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The Rich Roll Podcast

Breaking Boston: Scott Fauble Is Leading American Marathoners Into The Olympics

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement, Society & Culture

4.812.9K Ratings

🗓️ 9 December 2019

⏱️ 109 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For the vast majority of us, besting our 26.2 personal record by 3+ minutes would be considered fine. Something to be celebrated, but hardly a mind-bending breakthrough. At the highest level of distance running however, the distinction is vast. It's the canyon that separates a very good marathon runner from the greats. This is the story of Scott Fauble. Historically a very accomplished cross country & 10K runner (at the 2016 Olympic Trials he finished 4th in the 10,000 meters), Scott was unproven at the marathon. That is, until he ran 2:12 in Frankfurt in 2017 and matched that time the following year in New York. These performances certainly established Scott as a very good marathoner. But nobody, aside from Scott himself and perhaps his coach and close circle, was prepared for his stunning performance at the 2019 Boston Marathon. Not only did he surprise the world by leading the race for extended stretches, he accomplished what is almost unheard of at his level -- besting his marathon PR by almost 3 and a half minutes to complete the course in 2:09:09 as the top American and 7th overall. It was a performance that foisted him into the mainstream spotlight. Anointed him as the leading American going into the 2020 Olympic men's marathon. And established him as one of the world’s very best at the 26.2 discipline. Just as interesting are Faub's pursuits when the running shoes come off. Alongside coach Ben Rosario he penned Inside a Marathon: An All-Access Pass to a Top-10 Finish at NYC. Documenting the entire four-month journey to Scott’s 7th place finish at the 2018 New York City Marathon, it's a rare, candid (and very funny at times) behind-the-scenes look at the life of a professional marathoner. A chronicle of grit and mental fortitude, it's a must read book for anyone committed to mastery. This conversation runs the gamut. We begin with Scott's young running career. Track his evolution to Boston. And his maturation into Olympic contender. We discuss life in Flagstaff, AZ. What he has learned under coach Ben Rosario and training alongside teammates on the HOKA Northern Arizona Elite Team. We talk about the coach-athlete relationship as partnership. We go deep into his breakthrough Boston performance. The strategies and techniques that produced that amazing result. And Scott's mindset as he approaches Olympic Trials at the end of February. In addition, we explore his off-road pursuits. The intention behind writing a book. The why behind his podcast. And his deep love for burritos -- all interests I can certainly relate to. In closing, we review the mistakes he sees many amateurs runners make -- and how best to correct them. For Scott, it's about process over results. Passion over podiums. And why 'fast' doesn't always equate to 'good'. You can watch it all go down on YouTube. Humble and jocular, Scott is a natural conversationalist -- one of the good guys you just want to see win. So let's put some wind in his sail for Olympic Trials. I really enjoyed this one and sincerely hope you do as well. Peace + Plants, Rich Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

The sport is a lot simpler when you just don't worry about all this stuff.

0:06.4

It's just running realistically.

0:08.3

Everyone wants to make it this big complicated thing, but it's a pretty simple thing.

0:12.7

Everyone can go for a run, and you don't have to think about all these tactics all the

0:18.1

time, and you don't have to worry about the courses or the hills or the turns or the weather.

0:22.4

It's just running.

0:23.4

Just get out of your own way.

0:25.0

One of the buzzwords and sports and business right now is process oriented.

0:29.9

For me, what that means, being process oriented means like, a, focusing on day by day, and

0:36.0

b, not judging my performances down the line against other people.

0:42.0

They're based on what I feel like I can do and whether or not I got the most out of

0:45.0

myself.

0:47.4

For me, I don't need to worry about anyone else.

0:49.7

I just want to do the best that I can do.

0:52.4

The more I get sucked into what other people are doing, the worse that end result ends

0:56.4

of being, I think.

0:57.6

Really, I'm free to take big chances.

0:59.6

I'm free to go out there and just run as hard as I can and whatever those results are

1:03.4

will be fine because the things that are really important, the people that I care about,

1:07.3

will still be there.

1:08.8

That's Scott Fawble, and this is the Retro podcast.

1:20.2

The Retro podcast.

...

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