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Beth Alford-Sullivan Named Penn State Women's Track Coach
State College, Pa.; Aug. 12, 1999 -- Beth Alford-Sullivan, the Stanford women's cross country and track and field coordinator, is Penn State's new coach of women's track and field and cross country.
Athletic director Tim Curley said in announcing the appointment, "We are delighted to welcome Beth to Penn State. She has an impressive background with a wealth of experience as an athlete and international and national coach." Alford-Sullivan has been responsible for women's cross country and distance runners at Stanford since 1995 working under Vin Lananna, who is the director of track and field. She was the 1998 Pac 10 women's cross country coach of the year, repeating an honor she also won in 1997 and 1996. She was the NCAA women's cross country coach of the year in 1996 when Stanford won the NCAA team title. She won regional coach of the year honors in 1996 and 1997. Her 1997 Stanford cross country team was the national runner-up and her 1998 team finished third. "Beth certainly is a national figure and one with the ability to continue a tradition of excellence at Penn State," associate athletic director Ellen Perry says. "Her international and national credentials plus her background in the Big Ten are a perfect fit for us." A 1989 University of Minnesota graduate who was a three-year team captain for the Gophers, Alford-Sullivan moved to Stanford after serving as head coach of women's track and field and cross country for two years at Mankato State. She was the head coach of the men's and women's cross country teams and an assistant track and field coach at Southeast Missouri State University from 1991 to 1993 and a graduate assistant coach at Southern Illinois. She completed her undergraduate degree at Minnesota in youth studies then earned a master's degree in sports administration from Southern Illinois in 1993. Alford-Sullivan coached the 1997 U.S. World Junior Cross Country team which competed in Italy. In 1994, she was named the head coach of the U.S. women's distance running team that finished fourth among 20 teams at the Beijing International Women's Ekiden. In 1995, she was an assistant track and field coach at the U.S. Olympic Festival in Colorado Springs. She currently is the president of the NCAA Women's Cross Country Association, a member of the USA Track and Field Cross Country Committee and an executive member of the USA Track and Field Coaches Association and the US Women's Track Coaches Association. She has coached 31 All-Americans including Stanford's Monal Chokshi who won the NCAA and Pac 10 titles in the 3000 meters in 1998. Her cross country runners at Stanford earned five top 10 NCAA finishes. She is married to Jim Sullivan, a strength coach at Stanford.
Dayna Holston |
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