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Dr. Cathy
Utzschneider
“It’s never too
late to achieve your personal best."
Motivating and
coaching women to achieve their running goals and
juggle them with the rest of life has been Cathy’s
professional, academic, and personal focus for the
past 15 years. Since then, she’s coached women
from beginners to Olympians through MOVE, a
performance coaching practice.
Her own experience in
competitive running reflects the experiences of
some of those she’s coached and the principle that
it’s never too late to excel at a new sport. She
started competitive running at 40 and within ten
years earned a number 5 age group world ranking, a
silver medal at the Nike World Masters Games (40 –
44), three U.S.A. National Masters Track and Field
titles (45 – 49) and one Canadian National Title
(40 – 44). In November 2005 she won the U.S.A.
National Masters Cross Country Championship
(50-54) and in January 2005 she finished first in
her age group (45-49) of more than 1,100 women at
the Arizona Rock and Roll Half Marathon.
In addition to being a member of Liberty for many
of those years, she served as its president for
several years. During that time she obtained
sponsorship for Liberty from New Balance Inc.
She understands the demands of balancing athletics
with a family and career. At 40 she had the first
of her two children and began a doctoral degree at
Boston University (Ed.D., Human Movement). There
she wrote her dissertation on women who took up
running after 30 and who became national or world
class after 40.
Cathy continues her
research on women athletes through coaching,
teaching, and writing. Cathy is a professor at
Boston College, where she teaches peak performance
and goal setting. A columnist for the World
Triathlon Corporation, she writes articles on goal
setting and “Profiles in Performance”, a series on
training principles illustrated in both setbacks
and achievements of women runners and triathletes.
She is currently
finishing New Athletes, New Women, a book on women
over 30 who have taken up and excelled at new
sports in middle and later adulthood, showing that
it's never too late to improve their lives
dramatically by pursuing athletic goals.
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