Scott’s interest in training theory was sparked early by a forward thinking high school coach.
As I continued to learn and teach myself about the intellectual framework surrounding training, my climbing and skiing careers progressed in parallel. When I wasn’t skiing, I was out in the mountains climbing. I was consumed with a passion that drove me to partner with some of the best American climbers of the era.
In 1978 I was badly injured while soloing a route in the Alaska Range. After a protracted recovery, I went on to climb routes in the Himalaya and Karakoram ranges. But this accident caused a major reset of my alpine dreams.
Years later a mutual friend introduced Steve House and me. My alpine climbing background and my understanding of training theory proved to be the key to my eventually working with Steve.
While I was coaching Steve I also had a 15 year cross-country ski coaching career that resulted in several national championships culminating in four of my skiers making the 2012 Olympic team.
During this period, Steve engaged in the same type of training program I would apply to an elite level skier. The methods of training were varied only slightly due the special demands of alpinism. With Steve’s skills as a climber we immediately began to see the results of his training. Over the next few years, Steve went on a streak of big climbs and new routes all over the world. We worked together closely during that period, applying the techniques and training programs I had been developing for more conventional sports to the world of alpine climbing.
From this partnership was born our first book, Training for the New Alpinism.
At the time we had no idea how well received and influential that book would become. Our aspirations for the book from the start were really just to share what we had learned through our experiment with Steve. We knew we had a successful system for training for alpine climbing that could be replicated by another motivated climber, so it was natural for us to want to share what we had discovered. From that out coaching business Uphill Athlete was born
Shortly after the book went on sale, Kilian Jornet contacted us and asked if we would be interested in partnering on a similar book, applying the same principles to mountain running and ski mountaineering. Kilian and I collaborated closely during the writing our second book, Training for the Uphill Athlete.