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Skipper with a Stopwatch

 
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Jason Saretsky, Harvards new head coach of cross country and track and field (he succeeds Frank Haggerty 68, who retired in June), competed as a middle-distance runner, specializing in the 800-meter run, which many identify as the most painful event in track. Its the event where the sprinter meets the distance runner, and the sustained intensity of effort induces a ferocious lactic-acid burn late in the race. But Saretsky knows both the trials and the joys of athletics; he laments the fact that the only time you hear about track and field is when there is a drug accusation, and thats a shame. There is a purity to our sport, a beauty to our sport, that is special.

Jason Saretsky
Photograph by David Silverman / Harvard Sports Information

Saretsky began running in seventh grade, and at Columbia (he graduated in 1999), he ran on a 4 x 800 relay team that won the Heptagonal championship. He earned a masters degree in exercise physiology from Teachers College, Columbia University, and worked as a graduate assistant coach of the Lions track squad. In 2001 he moved to Iona College in New Rochelle, New York, where, as an assistant coach and later, associate head coach, he helped guide Iona teams to top-10 finishes at the NCAA cross-country championships four years runningno mean feat for an institution with only 3,000 students. Twice, Iona finished fourth in the NCAAs, allowing those teams to bring home the first NCAA trophies in the colleges athletic history.

Saretsky jumped at the opportunity to return to his roots in the Ivy League. Ive felt for a long time that Harvard is a sleeping giant, he notes. Theres incredible potential here: you have all the resources and facilities one could ask for. And theres a great tradition: I think Harvard has produced more individual national champions in track and field than all the other Ivy colleges combined.

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Issues > November-December 2006 > John Harvard's Journal

November-December 2006

In this Issue

November-December 2006

Taking Teaching Seriously

November-December 2006

The Business of Teaching

November-December 2006

Yesterday's News

November-December 2006

Susanne Ebbinghaus

November-December 2006

Interim Agendas

November-December 2006

An Allston Metamorphosis?

November-December 2006

Adios, Early Admissions

November-December 2006

Money-Management Makeover

November-December 2006

Controversial Visitor

November-December 2006

Bigger Biology

November-December 2006

Brevia

November-December 2006

Sciences and Gender

November-December 2006

Open for Business

November-December 2006

Fleet Policy

November-December 2006

How to Handle Hills

November-December 2006

Challenges on the Field and Off

November-December 2006

Soccer Summary

Previously in Departments > Sports

September 1, 2006

Every Play Breaks a Record

September 1, 2006

How Not to Fumble

September 1, 2006

Football: Off-Field Incidents

July 1, 2006

Down-under Dominator

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