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Coaches Around the Country: Skiing the Sierra’s with Jeff Schloss

Published: Sun Nov 04, 2007 2:00 AM MST
Updated: Wed Nov 07, 2007 9:17 AM MST

** Editors note: This will be a twice-monthly column highlighting our ski coaches from around the country… including elite coaches, college coaches, high school coaches, volunteer coaches, and learn-to-ski coaches. This is an effort to sample a diverse group of coaches and recognize the people who are the backbone of today’s skiers. If you would like to nominate a coach for an interview, please email rob@fasterskier.com. Please give coach’s name, email, and a several paragraph write-up of the nominee.



Jeff lives, trains, and coaches skiers in the Sierra Nevada’s of Northern California.



(Mark Nadell photo)




1. Background. Tell us about yourself Jeff.

I came to skiing relatively late in life. I grew up in the San Francisco Bay
Area and went to College at UC Santa Barbara--- not places conducive to
learning to ski! After college I took a job in Yosemite teaching rock
climbing and outdoor education and suddenly found myself in a winter
environment. I entered an XC ski race on a whim and just ran around the
course on my "Fischer Step" no-wax skis. It was fun and I became hooked.
Soon I was skiing and racing a lot and moved to Truckee to take a job as a
High School Cross Country ski coach. I also taught XC skiing and became
certified by PSIA although my examiner, Nancy Fiddler, almost failed me
because I couldnąt ski down hill very well!

2. You've worn many hats over the years.. ...being involved coaching for Far West as head coach, to Auburn Ski Club (ASC) head coach, the UNR coach, Truckee High School coach, World Jr coach, Scandinavian trip coach, and now back with Far West and ASC. Can you tell us a bit about the ride and the experiences along the way?

After coaching at Truckee High School I got hired to be the Nordic Coach at
University of Nevada, Reno. At that time UNR had a limited ski program and
competed as a club sport in the USCSA. After my first year at Reno we
managed to move the program up to NCAA skiing. I remember coaching at those
first races in the NCAA and I was a ‘nobody’ coach with no credentials. In one
of our first races, I was skiing backwards on the course to get out on the
trail, and I came flying around a corner and ran right into the top skier
from the University of Utah, knocked him over, and broke his ski! I had a
lot to learn and it took me a long time to be accepted as a legitimate
coach. But what I learned is that what it takes to build a good ski program
is having someone who is passionate about the sport, is willing to learn,
and stays with the program for an extended period of time. Having consistency in
coaching is one of the keys to building a strong program.

After 7 years of college coaching I decided to leave UNR in 1999 and to
begin working with the Auburn Ski Club and Far West to build our junior
programs. At that time Far West was one of the weakest divisions in the
country, often nick-named "Far Worst." I stepped into an incredible group of
people who wanted to bring up the level of Far West skiing: Glenn Jobe,
Sally Jones, Bill Sterling and many others all pitched in to help create a
program almost from scratch. I learned that it takes a village to build the
best programs and that no one coach should take full ownership of the
program. What we did was start year round training programs and we had a
philosophy that we wanted our programs to provide for serious JO type
athletes but also to be fun and introduce kids to a great life-time sport.
We built our training around a love of doing fun adventures outside. To
succeed in skiing you have to train a lot, so we emphasized teaching kids to
love training by going to wild places in the Sierra, climbing mountains,
swimming lakes, and loving to be outside training. We had fun but we trained
a lot.

In 2006, I helped coach at the World Junior and U-23 Championships in
Slovenia. This was an awesome experience and I came away with good
confidence in where US Skiing is headed. Our athletes were totally committed
and were right in there with the Europeans. Seeing our Junior women on the
podium for the relay was great and seeing the coaches from around the
country come together to provide excellent support for the athletes showed
me that we have a lot of good coaches here in the US and we can learn from
each other. It reminded me that USSA needs to keep working on coaches
education and having US coaches interact with each other. I think one of the
biggest benefits of the REG regional junior camps is getting the coaches
from around a region together to exchange ideas and learn from one another.

After 2006 I stepped back as head coach in Far West and handed it over to
the capable hands of Ben Grasseschi. I am still totally involved as a coach,
this is what I do, but I think it is great for the program to have a new
head coach who brings new ideas to the team. It’s cool because we have
consistency of coaching staff but also new perspectives this way.

3. How's Far West changed over the years?

The main way Far West has changed is in its growth. We now have over 40 kids in
the ASC Comp and Devo teams (age 12-19) plus we have started a senior
program with a summer camp and weekly senior team training, and we are
branching out to address coaching our masters as well.

4. What's the most rewarding aspect of coaching, for you?

Oh that is easy: being outdoors going on adventures with the athletes. Turning
kids onto the things I love in life, training, rock climbing, kayaking,
crust cruising, jumping off cliffs into cold water, cycling, etc. I feel
that this diverse approach to training works to make great athletes instead
of just going roller-skiing everyday.

5. Best place to ski?

We are so lucky with the skiing we have here in the Tahoe Basin! I love
Tahoe Donner and Royal Gorge. My all time favorite skiing though, is to
skate on the spring corn all over the High Sierra: no trails, no grooming,
just hundreds of miles of wilderness skating!

6. Most memorable coaching moment?

At the 2005 Junior Olympics when Matt Gelso won the J1 boys sprint! This was
Far West's first JO Gold Medal from an athlete who had come up completely
through our programs.

7. Let's say you were given $1,000,000. And it could ONLY go to xc
skiing in the US. How would you spend and allocate the money?


Oh Cool. I would give 1/3 of the money to USSA for Coaches education, 1/3 of
the money I would divide among the the top clubs across the country that are
developing our juniors, and the final 1/3 I would give to Pete Vordenberg
and the US ski team to use as they see fit, because Pete is doing an awesome
job!




(Mark Nadell photo)





Thanks Jeff!



 

 


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