Diana Hossfeld
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Barry Faulkner
Though she is a consummate pleasure to coach, Nothwestern University
junior Diana Hossfeld can also be a periodic pain in the clipboard.
Wildcats women’s cross country coach Amy Tush said Hossfeld’s
methodical, consistent pace has prompted more than a few anxious
race-day moments.
“Sometimes, she makes me pull my hair out, because it will be the
middle of the race and she won’t be up as far in the pack as I
project her to be,” Tush said. “But, by the end of the race, she
always seems to be where she’s supposed to be.”
Hossfeld was a solid, though not spectacular contributor to Corona
del Mar High’s CIF State and CIF Southern Section Division IV
championship team in 1999. She finished third among her teammates at
the section finals and fifth among Sea Kings at the state meet as a
senior.
But, benefiting from increased distance training -- a tactic CdM
Coach Bill Sumner discourages, as not to prematurely tax his prep
runners’ bodies before they head off to collegiate competition --
Hossfeld made great strides even before she arrived in the Chicago
area.
She lowered her times significantly after training 40-50 miles a
week before her first year at Northwestern, then continued to
strengthen her performance with offseason regimens of between 50-65
miles per week the last two offseasons.
“She has been a very, very pleasant surprise,” said Tush, who
projects Hossfeld as the team’s No. 1 runner this fall. “She is a
very hard worker and she’s very competitive in everything she does.
And, she’s probably the most consistent runner I’ve ever coached.”
Hossfeld, who finished 22nd individually at the NCAA Midwest
regionals last fall to help the Wildcats advance to the NCAA
championships, where they finished 30th as a team, said her
consistent pacing has come out of necessity.
“I guess I’ve always started slow and had to move up,” she said.
This back-of-the-pack predicament, however, winds up working in
Hossfeld’s favor, as her competitive instincts are stirred most with
a string of rivals in her sights.
“I like to see how many people I can catch,” Hossfeld said.
“Growing up as the youngest with two older brothers, I always had to
fight to get my way in my family.”
And while friends, teammates and acquaintances are readily aware
of Hossfeld’s friendly demeanor and persistent smile, Tush said there
is also a ferocity lurking near the surface, ready to respond to the
most casual competitive encounter.
“We went to a go-cart place on a team outing, and I got a kick out
of watching how competitive Diana was behind the wheel,” Tush
recalled. “She was trying to put her teammates into the wall.”
Hossfeld is expected to continue running through barriers this
season, as she tries to lead Northwestern back to the NCAA
championships.
“She can qualify for the NCAA meet as an individual this year and
that should be a goal,” Tush said.
Hossfeld, a communications major with a 3.8 GPA, said she covets
academic All-American status that has barely eluded her the past two
seasons, though she is less specific about other goals.
“I’ have always just run as hard as I could and not expected
things,” she said. “I just want to put in the effort and do my job.”
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