Eric Heins

Eric Heins

Title: Director of Track & Field and Cross Country
Phone: 928-523-5659
Email: Eric.Heins@nau.edu

Eric Heins is in his fifth season as the head coach of the cross country teams at Northern Arizona University, and second year as the Director of Track & Field and Cross Country. He has won eight Big Sky Championships and produced six top-10 national finishes in his first three seasons at NAU.

In his four years since returning to Flagstaff, Heins has been named coach of the year by the Big Sky Conference eight times, with one coming from the 2010-11 seasons, and one coming in the recently concluded cross country season. Heins was also honored as the Mountain Region Indoor Track and Field Coach of the Year by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association in 2010.

This past fall, the NAU cross country squads, under Heins' tutelage, again had successful seasons across the board. The Lumberjack women, who saw action from four newcomers in nearly every race, improved on their finishes each week, and established a firm foundation for the next few years. The NAU men's squad made history with their record fifth-consecutive Big Sky Championship, and seventh-consecutive individual title.  Diego Estrada earned All-America honors at the NCAA National Championships, while the team finished in the top-15 for the 18th time since 1984.

The Lumberjacks thrived in Heins' first full season as Director of Track and Field. Junior Diego Estrada led the group with a pair of top-10 finishes at the indoor and outdoor national meets in the 5,000-meter run. Heins' leadership also produced a collective six Big Sky Conference individual titles, including two from Estrada.

In the fall of 2010, NAU's cross country teams continued their powerful presence as one of the premiere programs in the country. In his fourth season as head coach of cross country, Heins produced a fourth consecutive conference title on the men's side, and coached an injury-depleted women's squad to a respectable fifth-place finish in the same meet. At the national meet, the Lumberjack men placed ninth behind All-America performances from Estrada and Ahmed Osman. For his efforts, Heins earned his seventh coach of the year honor from the Big Sky Conference.

Serving as the Interim Director of Track and Field, the 2010 track and field campaign under Heins' direction saw the program collect its first national champion in three seasons, as senior David McNeill won both the indoor and outdoor 5,000-meter run titles. Under the tutelage of Heins, McNeill rewrote the record books at NAU in both the indoor and outdoor 5Ks, as well as giving the program its highest finish (T-8) when he scored 18 points at the NCAA Indoor Championships in Fayetteville, Ark.

The 2009 cross country campaign proved to be a historic one for the program as the season culminated with the men's team finishing fourth overall at the NCAA Cross Country Championships. Heins coached junior David McNeill to his third-straight All-American award as he finished runner-up in the race. Junior Jordan Chipangama finished fifth to give the Lumberjacks their first ever duo to finish in the top five at the NCAA Championships. Senior Veronica Pohl, the lone member of the women's team to run in Terre Haute, Ind., landed her second-consecutive All-American award after finishing 38th.

The combination of top finishes at the cross country and track and field championships by the men's team during 2009-10, yielded the Lumberjacks a third-place finish in the final standings for the NCAA Division I John McDonnell Program of the Year Award awarded by the USTFCCCA.

In 2008-09, the men's cross country team finished sixth at the NCAA Championships, while the women finished 23rd overall in posting their second consecutive top 25 finish. The men's sixth-place finish at the 2008 NCAA Championships marked just the second time in NAU history that the Lumberjacks have posted back-to-back top-six finishes. They were led by McNeill (15th overall) and Pohl (16th overall), who were both named to their respective All-American teams. McNeill was named Mountain Region Male Athlete of the Year, capturing the region title to keep the title in the program for the second straight year.

Both the men and women also captured Big Sky Conference championships for the second consecutive season in 2008, as McNeill and Pohl were crowned individual champions. The men placed six runners in the top-10, scoring just 19 points, while the women had three top-ten finishers.

The 2009 indoor and outdoor track seasons produced three Big Sky team championships led by a strong distance group. McNeill ran to a runner-up finish at the NCAA Championships in the 5000m, while freshman Ahmed Osman earned All-America honors in the 10,000m. Pohl, Diego Estrada and Nell Rojas also advanced to the NCAA Championships.

Heins was hired in September 2007 and in two months time his teams were making history in Terre Haute, Ind. The men's team finished fourth and the women's team took seventh at the 2007 NCAA Cross Country Championships, to mark the first time in the storied history of the NAU cross country program that both teams have finished in the top eight nationally.

Heins produced three All-Americans in his rookie year at NAU. Lopez Lomong finished third at the championships, with McNeill taking 10th to garner national honors. On the women's side, Heins coached freshman Ilsa Paulson to All-American status on the merit of her national finish. Nine of Heins' runners were named to the All-Conference team, as well as seven to the 2007 All-Region team.

Lomong, who won the Big Sky and Mountain Region titles in 2007, went on to make the United States Olympic team in 2008 in the 1500m and represented his country as the flag bearer in the Opening Ceremonies in Beijing.

For returning the men's and women's Big Sky Championships to Flagstaff in 2007, Heins was selected as the Big Sky Cross Country Coach of the Year for both teams, as voted on by the conference's coaches.

Back on the track, Heins coached McNeill (1,500m, 5,000m), Ben Ashkettle (steeplechase), and Lesley van Miert (1,500m) to conference championships in the 2008 outdoor season.

McNeill and Van Miert would advance to the NCAA Championships, where McNeill would finish fourth (13:42.17) and Van Miert would take ninth (16:20.66) in their respective 5,000m finals.

Academically, the cross country teams have received the USTFCCCA All-Academic Team award five times under his direction while 20 student-athletes have earned a combined 26 Big Sky All-Academic honors. McNeill was named to the ESPN the Magazine Academic All-America team in 2009 and 2010.

His first women's team was given the honor of being named an Academic All-American team, based on their combined grade point average of 3.42 in the fall semester.

Heins returned to NAU from Texas Christian University, where he served as an assistant during the 2006-07 season. In his only season with the TCU Frogs, he took both the men's and women's teams to top 10 finishes at the NCAA South Central Regional. In addition, he saw five of his runners honored as Mountain West Conference Scholar-Athletes.

From 2001-03, Heins served as an assistant for the Lumberjacks under then-Head Coach Ron Mann. During his first tenure, the men's team finished as high as fourth place at the NCAA Championships, while the women took home a 10th place finish. From there Heins went to Southeast Missouri State, where he spent three years coaching the Redhawks to six different Ohio Valley Conference Championships.

Heins, who began his coaching career as an assistant in 2000 at Indiana, ran for Cincinnati from 1995-99, while earning his bachelor's degree in health promotion and education. At the 1997 Indoor Conference USA Championships, he achieved his highest individual accomplishment by placing third in the 3000 meters. He also notched top 10 finishes in both the indoor and outdoor 5,000 meters, as well as the outdoor 10,000 meters.

In 2001, Heins earned a master's in kinesiology from Indiana. In November 2007 he competed in the U.S. Olympic Trials in the marathon in New York, N.Y. Other accolades include winning the St. Louis Marathon in 2004 and placing first in his age group, and fifth overall, in the 2000 Marine Corps Marathon.

A native of Zanesville, Ohio, Heins now resides in Flagstaff with his wife Kaci. They have one son, Chase, who is three years old.

Ed Jacoby

Ed Jacoby

Title: Assistant Coach
Phone: 928-523-6797
Email: Edward.Jacoby@nau.edu

Ed Jacoby is in the second year of his second stint at NAU after coaching the Lumberjacks from 1999-2000.  Jacoby serves as an assistant coach overseeing all sprinters, jumpers and hurdlers. He brings over 43 years of coaching experience to NAU, and is a member of the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Hall of Fame.


Jacoby returned to coaching after working eight years in the business sector for Tartan-APS as an executive director.

Before Tartan, Jacoby served as the Head Track & Field and Cross Country Coach at Boise State from 1973-97; 2000-01. He won 11 Big Sky Coach of the Year honors, as well as being named NCAA District Coach of the Year four times. He produced three Olympians at Boise, including current NAU assistant coach Troy Kemp, along with numerous NCAA champions and All-Americans.

In 2000, Jacoby produced four NCAA qualifiers while at NAU, including Big Sky women's triple jump record holder, Asa Lonn.

Jacoby's credentials aren't just limited to the college ranks. He is an active member of the U.S. Track & Field Team, and served as the men's high jump coordinator for eight years. From 1991-93, Jacoby was an assistant coach for the World University Games in Sheffield England, an assistant on the U.S. Olympic Team for the 1992 games in Barcelona, Spain and was the head coach for U.S. World Championship team in Stuttgart, Germany, in 1993.

Jacoby has also authored three books on track & field, including Applied Techniques of Track and Field, Complete Book of Jumps and Winning Jumps and Pole Vault.

Alongside Jacoby for 53 years has been his wife, Jean. Their son, Jake, who still holds the Big Sky Indoor 55-meter hurdles record, is currently an assistant track and field coach at the University of Louisville.

Oscar Duncan

Oscar Duncan

Title: Assistant Track & Field Coach
Phone: 928-523-5647
Email: oscar.duncan@nau.edu

Oscar Duncan begins his first year on the Northern Arizona track and field coaching staff, serving as the assistant track and field coach. Duncan oversees the throws, pole vault and multi-event areas on the team.

Duncan arrives in Flagstaff after spending four years at Division III Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, where he served as the throws, jumps, multi-events and sprints coach for both the men's and women's programs.

In 2010, Duncan coached athletes to NCAA Division III qualifying marks in the women's long jump, triple jump, pentathlon, hurdles and men's javelin. Duncan's athletes also broke school numerous records from 2006-10 in the indoor and outdoor shot put, long jump, triple jump, hurdles and weight throw.

Before coaching at Bowdoin, Duncan worked at Boise State from 2002-06 where he served as the Athletics Academic Counselor, Tutorial Coordinator and as a university instructor.

Duncan also enjoyed success as a professional athlete, competing at the U.S. Track and Field Championships from 1999-2004. In 2002 and 2003, Duncan placed fourth and seventh, respectively, in the javelin at the U.S. Championships. Working towards the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Duncan finished sixth overall at the 2000 USA Olympic Trails. He won the 1999 bronze medal at the 1999 USA Track and Field National Championships, and was a member of the U.S. World Championships and Pan-American Games teams that same year. He ended his professional career with a lifetime-best throw of 252 feet (77.30m).

In 1997, Duncan graduated from the University of Idaho with a bachelor's degree in sports science/corporate wellness. He obtained his master's of education in physical education in 2000.

Duncan put together an impressive student-athlete résumé while competing at Idaho. He was a three-time NCAA All-American, and two-time Big West Champion in the javelin. In 1996, Duncan broke the Big Sky javelin record with a throw of 238 feet, six inches, in route to an 11th-place finish at the outdoor championships.

A native of South Orange, N. J., Duncan is joined in Flagstaff by his wife, Nicole, and five daughters, Tañia, Aaliyah, Keeli, Jasmine and Celeste.

Troy Kemp

Troy Kemp

Title: Assistant Coach
Email: tk293@nau.edu

Troy Kemp begins his first season as an assistant coach with the Lumberjacks.  His primary coaching duties will be the sprints, jumps, and hurdles.

Kemp, who competed collegiately for Boise State from 1987-88, comes to NAU after spending the past 10 years coaching on the club and high school levels in Boise, Idaho, where he also worked as a support engineer for Hewlett-Packard.

From 2001-2011, Kemp coached the YMCA Team Idaho Track Club in Boise.  In additon to his club duties, he was an assitant coach for the high jump at numerous area high schools, including Bishop Kelly High School (2007, 2010-11), Timberline (Idaho) High School (2009), and Centennial (Idaho) High School (2008).  Kemp also served as Interim High Jump Coach for Boise State in 1998.

Prior to coaching and working in the business world, Kemp was extremely accomplished as an athlete.  Kemp was able to compete and contend for championships on the world stage for the better part of the next decade.  Kemp, a native of the Bahamas, represented his home country in two Pan-American Games, three Olympic Games, and six World Championships (2 indoor, 4 outdoor).  He received the silver medal in both Pan-American Games performances, the first coming in the 1987 games in Indianapolis, Ind., and the second coming in the 1991 Cuba Games.  Kemp was a finalist in both the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, Spain and the 1996 Games in Atlanta, but his best world finishes of the mid-90s came at the IAAF World Championships in 1993 and 1995.  Kemp earned fourth-place finishes at both the indoor and outdoor world meets in 1993. At the 1995 World Outdoor Championships in Gottenburg, Sweden, Kemp was crowned world champion in the high jump with a jump of 7-9 ¼.

In his short college career at Boise State, Kemp notched a second-place finish in the high jump at the NCAA Indoor National Championship in 1988.  He set the national collegiate high jump record in that meet (7-6 ½), a record that still stands today.  Kemp earned four All-America honors for Boise State, which included his record performance as well as three third-place national marks (1987 Indoor, 1987 Outdoor, 1988 Outdoor).

Kemp is currently working to complete his bachelor's degree in psychology from Northern Arizona.  He has three children: Troy Jr (18) recently graduated from high school in Boise, Mariah (19) is a sophomore outside hitter for the College of Idaho volleyball team, and Katherine (21) is a junior at Boise State.

Jason Pedersen

Jason Pedersen

Title: Graduate Assistant Coach
Phone: 805-338-1130
Email: jbp49@nau.edu

Jason Pedersen enters his first year as a graduate assistant coach for NAU cross country and track & field.  He will assist with the men's and women's cross country teams, as well as the distance runners during the track and field seasons.

Pedersen joins the coaching staff after finishing a successful career with the Lumberjacks, ending in Spring 2011.  Pedersen was a constant presence on the men's cross country team from 2006-2011, running in three NCAA Cross Country Championships and improving on his finish every year (194th in 2008, 95th in 2009, and 87th in 2010).  His finishing time at the 2009 national meet, 30:52.3, was nearly 50 seconds better than his time the previous year.

A native of Simi Valley, Calif., Pedersen led his Royal High School cross country team to consecutive state championships his junior and senior years.  He also set a freshman record in the 3200-meter run, and qualified for the 2004 CIF Southern Section finals in the same race.

Pedersen is currently working towards his master's in mechanical engineering.

Martin Nevarez

Martin Nevarez

Title: Volunteer Assistant Coach
Position: Pole Vault

Martin Nevarez joins the Northern Arizona University track and field program for his first season as a volunteer assistant coach for the pole vault. He comes to Flagstaff after graduting with a BA in Sociology from the University of Maryland-Baltimore County (UMBC).

Nevarez competed for the UMBC Retrievers in the pole vault from 2008-2011, earning all-conference honors in 2011 for the indoor and outdoor seasons. Prior to UMBC, he attended Central Arizona College from 2007-08, where he won the NJCAA national championship in the pole vault and took third in the decathlon.

A native of Casa Grande, Ariz., Nevarez won the 2006 5A-I state championship in the pole vault. In addition to coaching for NAU, Nevarez currently works as a Client Advocate for Flagstaff Shelter Services.