Palisades High Cross Country and Track Coach Rob Hockley Specializes in Physical, Mental and Spiritual Training
By STEVE GALLUZZO | Sports Editor
It is no wonder Rob Hockley has made a name for himself. He has dedicated his life to training and coaching young athletes and now the Palisades High cross country and track coach has a new website dedicated to Tri Core Coaching.
Originally from Bermondsey, a tough, working class part of Southeast London, he arrived in the United States in the late 1980s, doing commercials like Adidas, Coke, Nike, Coors Lite and playing soccer with the SoCal Champions and at the LA Coliseum and Rose Bowl.
In the mid-1990s he began to immerse himself in movement, training and coaching education and by the end of the decade he was training soccer players, runners and then female pro beach volleyball player Elaine Roque. He coacheds his son Jack at Pali High and the testimonials from individuals he has trained are plentiful.
“His training made a huge difference in my speed and strength as a runner,” says former Dolphins runner and Palisadian-Post Cup Award winner Ava Baak, who now attends the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. “He always motivated me to stay consistent and push my limits, even when I felt like giving up. More than that, he cared about the health and well-being of both me and others he coached. Rob allowed me to see my full potential as a runner and I’m so thankful I was able to work with him.”
To Hockley, health and and performance must be thought of as partners. The mother of another athlete trained by Hockley added: “My daughter did soccer specific speed training with Rob with great results on the field. Her ball skills, fitness and speed all improved.”
Hockley teaches that simplicity is on the other side of complexity.
“We all think we know about training and the human body, but nothing in comparison to what we don’t know and don’t worry about… the one to two percent, if not nailing the 98. Super shoes, thera guns, etc. are no good if sleep and nutrition are poor. my goals for athletes.”

Photo: Steve Galluzzo
When it comes to speed, Hockley offers the following words of wisdom:
“Before we ever offer a solution to the puzzle of improving athlete performance, we must first identify the correct problem. When assessing movement, consider not only the athlete’s body but also, the task and environment they perform in.Knowing KPI’s (key performance indicators and inhibitors and considering both content and context are crucial to this process.”
The secret is assessing postures, shapes and rhythms from multiple viewpoints qnd working on them to help improve speed. So when SPEED training is viewed as skill acquisition, rather than a grind to exhaustion, small doses can be done more frequently.
“The goal is to get athletes to their most efficient and effective movement given their specific and unique constraints,” says the four-time Iron Man and 11-time Escape from Alcatraz finisher, who has led the Dolphins to great success, including multiple City cross country titles and state finals appearances and assisted in the boys’ first ever track and field team championship by half a point in 2019.
A USTA Level II coach, Hockley ran the Leona Divide 50-mile race in Lake Hughes in 12:05:39 in 2013 and ran the 50K in 6:57:40 the next year. In 2010, he did the Bulldog 50K Ultra Run and 25K Trail Run in Calabasas.

Photo: Steve Emery
“Having always been an avid student of past distance coaching legends like Arthur Lydiard, Mihaly Igloi, Gordon Pirie, Percy Cerutty and the like…the lastfour or five years have taken a deep educational dive on all things “speed” and use of critical thinking, from the world class sprint coaches at ALTIS, who have ccached 120 Olympians,” Hickley adds. “It’s been an incredible experience and it’s still ongoing and has given me another lens to view training through.”
“Responsive coaching is a holistic practice, where the entirety of the unique individual and his or her surroundings must be considered, constantly observed and adjusted to,” Hockley says. “Health and performance must be thought of as partners. Athletes will not perform at their best if health is compromised.”
For the last 15 years, Hockley has focused predominantly on high school athletes, coaching hundreds of teenagers in multiple sports to fulfill their potential and help them win numerous individual and team titles.
Core principles he teaches are:
1. Coach the unique individual
2. Observe, observe, observe
3. Repeat frequently with variability
4. Elevate health and performance
Hockley is a certified coach with more than 25 years of experience in multiple sports and has studied with
incredible resources, including Pete Egoscue (posture, alignment, movement); Bobby McGee (distance running); world class coaches at ALTIS (distance, sprinting and sports speed); and a 30-year marriage and learning from former professional and world champion dancer Lisa Nunziella (rhythm, coordination and performance under pressure).
“The journey has always been an endless search for fluid efficient and effective movement,” he adds.
With a background in semi-pro soccer (he was once teammates with singer Rod Stewart), running, martial arts and triathlon, he has trained soccer and female pro beach volleyball players, runners and triathletes since the late 1990s in addition to being a conditioning consultant to the Hofstra University women’s volleyball
team and being invited as a trainer and presenter at two U.S. Olympic Training Centers while sending multiple qualifiers to the Ironman World Championships.
“Train to improve the five basic bio motor abilities: coordination, speed, endurance, strength and flexibility,” Hockley says. “Fostering adaptability, confidence, resilience, emotional and psychological wellness, elevating health and performance and preparing athletes not only for now, but importantly for what comes next.
The human body is a dynamic complex system, but this doesn’t mean simplicity in training won’t work; you have to nail the fundamentals and repeat frequently. To coach is to speak and teach, but more importantly it is to listen & learn.”
To contact Hockley, email rljhockley@msn.com or call 310-628-3346.