Working with the Buffaloes: A Season Inside With Mark Wetmore, Adam Goucher, And The College Of Colorado Males’s Cross Nation Crew
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(December 2009)
In RUNNING WITH THE BUFFALOES, author Chris Lear follows the College of Colorado cross-country group via an unforgettable NCAA season. Allowed unparalleled entry to group practices, non-public moments, and the thoughts of Mark Wetmore–one of the nation’s most famous and controversial coaches–Lear supplies a riveting look contained in the triumphs and heartaches of a perennial nationwide contender and the lads who will cease at nothing to attain excellence. The Buffaloes’ 1998 season held nice promise, with Olympic hopeful Adam Goucher poised for his first-ever NCAA cross-country title, and the College of Colorado taking pictures for its first-ever nationwide group title. However within the rigorous world of top-level collegiate sports activities, blind misfortune can sabotage the desires of people and groups alike. In a season stricken by damage and the tragic lack of a teammate, the Buffaloes had been examined as by no means earlier than. What these males managed to attain within the face of such adversity is the stuff of legend and glory.
With ardour and suspense, Lear captures the lives of those younger males and provides a glimpse of what drives a gifted runner like Adam Goucher and an important coach like Mark Wetmore. Like Lance Armstrong’s It is Not Concerning the Bike, RUNNING WITH THE BUFFALOES is without delay a glowing celebration of a sport and an inspiration to anybody who has ever had the braveness to beat the chances and observe a dream.
Writer : Lyons Press; First Version (April 1, 2011)
Language : English
Paperback : 288 pages
ISBN-10 : 0762773987
ISBN-13 : 978-0762773985
Merchandise Weight : 14.4 ounces
Dimensions : 6 x 0.9 x 8.9 inches
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Prospects discover the e book satisfying, fascinating, and value studying. They describe the story as compelling, inspiring, and true grit. Readers reward the writing high quality as excellent, well-crafted, and concise. They respect the good combine of coaching ideas and insights.
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11 reviews for Working with the Buffaloes: A Season Inside With Mark Wetmore, Adam Goucher, And The College Of Colorado Males’s Cross Nation Crew
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Original price was: $16.95.$15.76Current price is: $15.76.
Missouri Mom –
A Good Solid Read
If you’ve every wanted to know what it’s like to train and race on a top college cross country team, this book will give you an insider’s view. This book gives takes you through a fall season with the Colorado Buffaloes and follows it chronologically through the training and racing schedule. The book is concise and well written, and covers some personal trials and tribulations of some of the athletes and Coach Wetmore. As a female runner, however, I’m still looking for some female perspectives. This book briefly talked about the women’s part of the team, but didn’t really share any personal information about any of the athletes, and they must be pretty tough to get through some of Wetmore’s workouts!!! Maybe some day, there will be more about female distance running, although I still enjoy reading about the men. Happy trails.
Dog Face –
Epic Running Tale
I have purchased many good (and some not so go books) on Amazon over the years. Though these good books have moved me and I have thought about writing a review to say so, this is the first book to move me to write a review. As someone who has been a runner since the age of 10, and ran cross-country and track in high school and college, I might be a bit biased towards a story of this nature. That said, the crisp writing and building narrative composed by Mr. Lear made me feel like I was training alongside the Buffaloes in the Fall of 1998. It is a rare talent for an author to give such an in-depth account of the training details of athletes, without it being tedious or reading like a how-to book. Instead, Lear uses the details of the workouts composed by Coach Mark Wetmore to tell a story and explain the method behind this successful madness. While at times I felt tired just from reading about the volume and density of training the Buffaloes were experiencing and enduring, and would in my mind will them (15 years retroactively) to just take a break, Lear also lets you hear from Wetmore and the athletes and learn why they are so committed to this program. You will also come away with a new found or revived appreciation for just how amazing a runner Adam Goucher was before injuries took a toll on his professional career, and the hurdles he had to overcome in life to get where he did.Some will undoubtedly criticize Wetmore’s training, particularly the number of hard workouts spaced so closely together. But once again, this is not a how-to book, and Wetmore, besides acknowledging the ongoing need to reassess and improve, asks for no one’s buy-in to his methods other than his own athletes. And those athletes, most notably Adam Goucher did believe. Ultimately, that’s what this book is about, the power of believing in yourself, your coach, your teammates, and a higher purpose to overcome tragedy and achieve your goals, be they in running or life. So I’ll answer the question, “Should I read this book?,” with a mantra that takes on special significance in the story of the Buffaloes: “No doubt about it.”
Cooper Parlee –
A powerful and tragic book that explores the dedication of distance athletes.
As a runner myself, I would recommend this book to any and all distance athletes (not just runners). It presents a true dialogue where many other books and movies fail when it comes to the level of dedication it takes to achieve our goals in our sports. Packed full of inspirational quotes and inherent advice, this book was definitely worth a read. Unfortunately, the ending proves a little confusing and anticlimactic.
Andrew –
Definitely an interesting read, and one of the classic running novels
I enjoyed reading Running with the Buffaloes. I’m an avid runner and it was interesting to get a peek inside such an elite level program. The chapters are short, which is nice to be able to read small bits and pieces in a spare five minutes. It goes quickly and Lear is a fantastic author.I did also find the obsessive training style implemented by Wetmore to be interesting, and I’m curious to know if he still advocates it so many years later. His runners were clearly very overtrained and while I understand that thats partly the point, I wonder if a small scale down could have drastically improved their rankings.All in all, buy it!
mjr615 –
Surprising Drama and Emotion
When I was in High School, most of the conventional athletes looked on Cross Country runners as lesser athletes, or worse-yet, nerds that could not do any other sports. Boy, were we wrong.One thing that you learn from this book is that runners are athletes in every sense of the word, more so than successful athletes in many other sports. Lear is a gifted writer, making what many consider a boring,dry sport seem fascinating and, in most cases downright exciting. Although Lear was a schoolboy running sensation himself, that does not come out in his writing. Although he runs and keeps up with these college phenoms, he never brags about his own career or performance, barely mentioning his running past. Although this is a running book, the myriad of behind the scenes plots and personal relationships could be happening in any book, and there is enough action and plot twists to fill a good work of fiction. Believe it or not, this book will make you cheer, laugh and even cry as Lear describes the individual and team succeses and failures. His character development is probably his strongest talent, and based on my experinece , most successful runners are colorful characters. I had real trouble putting this book down, and like any good story, the ending leaves you smiling and feeling inspired. Needless to say, I recommend this book highly. Add a start (that would make 6) if you are a passionate runner yourself.
Dani –
A great book that every runner should raed
A great book that shows a cross country inside team and what is like for someone that never experience
Amazon Customer –
Enjoyed the book so much I read it twice. First time I have ever done that. Takes you behind the scenes of a top NCAA Division 1 college Cross Country program. Great training and racing tips for cross country running and what it takes to be part of a Division 1 team.
Juliano Freitas –
Os Buffaloes é o nome do time de corrida da universidade de Colorado. A história conta do dia a dia de treinamento de elite, bem como as dificuldades e desafios encontrados pelo treinador e pelos atletas. O livro é muito gostoso de ler, e ensina muito sobre a corrida. Um dos melhores que já li
Mary Mc Intyre –
Nice format for reading running training experience – lots to learn between the pages too
Amazon ã«ã¹ã¿ãã¼ –
This book has been on a number of top ten running book lists. Having read the first third of the book, my conclusion is that there are fewer than ten good running books.The book is a diary account of the Buffaloes’ cross country season. This is intrinsically interesting to runners such as myself, but a prosaic writing style ensures it soon feels repetitive. It is not a terrible book, however, and I aim to read it to completion some time in the future. It may well be that the latter stages of the book are more enjoyable.Other running books I have had greater luck with are “Born to Run,” and “Feet in the Clouds.”
James D.F. Harris –
Initially I thought it was unreadable because it seemed to focus on so many individual characters but it developed cohesion with my own understandings and experiences with running.