Earlier this month, the unstoppable聽Kilian Jornet set a new course record at Alaska鈥檚 most revered footrace, a short but brutal mountain run known as Mount Marathon. While Jornet may have topped the headlines that day, the second place finisher on the women鈥檚 side, Allie Ostrander, is the one we should have been paying attention to. The 18-year-old Kenai Peninsula native is quickly becoming one of the best young runners聽in the country.聽
Last fall, Ostrander, who recently graduated as co-valedictorian from Kenai High, won the Nike Cross Nationals in Portland, Oregon. Her final season of high school track included a 9:59.33 3200 meters, which at the time was the fastest two-mile by any high school girl this year. Despite such impressive performances, and unlike fellow prep running prodigies Mary Cain and Alexa Efraimson, Ostrander isn鈥檛 turning professional right out high school. She has committed to Boise State, where she intends to supplement her passion for cooking with a degree in kinesiology and nutrition.聽
Catching up with Allie for an interview wasn鈥檛 easy as聽she was busy putting on a running camp for 6- to聽12-year-olds. When we finally got in touch, Ostrander shared some thoughts about her budding athletic career, the challenge of running up hills, and the versatility of pancakes. 聽
国产吃瓜黑料: It was tough getting ahold of you. Tell us about this summer running camp you鈥檙e involved in at the moment.
翱厂罢搁础狈顿贰搁:听Last summer, my friend and I had to do a senior civics project, which is like a community service project, as part of our high school government class, so we decided to start a running camp for younger kids and teach them the basics about running and try to spread a little bit of the love that we have for it. It went really well, so we decided to do it again this summer, except we did two camps this time around.
How did you get into running?
Both of my parents were runners, and so is my older sister, Taylor. We would always do the community 5Ks when I was younger and I also did , starting in second grade, which was usually just the one meet a year. When my sister started racing for her middle school, I went to their practices and ran with them.
For the last few seasons, you鈥檝e played on your high school basketball team, between cross-country and track seasons. As a multi-sport athlete, what do you think the special appeal of running is?聽
I think a lot of it has to do with the challenge of running鈥搕hat it鈥檚 so difficult. It may not be the same type of fun as basketball, most people don't call running intervals fun,聽but it鈥檚 also way more rewarding than any other sport I鈥檝e ever done.聽
Why do you think it鈥檚 more rewarding?
Because every thing you do is coming from within yourself. It鈥檚 not like having teammates that you鈥檙e working with, or a ball to chase after鈥搃t鈥檚 just you pushing yourself to be your best.聽
鈥淢ount Marathon is a big deal in Alaska. It鈥檚 such a storied race and so mentally and physically challenging鈥攊t has a lot of the essence of being a 鈥榯ough Alaskan.鈥櫬燜or me, it鈥檚 the only mountain race that I do.鈥
Last spring, you broke ten minutes in the 3,200 meters, which is a landmark achievement. Do you have any specific running goals going forward?
It鈥檚 hard for me to set goals for my college races, because I haven鈥檛 really run any of those distances before. I think I鈥檒l have a better idea after my freshman year, when I can get a baseline for what I鈥檓 capable of. I know I want to move towards the distance end. In high school I raced the 800 and the 1,600, but I want to move more towards 5K and 10K.聽
Do you have a favorite workout?
I don鈥檛 know if you can call it a 鈥渇avorite鈥 workout, but probably one of my best workouts is a 丑颈濒濒-谤别辫别补迟听飞辞谤办辞耻迟 that鈥檚 just, well, very difficult. I鈥檇 actually never been able to finish the workout until my senior year. It鈥檚 hard to explain why it鈥檚 so hard, because you kind of have to be there to understand, to see this hill. But we did three sets of three hills, and each one is about 400 meters long and you鈥檙e trying to do them at 5K pace but, you know, you鈥檙e going up a steep hill. And then, in between the sets, you do a 400 at mile pace on a gravel loop. 聽It鈥檚 something about the way the uphill completely drains you. After the first or second repeat, I鈥檓 already super tired.聽
Which brings us nicely to Mount Marathon, where you finished a remarkable second in your debut at the women鈥檚 senior race. Mount Marathon has the reputation of being the no.聽2 聽most recognized race in Alaska after the Iditarod. Do you think that鈥檚 true and, if so, why are some many people so into this small, local race?
Yeah, I would say that鈥檚 true. All the people I鈥檝e ever met who run know about the race. Of course there are exceptions, people who aren鈥檛 really that into sports might not know about it, but Mount Marathon is a big deal in Alaska. I think a large part of that is that it鈥檚 such a storied race and so mentally and physically challenging鈥搃t has a lot of the essence of being a 鈥渢ough Alaskan.鈥 In Alaska, it鈥檚 such a bucket list thing to do. For me, it鈥檚 the only mountain race that I do and I know it鈥檚 the same for a lot of other people here.聽
Do you plan to keeping running it every year, now that you鈥檒l soon be running for a college team?
I鈥檇 like to keep running it. We鈥檒l see with my college training if it will fit into that, but, yeah, it鈥檚 been a part of my July 4 for about nine years now.聽
Reading about Mount Marathon, it sounds so brutal. Have ever been injured while running? Were there any close calls for you personally?
Not really. I fell a couple times, but it was just in the shale so it wasn鈥檛 really dangerous. I told my coach about the race before I did it this year and he said, 鈥極h, that鈥檚 fine. I don鈥檛 want you to give up things you love to run. It should be something you want to do, and it shouldn鈥檛 limit you.鈥 So I really appreciated that. When I race Mount Marathon, I鈥檓 relatively careful. I鈥檓 not holding back on the downhill, but I鈥檓 also being smart and not taking unnecessary risks.聽
Do you have any secret, or perhaps not so secret, aspirations to break the course record?
Yeah. I feel like no win would be completely legitimate unless I beat that time.
What鈥檚 it like training during the winter in Alaska? Do you think that will be easier in Idaho?
I think training in Idaho in the winter will probably be easier in than in Alaska, although I鈥檝e never done a whole lot of winter training in Alaska, because I鈥檝e always been in basketball. I鈥檓 sure it鈥檒l still be cold and dark in Idaho, but not to the same extremes as in Alaska. I would usually run聽about three days a week during basketball, but mainly just short runs to keep up my aerobic capacity and I only started doing that this year. Before that, I hadn鈥檛 done any running in the winter.
You鈥檙e reputed to be quite the cook. Do you have a pre-race ritual meal, or a favorite food?
I do have a pre-race ritual meal鈥揥heaties, of course. My favorite dish would probably have to be pancakes. Not because they鈥檙e hard to make or because they represent a particular culinary challenge, but because they鈥檙e so versatile and my sister and I always like to experiment with new pancakes flavors and combinations. Also, it鈥檚 not just about the pancakes, but the connotation of pancakes-which is spending time with my sister.聽
What kind of flavors of pancakes are we talking about? Anything聽unusual?
I鈥檓 sure we鈥檝e done a number of rather unusual pancakes. We鈥檝e done lemon poppyseed, almond poppyseed, pineapple coconut, orange cranberry, banana peanut butter, pumpkin, sweet potato . . . we鈥檝e experimented quite a lot. Just yesterday I made zucchini pancakes. We put syrup on most of them, but sometimes we鈥檙e more in a peanut butter mood, and we also really enjoy topping them with apple sauce.聽
Wow. Have any of them turned out particularly good or, maybe, particularly bad?
Not sure about the best ones. I really like pineapple coconut, but I also really like the zucchini ones I made yesterday. None of them of have really turned out bad. My sister and I, we鈥檙e kind of the pancake masters.聽