PIUS
STUCKI SPOTLIGHT
9-13-02
Senior men's cross country runner Pius Stucki (Altendorf,
Switzerland) earned his place in the Ram Spotlight by winning the
Rams' first race of the year two weeks ago at East Carolina. One
of the top runners in the CAA, Stucki appears to have regained
the form that allowed him to finish in the top three of every
race last year - until the CAA Championships. "At the CAAs I
didn't run too well," he said of his 13th place finish.
"I don't know what went wrong. Maybe I was burned out, or
the weather was too cold. I was in good shape, it just didn't
work out the way I had hoped."
Sub-par finishes at the conference and
regional meets are just part of what motivates Stucki to turn in
his best season yet at VCU. Last spring, Stucki was having an
outstanding season on the track, running a personal-best 8:53.29
in the 3,000-meter steeplechase to qualify provisionally for the
NCAA Track and Field Championships. That time was the
second-fastest time by a Swiss athlete in that event last season.
Stucki and head coach Julian Spooner felt he could improve on
that time, but a mid-season injury that hampered Stucki for three
weeks dashed his hopes for another fast time.
Stucki used both disappointments over the last
year to push him to train through a hot summer in Richmond.
"This summer I ran about 90-100 miles a week," he said.
"You have to be really motivated to get up every morning at
6:00 to run that kind of mileage in hot weather.
"I didn't do any hard workouts, just
miles. It's given me a good base, and I can recover faster from
workouts. Right now, I'm winning races without doing hard
workouts, and that gives me a lot of confidence. When the
conference and region meets come, I'll be fresh and ready to
go."
Although Stucki is confident he can atone for
his disappointing race at the CAAs a year ago, his main focus is
qualifying for the NCAA Cross Country Championships at the
regional meet. Stucki found the logo for the NCAA meet on the
internet, printed it out on large sheets of paper and has it
posted over his bed and in front of his desk. "I can see it
whenever I do my homework and before I go to bed," he said.
"I focus on it every day. I figure whoever wants to go to
nationals the most will make it, and I want it."
Stucki, who will earn a Master's degree in
information systems in December, plans to return to his native
Switzerland after graduating despite still having eligibility for
track. But the end of his collegiate career does not mean he will
stop competing. Stucki wants to continue training while working
part-time in order to qualify for the cross country world
championships. "Someday when I'm 40, I don't want to look
back and wonder what would've happened if I trained harder,"
Stucki said. "I want to continue running for about two or
three more years and see how far I can go."