The sound of 180 claps per minute ringing into his ears helped save Aaron Bartnik's running career and transformed him into an elite long-distance runner.
Last spring, key seniors from the women's cross country team graduated, making the Gophers a longshot to keep their streak of consecutive trips to national meets alive.
Saturday in Terre Haute, Ind., a fresh pack of Gophers on the women's team and Bartnik from the men's team will complete their revivals in the NCAA cross-country meet.
Bartnik finds stride
The process had become so painful that Aaron Bartnik and the Gophers men's cross country staff agreed it might be in the best interest of both parties to part ways.
Bartnik, a former high school state champion at Eden Prairie, had limped through his first three years of collegiate running. He would run in one meet and miss the next two, suffering from seven different bone injuries along the way.
"Whenever I got my mileage to a certain level, I would just break down and wasn't able to stay healthy," the redshirt junior said. "Up until 15-16 months ago, I was getting hurt nonstop. Once I figured out how to recover from that, I was able to get solid training in, and I've been able to perform at a very high level."
The transformation began after countless conversations with running and health experts and led to TRIA orthopedics physical therapist Blake Butler. Stride and strength analysis revealed that Bartnik's bouncy and long running form was causing the problems. His 160 strides per minute needed to increase to 180.
The next several months Bartnik ran with a metronome app sending 180 claps per minute through his headphones.