
Garrett is a Winona, Minnesota native, where he graduated from Hopkins High. He and his younger brother Eliott (2011 NCAA Indoor 3K Champion) both attended Stanford, where Garrett earned several All-American awards, currently serves as a volunteer assistant coach, and is enrolled as a PhD candidate in the Stanford Technology Ventures Program in the Management Science and Engineering Department.
1. As a professional runner, you've primarily focused on the mile, although you have had very good performances at 5K in the past. Most people go up in distance, so how have you decided to zero in on the 1500m at this point in your career?
2. As a high school athlete, you did other endurance sports. How do you feel that has helped your running career?
3. Unlike many pro athletes, you have chosen to continue along your other career path, studying for your PhD as a candidate in the Stanford Technology Ventures Program in the Management Science and Engineering Department. Up to this point, how have those graduate study experiences impacted your running and vice versa?
That being said, I’ve decided to take this next year off from the PhD program in order to focus all of my energy into running and the Olympic trials this next year. With this, taking a year off is mainly a product of wanting to make sure that I do everything I can to get better this year. Probably the hardest part of the PhD this past year has been that there are occasionally some of the extra drills and core that I have had to sacrifice when I have a big paper or project due for school. I’m also hoping to do some altitude training this fall and winter, which would have been much harder if I was still in school. The 2nd year is also an important year for the Phd, so I wanted to make sure that I had enough energy to devote to that as well and decided that would be hard to do this year.
4. Your brother has developed into a tremendous runner in his own right. What advice have you given him, and what have you learned from watching his growth?
5. This month, we are talking to our athletes about tapering for their goal races. What have you learned about tapering for championships races? What has been a key to staying fresh and ready when the big race rolls around?
Most recently, I’ve really found that traditional tapering hasn’t necessarily been an important aspect of staying fresh for me as much as just making sure that I feel mentally ready and comfortable with what I’m doing. I’ve had some of my best races when I’ve been in the heart of my training or when everything seems to be going wrong leading into a race (this can be especially prone to happening when racing over in Europe). I think it really comes down to knowing your body and what works best for you. I’ve seen a lot of runners feel great off cutting their mileage in half the last few weeks leading into a race and others who have their best races off running 100 mile weeks like they have been doing all year. Personally for me, I feel the best dropping my mileage by about 20-25% leading into a championship race and really just focusing on getting a lot of sleep the week leading into the race. Beyond that, just eating a good diet and being confident that I’ve done everything I can to prepare myself for the race are probably most helpful things for me at that point.