Jack Daniels (coach)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other persons named Jack Daniels, see Jack Daniels (disambiguation).
For the whiskey, see Jack Daniel's.
Jack Daniels was a professor of physical education and cross-country running coach at State University of New York at Cortland. He received his doctoral degree in exercise physiology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Named “The World’s Best Coach” by Runner's World magazine,[1] he led Cortland runners to eight NCAA Division III National Championships, 31 individual national titles, and more than 130 All-America awards.[2] He is famous for writing Daniels' Running Formula, a 1998 book detailing his unique training philosophies. Dr. Daniels resides in Flagstaff, Arizona where he mentors and coaches some of America's top distance runners.
[edit] Notes
- ^ (2005-03-24). "'World’s Best Coach' joins Center for High Altitude Training". Press release. Retrieved on 2006-08-07.
- ^ "'World’s Best Coach'". Press release.
[edit] See also
- USA Track and Field and ((USA Track AND Field Coaches Association))

