If Jackson High School cross country runners need an example of how
to train and race, they need look no further than their coach, Brian
Olsen. The 43-year-old Jackson resident earned his his first Michigan
Runner Masters Male Runner of the Year award, compiling 80 points in
the MR race series. Olsen has been head coach at the school for the past two seasons
after serving as an assistant for many years. His wife, Martha, has been
active in running and coaching, and daughters Kristina, 16, and
Hannah, 14, are harriers on his team.
Olsen, noting how many many excellent masters there are in Michigan,
said, "I thought I had a shot to be in the top five, but my main goal was
just to perform well." He accomplished that.
He was the top state master at five series races: the St. Patrick's Day
Corktown 4-mile (21:35), Borgess Half-Marathon (1:16:16), Grosse Ile
Memorial Day 8K (27:01), Cherry Festival 15K (54:11) and Steve's Run
Trail 10K (35:34). He was the second age-40-and-older finisher at the
Frankenmuth Volkslaufe 20K (1:13:33), and posted times of 59:44 for 10
miles at Crim, and 1:32:11 for 25K at the Fifth Third River Bank Run.
Olsen fared well on the local level too, winning the Jackson Citizen
Patriot race series overall. He finished top master at the Advance
Packaging 5K (16:41, second overall) and the Rose Run 10K (35:36,
fourth overall).
Olsen started running at Jackson High School. After graduating in 1979,
he competed for Jackson Community College, then Oklahoma State
University. He posted times of 4:12 for the mile, 14:31 for 5K, and 2:28
for the marathon.
He credits Bill Lundberg, who coached him at Jackson Community
College, as a strong early influence. Lundberg, who now coaches track
and cross country at Hillsdale College, is a "great motivator," Olsen said.
Olsen's training regimen stresses consistency more than an intensity or
volume. Never a high-mileage runner, he now logs 30 to 40 miles per
week, and, he said, "If I'm lucky, I might get an interval workout in." One
goal for 2005 is to break 16:00 in a 5K, something that eluded him in '04.
His running is just one of several priorities, however. In addition to
coaching at Jackson High, Olsen owns Sun Control of Michigan, a
window-tinting company, coaches a club cross country team sponsored
by his business, and works part-time for a construction firm.
He counts the River Bank Run and Crim among his favorite state
races, and the Rose Run 10K and Clark Lake 12K as top Jackson-area
events.
Olsen recommends keeping a running log, something he has done
faithfully during his 27 years of running. It is motivating to look back at
what he's done, and the kind of workouts that led to better performances.
But the best approach to running, he said, is, "enjoy it, have fun and
don't overanalyze.
"It becomes a way of life," Olsen said.
Writer Paul Aufdemberge - Michigan Runner of the Year in 1996, 1999
and 2000 - ran a personal-record 2:20:03 marathon in Columbus Oct.
17. He joined the master's ranks, turning 40 Dec. 30. M R