Harter altered life on 40th birthday

Coach Lance Harter said his visit to Fayetteville before taking the Arkansas job left an impression on him. “After the visit here it was one of those things where it just seemed like, ‘Hey, if I don’t take this job, I’m a fool,’ ” Harter said. 
(NWA Democrat-Gazette file photo)
Coach Lance Harter said his visit to Fayetteville before taking the Arkansas job left an impression on him. “After the visit here it was one of those things where it just seemed like, ‘Hey, if I don’t take this job, I’m a fool,’ ” Harter said. (NWA Democrat-Gazette file photo)

FAYETTEVILLE -- Lance Harter spent his 40th birthday preparing not so much for life over the hill, but on top of it at the University of Arkansas.

Harter flew to Fayetteville from his home in California on his birthday, April 15, then spent that night celebrating at the restaurant inside the Fayetteville Hilton on the downtown square.

The second in a series detailing the back story on the hiring of Arkansas head coaches.

There were other reasons for celebration that night. After establishing himself as one of the best track and field coaches in the nation at Cal Poly in NCAA Division II, Harter was stepping up in class and would be introduced the next day as head coach of the Razorbacks' women's track and field and cross country teams.

That was 30 years ago, and he has celebrated every birthday since in the same job.

"We came out in [early] April and did kind of a whirlwind visit and then shot back to Cal Poly to sit down and make a decision," Harter said. "I had turned down quite a few jobs already, so I knew how to turn jobs down; we had done that prior. After the visit here it was one of those things where it just seemed like, 'Hey, if I don't take this job, I'm a fool.'

"My dad at the time said, 'You know, you've won 14 national titles at Cal Poly. What else are you going to do?' I think that was a big motivator, that you've proved yourself."

Among the jobs Harter turned down before coming to Arkansas were the head coaching positions at Southern Cal and UCLA in his home state. He had also been a finalist when Terry Crawford got the job at Texas in 1984.

"What I really liked about Fayetteville was I knew I was going to have to recruit a lot, and I had a wife and two young baby girls," Harter said. "This is going to be where she's got to be comfortable, and I'm going to be gone recruiting or traveling with the team. That's what really made me comfortable here. In Southern California with the salary I was going to be paid, I was going to have to live in some pretty desperate situations or commute an hour and a half each way each day. I think it was a situation where I knew I could be comfortable while I was on the road a lot."

Harter also felt comfortable in the Southwest Conference. He ran for Texas Tech in college and his Cal Poly teams competed well against teams in the SWC. A year before he was hired at Arkansas, his 3,200-meter relay team from Cal Poly won at the prestigious Texas Relays in Austin.

Coached by Bev Lewis, the Arkansas women won their first SWC cross country title a few months earlier.

"I thought we could become an impact player right away," Harter said.

Some of that confidence had to do with a conversation Harter had with Arkansas men's track coach John McDonnell during the first trip to Fayetteville. By that time, McDonnell's teams had won 11 NCAA and 33 SWC titles in the three sports he coached and were in the midst of the most dominant stretch ever by a college track team.

"The conversation with him was, 'Hey, if you can do it with the men, can we do it with the women?' " Harter recalled. "His response was, 'Absolutely.' "

Lewis hired Harter. She coached the 1989-90 cross country and track seasons while also in her first year as Arkansas' athletic director for women's sports. (The UA operated separate athletics departments for male and female sports until 2008).

"I had seen what we had done without a lot of funding, a lot of recruiting money across all the women's sports and without good facilities, and I really felt like we could build a nationally competitive program," Lewis said. "In track, I had a little bit of success -- nothing like Lance had done -- but I could see the potential was there if you had the right person."

Harter said Lewis first approached him about the job the fall before he was hired while at the USA Cross Country Championships, which were in San Francisco that year. Over a meal, Lewis told Harter, "I'm looking for people to apply for this job to take my place, and take this program to another level."

The hire was especially important to Lewis because it had been her program for nine years.

"I only had my sights set on one person," Lewis said. "Typically when you offer a coach, you give them 24 hours to decide, but I could tell with Lance that he was very calculated, and he wasn't going to make a quick decision. I think one or two other SEC schools had gone after him prior, and he didn't budge.

"I let him take his time, and I think he did tons of research. It probably took him about a week, but he finally came for a visit and decided he was coming."

In a day when shoe companies signed with coaches instead of schools, Harter brought a lucrative Nike affiliation to Arkansas -- one of only six women's coaches with such an agreement. He also had already been named an assistant coach for the U.S. national team at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona.

"I think it was evidence of the respect he had within the track and field world," Lewis said. "He was just nationally respected, even being at Division II."

Hiring someone of Harter's caliber became even more important shortly after he arrived in Arkansas. He coached Cal Poly through the 1990 outdoor season, then moved to Fayetteville in late July.

On the day the moving truck arrived at his new home, so did Lewis with some surprising news.

"She said, 'Do you have a tie?' " Harter recalled. "I was like, 'Yeah, in that truck in front of you is all my clothes.' She was like, 'I need you to be dressed up, and tomorrow you need to be at this press conference. We're converting to the SEC.'

"I was like, 'What? Do you realize we're going from a good, solid conference to the elite overnight?' "

In the late 1980s, LSU had emerged as a power on the women's side comparable to McDonnell's men at Arkansas. Florida, Alabama and Tennessee were players on the women's national stage, and Kentucky was two years removed from a national championship in cross country.

"I had no question he'd be able to meet that challenge," Lewis said.

In Harter's specialty, distance running, Arkansas adapted quickly to the new league, winning five consecutive SEC cross country titles from 1991-95. It took a while longer to find the right balance to win on the track, but after hiring what would become longtime assistants Lonnie Greene and Bryan Compton, the Razorbacks were beginning to win titles in all three seasons by 2000.

They haven't slowed down since.

In 30 years at Arkansas, Harter has won five NCAA championships -- the only team titles for women's sports at Arkansas -- and 38 SEC championships. He also has coached numerous All-Americans and Olympians.

In 2019, the Razorbacks became the third program to ever win the NCAA indoor, outdoor and cross country titles in succession, and Arkansas' 2020 SEC Indoor championship was its 18th in the past 20 conference meets.

"It turned out OK," Harter said.

Sports on 05/20/2020

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