Daily Pilot High School Athlete of the Week, Amber Steen: Tunnel
vision
Barry Faulkner
On the eve of the biggest victory in her cross country career,
Amber Steen was shaken, but not stirred.
Roused briefly from sleep in the wee hours by an earthquake which rattled
her Newport Beach home, the Newport Harbor High junior made a
semiconscious decision to not let even Mother Nature deter her from her
finish-line focus.
“When (the temblor recorded at 7.1 on the Richter scale) happened, I woke
up for a couple minutes,” Steen recalled. “But I fell right back asleep.”
It was a decision Steen later credited with preserving the energy
necessary to outrun a sterling field and win the girls sweepstakes race
at the prestigious Orange County Championships Saturday at Irvine Park in
Orange.
“My plan was to stick with the leaders (Santa Margarita’s Lori Mann and
Mater Dei’s Jenny Sears) as long as I could and I was fortunate to have
as much energy as I did the last 800 meters,” the Daily Pilot Athlete of
the Week said. “I’d been sleeping well -- even with the earthquake -- and
eating well and I felt good that day.”
A two-time Sea View League 1,600-meter champion, who also won the league
3,200 title and the CIF Masters Meet 1,600 last spring, Steen has given
Sailors girls cross country and track and field coach Eric Tweit a good
feeling ever since she stepped on campus.
“We’ve had girls train as hard as Amber does, but I don’t think I’ve ever
had a runner who really took the mental approach, was as goal oriented
and who wanted to be the best,” said Tweit, closing in on two decades at
the school. “And there’s no telling how good she could end up being.
She’s ready to be either a state champion or in the top three in the
state.”
Steen, who has had more success in track than cross country, said
Saturday’s victory was a big step.
“Confidence wise, it’s a real boost,” she said. “I feel like I’m exactly
where I should be at this point in the season, but I still don’t feel
like I’ve done my best.”
Steen’s ability to always give her best, in training as well as races, is
one reason she is so revered by her coaches and teammates. And her
interest in the success of her teammates is almost as unusual as her
talent.
“My two goals (Saturday) were to run under 18 minutes (accomplished at
17:44, a personal record) and to do well for my team,” Steen said. “I
love my team so much. I’m so overwhelmed at how well (teammates) do, it
carries over into my own racing.”
Steen displays support for her teammates by quickly concentrating her
energy on cheering after she hits the finish line.
“I want to see the rest of the race, see how much each of our runners are
improving and how well we’re doing as a team,” she said. “My team is
always excited for me, but I’m more excited for them.”
Steen said the inspiration of her teammates is one of several motivating
factors she employs.
“There are expectations for me to do well, but I always try to just run
my own race, try my hardest and be as positive as possible. If I didn’t
have the teammates I have, it wouldn’t be as much fun.”
Already possessing the talent and the drive, Tweit believes Steen needs
only to add experience to fulfill her potential.
“The No. 1 thing for her, now, is to find the best way for her to race,”
Tweit said. “A lot of that is feel. Some people have it and others have
to acquire it. I think she’s still getting used to things and feeling
comfortable and confident. She really needed (Saturday’s) victory in a
real competitive, intense situation against a lot of elite runners.”
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