EIU cross country has mentor program

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In this Sept. 18, 2012 photo, Eastern Illinois cross country runners Tyler Anderson (left) and mentor Doug Mateas pose in the O'Brien Stadium training room in Charleston. (AP Photo/Times-Courier, Kevin Kilhoffer)
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CHARLESTON (AP) — Erin Howarth saw a gap could form.

The third-year Eastern Illinois head cross country coach did what any good runner would do at that point.

She took strides to prevent the gap from occurring.

Howarth had nine women returning with at least four years' experience of college running, and she had nine women joining the EIU team for the first time this fall. She knew a divide could happen, so she took steps to prevent factions on the team.

Her solution was creating a mentor program.

"I don't like cliques. I don't like groups," Howarth says. "I want this to be a team feel 100 percent. I thought the mentor program with pairing one of those upperclassmen with an underclassmen . they could really show them what it means to be a Panther and take a lot of pride in what they have spent their careers developing to what it is now."

Howarth has a strong distance group returning on the women's side after EIU won the Ohio Valley Conference women's cross country, indoor track and field and outdoor track and field titles during the 2011-12 school year.

She hopes the mentor program helps bridge that success to the new Panther runners.

"I wanted to make sure we used that leadership and that knowledge with the freshmen so they know what it's like for this year. Because next year, they're the top of the totem pole with the three sophomores we have," Howarth says.

The women are divided into nine groups aimed at one-on-one time between the nine veterans and the nine newcomers (eight freshmen and one transfer student).

Howarth created the mentor program for the women in May. She told the mentors the name of their mentee in May to give them a chance to make contact during the summer.

She decided this summer to develop a similar program for the men's team. She divided the team into five groups with four men in each group. The men's mentor program is more aimed at accountability and socialization.

"It is such a huge adjustment to college," Howarth says. "Everyone thinks you're going to be fine. It's not. You struggle in some aspect whether it's athletically, academically or socially. Something is going to give a little bit. I think these upperclassmen have been there and done that and been able to help that transition."

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