Samia Akbar (26) of Herndon, VA produced noteworthy results
during 2006, her second season as a full-time professional
distance athlete chasing women with international racing
credentials. She placed third (32:42) in the Women's 10,000m at
the 2006 AT&T USA Track & Field Championships, and followed it
up with a marathon debut twelfth place (2:34:14, third
American) finish in the 2006 ING New York City Marathon women's
race.
Samia and Alan Webb of Reston, VA signed autographs at Metro
Run & Walk last August before flying to Osaka, Japan with Team
USA for the 2007 IAAF World Championships in Track & Field. One
month later, we met at Chesapeake Bagel in McLean, VA where she
discussed her development as a long distance runner beginning
in her freshman year on Oakton (VA) High School's track & field
team.
Friends
Samia's father first introduced her as a young girl to running
on a track. Her older sister ran long distance events for her
high school track team in Fairfax, VA. During middle school,
Samia had a brief exposure to running with one track meet at a
neighboring school. A close friend, who had participated in
youth track programs, persuaded Samia to join the track team at
Oakton High School in Vienna, VA. It was a large team, and
nobody was cut.
The Oakton High School track team was led by a different coach
each year; that lack of continuity at the top was difficult.
Some coaches knew the sport well but weren't good with people,
and others were nice but lacked expertise in running. However,
her track team did have a coach for one year, Scott Raczko,
with both a friendly personality and expertise. She raced
mostly the mile and two mile, and says that she lacked 400m
speed; the longer the distance, the better she performed.
Samia's friends and coach urged her to try cross-country her
sophomore year. But she was surprised to learn that cross-
country practice started in August before the school year
began, and involved running through fields. She quit the team,
telling her parents that she didn't like cross-country. Her
sophomore year of track went well; she gave cross-country a
second try junior year. This time she enjoyed it and stuck with
it. Her advice to others about new encounters in running: "Just
Try It." You don't know how well you can do something until you
test yourself. In life, one sometimes doesn't know which way to
go. Trust your instincts, go with your strengths, and make
informed decisions. There are many things you have to work
toward, and develop skill in. But it becomes easier and
enjoyable when one excels.
There were several outstanding Virginia female runners during
her time (1996-99) in high school; races were exciting. Samia
was one of Oakton's best distance runners (2 mile best of 11:02
or so), but several girls in the state were faster including
Laura Heiner (now Turner, who ran for BYU; 18th female at the
2006 USA 25K Championships), Jackie Kerr, and Erin Swain (who
races locally for Pacers Running Stores). The girls and boys
practiced together with coaching by discipline, not gender.
Fellow 2006 RRCA Roads Scholar recipient Jacob Frey, an Oakton
classmate, became a close friend. Samia was able to keep up
with some of the boys on runs, and enjoyed their great attitude
and enthusiasm.
A Positive Experience
College racing was more intense with greater expectations. She
chose American University during their first year with an
intercollegiate track program (from club status); she and Sean
O'Brien received the first full athletic scholarships. Everyone
focused on doing well in studies and sport. Many of her
teammates started when it was a club sport, so there was a
variety of abilities. The small program nurtured her talent
with individual attention from Coach Matt Centrowitz. She
describes him as city guy with a loud, bright personality: he
talks to everyone, makes friends easily, and yells at runners
in front of the team if they do something wrong. But he does
not threaten or intimidate; Coach Centrowitz communicates well
most of the time. You feel his presence, he won't hold back;
but Samia understood his personality from the start. He didn't
change his style after recruiting her.
Samia told a story about running a 5000m track race and having
an argument with Coach Centrowitz afterwards. "Why am I doing
this long stuff? It's so long and so boring. So many laps.
Spectators get up to buy pizza during my event, this is
terrible." But Samia stopped complaining; she excelled at that
distance. Coaches are important because they see the big
picture, they offer insight and guidance. Coach Centrowitz is
very knowledgeable (his son, Matt, recently graduated from high
school with a boy's national record in the 2 mile), and an
experienced national level coach (Olympic distance athlete Jen
Rhines is one of his proteges).
Samia's achievements as a highly decorated college athlete
included becoming American's second female All-American athlete
in 2003 with a NCAA Championships 10,000m (33:38.55) ninth
place; the first All-American was a field hockey player in
1996. She set a course record during the Patriot League Women's
Cross Country Championships (21:54 in West Point, NY), and set
several school records. Samia says that too often talented
runners have a rough time in college at top programs with
pressure that breeds eating disorders. Someone might be doing
well, although that athlete eats very little, so teammates
conclude that it works; eating disorders can spread like a
virus. She felt blessed to have avoided stress, and graduated
feeling fresh, without injury.
Mastery
A group of local athletes, calling themselves DC Elite, train
full-time and race professionally with the guidance of two
coaches. Julie Henner (with a position as assistant track coach
at George Mason University) coaches Sam Burley (800m), Chris
Lukezic (1500m), Anne Shadle (3000m/5000m), and Kevin Sullivan
(via e-mail or phone). Coach Scott Raczko (who works for Metro
Run & Walk) guides 2004 Olympic & 2005/2007 World Championship
finalist Alan Webb (1500m), Samia Akbar, Nikeya Green (800m),
Keira Carlstrom (5000m), and Alyssa Aiken. They first met each
other during high school, and close relationships have
developed within the training group. The local flavor and high
level of motivation is great for morale. Keira also attended
Oakton and American (graduating with All-American honors),
three years after Samia; they are very close friends.
Originally, Samia planned to pursue a masters degree in
psychology with full funding as a teaching assistant required
to take a full class load. She also worked a second job and
trained with the intention of reaching the next level in her
running. The student athlete is common among undergraduates;
Samia had taken summer school classes to give herself
flexibility for running during the school year. But as a
graduate student, she had a very busy schedule; her academic
and athletic performance deteriorated. She felt like a jack-of-
all-trades and master of none. She discussed the miserable
situation with Coach Centrowitz, who reassured her that she was
talented and bright. He suggested it was unnecessary to take
everything to the next level simultaneously. Samia agreed upon
reflection, and resolved to find a better way to do things. She
cut back her activities, and chose to focus on running. School
and a work career could be postponed, but reaching her full
athletic potential had to be now or never.
The Right Choice
Samia moved back home with her parents in Herndon; they had
always been supportive and never pushed her. In 2004, 22-year-
old Samia had no money and no coach; her Father's Day present
was racing a local road race, the Metro Run & Walk Run with Dad
5K. She won the women's division in 17:16 with her dad
watching; she was surprised to see her former coach, Scott
Raczko, there scoring the race. Samia had kept in touch with
him during her college days; on that day, he made an open-ended
offer to help her turn pro by supplying her with workouts.
Samia had found her coach.
Everything has been fantastic with "Coach Scott." Samia got
onto a training schedule, like Alan Webb; the runners meet
several times a week, and Scott gives them individualized
workouts. They utilize area parks and trails such as the W&OD
Trail, Lake Fairfax, and Burke Lake, for distance runs,
fartlek, and hill work. They do track workouts and weight room
conditioning at George Mason University. Scott is great to work
with because he makes his athletes a top priority, and the face-
to-face contact eliminates guesswork. He travels with them
often, even when he has athletes racing in several locations.
Samia notes that he manages with little sleep while drinking
Coca Cola as if it were water.
Success as a long distance athlete requires talent, hard work,
and the patience to invest in a career for several years before
expecting big gains. Peak achievements in distance running tend
to occur during an athlete's late 20s or early 30s and beyond.
For example, Deena Kastor of Team Running USA won her 2004
Olympic Women's Marathon bronze medal at age 31 with eight
years of professional experience. Samia says the key to her
success has been consistent training that paid off in 2006. She
has qualified and entered the 2008 USA Olympic Trials-Women's
Marathon to be held on Sunday, April 20 in Boston, MA.
A Few Racing Highlights
During 2005, Samia entered local road races and performed
brilliantly, placing tenth (57:40) among women at the Credit
Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile, and winning the women's division
at the Harris Teeter Leesburg 20K (1:17:32) and Veterans Day
10K (34:05). In 2006, she posted several top ten finishes at
USA Championship women's races: third in 10,000m track; fourth
in the Tufts 10K road race (33:56); ninth in the Women's Cross
Country 8K (27:42); and ninth in the Gate River 15K road race
(52:33). During 2007, she ran personal bests at the USA (Gate
River) 15K (51:56, 10th) Road Championships in March, and an
international 5000m track (16:09) race in Brasschaat, Belgium
during July.
Samia had to alter her training during May/June 2007 and
received chiropractic and massage therapy. She didn't feel
100%; there were problems with her hamstrings, calves, etc. It
was more difficult to stay positive when she couldn't go full-
speed in training. She spent July in Belgium with 40 runners
represented by Ray Flynn. They were based at a Catholic
university in a very charming town with miles of trails, summer
concerts, and places to hang out. It was an exciting experience
that allowed athletes to focus on training. She felt recharged,
running with women she admired. Osaka, Japan in late August was
fun; her father traveled with her, and she visited family in
Japan. It was an amazing experience to represent the USA. Samia
placed 49th (2:56:27) in the 2007 World Championships Women's
Marathon on September 2 in Japan, passing through 25K (1:37:02)
with three Team USA women.
Samia Akbar will continue to seek improvements on the track
(5000m and 10,000m), and wants to run a great marathon race
sometime during her career. Coach Scott Raczko has given her a
few distance options; he nudged her toward the marathon by
asking her to try the half marathon (2006 Philadelphia Distance
Run, 1:13:13, 9th female.) She is always excited about racing
opportunities; every competition gives her an edge to reach her
goals. She doesn't get very excited about a race performance;
she looks forward to continued progress. Samia Akbar feels very
fortunate to do something every day that she loves--running.