The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Odentz starts his long road to London with return of Run Garioch

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When Aaron Odentz lines up on the start line at Run Garioch on Sunday, it will give him a rare chance to focus solely on himself.

The 22-year-old Aberdeen University student, who is due to graduate with a degree in economics this summer, has taken on a key role as one of Aberdeen AAC’s main distance coaches – quite a challenge, given he has his own running career to manage.

It is a test Odentz welcomes more readily than his exam papers, the last of which he saw off two weeks ago.

He will be running in both the 5k and 10k races in Inverurie when Run Garioch returns after a three-year absence.

It is part of a long haul season for Odentz, which has already seen him dip under 70 minutes for the half-marathon when he competed in Inverness in March.

The Aberdeen athlete is feeling positive for the months ahead, which are going to see him continue to prioritise halfmarath­ons. He sees this weekend as a good fitness test before he competes at the Scottish 10k Championsh­ips in Kilmarnock next month.

Odentz hopes to complete his season in October with the London Marathon.

He said: “Training’s been going quite well – it was probably about this time last year that I really started to up my mileage and realise what I wanted to do was probably the 10ks and half-marathons, with an eye on the marathon at some point in the future.

“Training went really well last summer, but nothing seemed to click in races. I was training a lot better than I was racing.

“Over the winter things started to click into place and I made my first district team since I was an under17. I was really happy with that and went on to perform quite well at the nationals, but since January my main focus was on the Inverness half-marathon.

“That was my first half and I set the target of going under 70 minutes, which I did – just.”

Odentz spends a significan­t amount of time coaching. He took on leading Aberdeen AAC’s performanc­e distance running group last year, and he says it’s a challenge which allows him to keep learning more and more about the discipline of distance running on both the track and the road.

“I love it,” he said. “You’ve got so many different people – none of them are profession­als – they’ve all got jobs, or uni, so they’ve got to balance (the demands of athletics and day-to-day work).

“You’ve got to make sure they’re still enjoying everything.

“You’ve got to adapt how you speak to people, how you write their programmes – everything has to be adapted to the individual.”

Due to his coaching commitment­s, it is unlikely Odentz will have any time to relax on Sunday after his races.

Although none of his athletes are competing alongside him in Inverurie, many will be running at the Scottish Athletics Outdoor Opens in Kilmarnock and Inverness.

Despite a busy weekend, he will look to find some pleasure in the pain, given Run Garioch is a local event in which he has enjoyed competing in during previous years.

Odentz said: “I think the Garioch event is really good – there’s always a good atmosphere and, although Inverurie is not my hometown and I’m local to Aberdeen, there’s always people you know cheering you on.

“It’s a really good day out.”

 ?? ?? Aaron Odentz is AAAC young coach of the year.
Aaron Odentz is AAAC young coach of the year.

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