the
program and was
instrumental in
convincing her husband
to come in and coach the
team. As the athletic
department’s head
athletic trainer, she
evaluates and treats the
injuries of all athletes
at the college,
including those of the
Warrior runners. She
plays a major role in
the development of the
cross country
scholarship program,
where individuals and
businesses contribute
money to the team to be
used by the
student-athletes to help
offset the costs of
going to school. She
also does many of the
other administrative
duties that help to keep
the program moving in
the right direction.
Tracy is a certified
athletic trainer and has
served as the ATC at
Lewis-Clark State
College for more than a
decade. She also is a
member of the NATA and
the Idaho Athletic
Trainers Association.
She is also a board
member of the Idaho
State Board of Medicine
for Athletic Trainers
and is currently serving
as its chair.
Tracy is a native of
Lewiston and attended
Lewiston High School,
where she established
several school records
as a sprinter.
Throughout her high
school track career she
finished first in
several relays and in
the 100 and 200 her
junior year at the Idaho
State Meet. When she
graduated in 1988, Tracy
held six individual and
relay records in track
and several of those
still stand today,
including an 11.93 time
in the 100 meters and a
24.97 clocking in the
200.
Tracy ran track at Boise
State University,
competing in the 100,
200 and 400 meters as
well as on relay teams.
She graduated from BSU
in 1993 with a
Bachelor’s degree in
Athletic Training. She
is currently working on
her Master’s degree.
Now Tracy spends a lot
of her time running
after her daughters
Kassie and Emily, and
loves being a mom. When
she has time, she enjoys
reading, photography,
scrapbooking, and
staying at the family’s
cabin on the Selway
River.
Arlen
Olson (throws coach)
After
15 years coaching high
school throwers to 23 state
titles and four state
records in North Central
Idaho, Arlen accepted an
invitation from head coach
Mike Collins in 2008 to
“officially” begin a throws
program at Lewis-Clark State
College.
Entering his fifth year as
the throws coach at LCSC,
his throwers have broken all
of the men’s and women’s
school indoor and outdoor
records with the exception
of the men’s outdoor shot
put. Under his direction,
LCSC throwers have set
school records in each of
the last four years with
eight qualifiers to the NAIA
national championships and
earned five Academic
All-America honors as well
as one All-America
selection.
Born
and raised in Orofino,
Idaho, Arlen attended Coeur
d’Alene High School, where
he competed in the discus
and shot put, placing at the
state meet in his senior
year and setting the school
record in the discus. Coeur
d’Alene grad and current
LCSC sophomore thrower John
Murray likes to often remind
Coach that he is no longer
the school record-holder
with Murray having set the
school record in winning the
state title in 2011.
In
1988, Arlen graduated with a
B.A. in Political Science
from Pitzer College of the
Claremont Colleges in
California. He was a
three-time qualifier to the
NCAA Division III Track &
Field Championships in the
discus, javelin and
decathlon. He set the
Pomona-Pitzer school record
in the decathlon in 1984,
which 28 years later is
still the current school
record in the event.
Coaching was a natural
progression for Arlen
considering his family and
friends who mentored him.
His father Darrel was a
long-time volunteer coach at
Orofino High School where he
coached Jim McGoldrick, who
was a two-time state
champion and state
record-holder in the discus,
a NCAA champion at the
University of Texas (where
he still holds the school
record), a three-time
competitor at the U.S.
Olympic Trials and a
five-time world champion in
the Scottish-Highland Games.
A move from hometown Orofino
to Coeur d’Alene while in
high school helped to
further Arlen’s athletic
goals and coaching interests
under the coaching and
mentoring of Bart Templeman,
founder of the prestigious
Iron Wood Throws Camp.
2012 coaches
2011 coaches
2010 coaches
2009 coaches
|
|
|