Grassfield sophomore Grant Holloway a US#1 55 hurdles on Friday and US#1 34.63 300m on Saturday... and Lafayette's Derek Holdsworth gets a US#1 1000m on Saturday.
Grassfield sophomore Grant Holloway a US#1 55 hurdles on Friday and US#1 34.63 300m on Saturday... and Lafayette's Derek Holdsworth gets a US#1 1000m on Saturday.
Complete coverage of Foot Locker Regional meets leading up to Foot Locker Nationals on 12/14/13. (Photo by Margot Kelly)
Putting it simply, Marianne Abdalah does not feel comfortable in crowds. That personal preference for open space explains two major things about her life.
It was a great race. But the Archbishop Wood girls had far more on their minds than just a race.
US#2 Unionville Girls and US#8 West Chester Henderson boys captured team titles at the Ches-Mont Champs. Unionville's Courtney Smith and West Chester East's Chris Cummings were individual titleists.
PA#1 Unionville beat 7-time NXN champions Fayetteville-Manlius 45-79 in the featured, seeded race, putting five ahead of FM's four, and eight ahead of FM's five. Elk County Catholic's Kennedy Weisner posted a solo effort of 16:54.6. Maplewood's Jeremy Parsons won the Boys Varsity A Race in 15:19.5.
Cumberland Valley sophomore Mady Clahane took her running career to a new level at the Carlisle Invitational - beating a returning Foot Lock Finalist, and setting the fastest time on new course or old in the 21st edition of the Carlisle Invitational. In the boys Challenge race, Carlisle junior Zach Brehm defended his home turf in a very fast 15:28.
US#9, PA#2, Pennsbury girls survived a scare, winning by 12 points over PA#3 Mt. Lebanon by a score of 78 to 90. (Photo by David Beyerle)
Deworski Odom does not do a lot of talking. You get the feeling after spending a little time with him that he is one of those coaches who can communicate with his athletes from across a track. A raised hand. A stare. You get the distinct idea that athletes know exactly what he wants, and that they will do exactly that. Or there will be consequences.
Out of nowhere. It's a phrase used on occasion in sports to describe an athlete who puts on a performance that virtually no one expects. And not just a good performance. An extraordinary one. (Photo by Marleen Van den Neste)
Photo by Timothy O'Dowd
(Photo by Tim Fulton, ArmoryTrack.com)