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November 5, 2010

Revisiting two cross country championships

Baltimore City Cross Country Championships

The Edmondson boys and Western girls won the Baltimore City team championships at the title meet last week at Herring Run Park.

For Western, there wasn’t much trouble as the Doves got a win from Syrita Hunt and took five of the top seven spots to finish with 19 points. Kenneth Johnson won to lead Edmondson to its title as its 58 points was just enough to beat out Digital Harbor (63).

Boys

1. Edmondson, 58
2. Digital Harbor, 63
3. Northwestern, 88
4. Carver, 93
5. Mervo, 104

Individuals

1. K. Johnson (ED), 17:12
2. Brown (DH), 17:16
3. Westbrook (DUN), 17:20
4. Lucas (ED), 17:27
5. Braxton (DH), 17:50
6. Burks (CAR), 18:14
7. Miranda (NW), 18:20
8. Idris (NW), 18:22
9. Eugene (MER), 18:43
10. Palmer (POL), 18:54.

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Posted by Baltimore Sun sports at 9:32 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Cross country
        

September 23, 2010

Former Wilde Lake runner from Kenya gets his visa

Kikanae Punyua is back.

Punyua became a star in the local running scene last year when he emerged as one of the state's best distance runners while in the country for a year at Wilde Lake. But Punyua's visa expired after the school year, forcing him back to Kenya. But after a long summer of battling to return to the United States -- aided by Wilde Lake coach Whitty Bass and others -- Punyua was able to work everything out and arrived in Howard County again last Thursday.

But there's one change. Punyua will be going to school at Glenelg Country School, and he ran his first race Tuesday. Punyua won by 49 seconds in a meet with GCS, St. Paul's and Severn.

Punyua was able to obtain an F-1 visa to return to the United States -- something that Howard County and some other public schools don't accept, but some private schools do. It is a two-year visa, which will let Punyua finish his final year of high school and get set for college.

He's already drawn the attention of several colleges after winning a state title in both indoor and outdoor track last year.

-- Jeff Seidel

Posted by Baltimore Sun sports at 4:25 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Cross country
        

November 20, 2009

Running to Australia

When I interview an athlete, I always want to know what got him or her started in the sport at which he or she excels. What piqued the interest in that particular sport?

When Amanda White Pagon ran for Dulaney, I wrote a few stories about her and watched her amazing success stories pile up one after another, but I never knew why she first started running. I asked her that when I talked with her a few weeks ago for today's Alumni Report.

She said she wanted to run to Australia.

“In elementary school, we had this gym teacher from Australia and she did this program to get kids interested in running. She said, ‘We’re going to run to Australia.’ We had these little cards, 50 miles on a card and they were broken into 50 squares and each square was broken into fours for a quarter mile. You could run at recess and the teacher could tally it for you or you could run at home and parents could initial them.

“What always worked with me was some motivational thing like that, trying to reach some goal, so this was very cool, because in our hallway, she had this big line and as the kids ran more and more on their cards, the line got longer and we started getting closer to Australia.”

Except for the occasional 5K, she didn’t run much after her sophomore year at Dulaney, concentrating mostly on swimming and playing a few other sports. Still, an elementary school teacher with an irresistible goal introduced her to the sport she still can't leave behind.

Oh, and by the way, it’s 9,785 miles from Baltimore to Sydney, Australia. Years later, Pagon raced in a triathlon there.

Posted by Katherine Dunn at 4:12 PM | | Comments (0)
        

November 6, 2009

Looking back at the cross country regional results

Here’s a quick summary of what happened at Thursday’s MPSSAA cross country regional meets. The state meet for all four classes is next Saturday at Hereford.

Class 2A North: Kenneth Johnson won for Edmondson, which also took the team title. Regina Summerville did the same for Digital Harbor.

Class 2A South: Robby Creese of Glenelg sparked the Gladiators’ victory. Oakland Mills won for the girls.

Class 3A East: Mount Hebron won for the boys after taking the Howard County title last week. Atholton’s Matthew Pacheco captured first place. River Hill also won after earning the county crown -- and Mount Hebron’s Becky Yep did the same thing.

Class 3A North: Hereford didn’t have any problems with rules violations this time, beating Towson by eight points. Mason Rivera won for the Bulls, who also took the girls’ title. Hereford’s Lauren Kennedy captured that race.

Class 4A East: Severna Park swept both championships and got a victory from Chris Patrick on the girls’ side. Chesapeake’s Will Neal won the other race.

Class 4A North: Dulaney and Westminster’s boys tied for first with 43 points, but the Baltimore County school got the title on the tie-breaker (who got the better sixth-place finisher).

-- Jeff Seidel

Posted by baltimoresun.com at 10:08 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Cross country
        

October 28, 2009

City cross country championship postponed

The recent rains have forced postponement of Wednesday's scheduled Baltimore City cross county championship meet at Herring Run Park. City officials moved the meet back a day, and it's scheduled to take place Thursday at 4 p.m.

But the Interscholastic Athletic Association of Maryland's meet will go on today. The varsity race is set to begin at 3 p.m. at Oregon Ridge. The Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association meet will take place next Thursday at Oregon Ridge.

That had been originally planned for next Wednesday, but conference officials switched it to Nov. 5.

--Jeff Seidel

Posted by baltimoresun.com at 2:48 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Cross country
        

October 23, 2009

Balto. Co. cross country meet rescheduled again

Weather has forced a second re-scheduling of the Baltimore County cross country championship meet. The meet has been moved from Saturday to Monday, with the varsity races going off at 4 and 4:30 p.m, at Dulaney.

Ron Belinko, coordinator of the office of athletics in the county, said Friday afternoon that the forecast for thunder was the reason for the move, not the nearly 100 percent chance of rain. Thunder worried Belinko and other coaches, especially with athletes spread out over a three-mile course.

The event originally was scheduled for last Saturday at Dulaney, but the combination of temperatures in the low 40s plus rain made county officials re-set the races for Saturday. Now, Mother Nature has intervened again.

-- Jeff Seidel

Posted by baltimoresun.com at 5:20 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Cross country
        

October 16, 2009

Balto. Co. cross country meet postponed

The Baltimore County cross country championships, scheduled for Saturday, have been moved back a week due to the poor weather conditions this weekend.

The meet was supposed to take place at Dulaney, starting at 10 a.m. Saturday. But with temperatures probably in the 40s and lots of rain coming, county officials pushed the meet back to next Saturday. The meet will still be at Dulaney, but the starting time now is scheduled for 2 p.m., county officials confirmed Friday.

-- Jeff Seidel

Posted by baltimoresun.com at 1:01 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Cross country
        

September 23, 2009

Calvert Hall set to compete at Bull Run

Cheers to Calvert Hall cross country for deciding to come to this weekend's Bull Run meet at Hereford.

The No. 2 Cardinals have usually been near the top of the polls in recent seasons, but hadn’t come the last few Bull Runs because they would go to an event in Richmond, Va. Some local teams often grumbled about why Calvert Hall wouldn’t come to this event, which is arguably the biggest in-season event in the area.

"If you’re the best, you should go against the best," was the refrain I often heard. Calvert Hall coach Randy Fowler doesn’t understand what bothered people -- he just saw the Richmond meet as a good place for his kids to run.

But there are some problems with that meet this year, Fowler said, which opened up the Calvert Hall schedule.

“To us, it’s just another meet. No big deal,” Fowler said. “I thought it’d be a good time to go to the Bull Run. It’s a prestigious meet [with] all the local teams. [It's] finally a chance for us to compete against other schools in the state of Maryland since we don’t get to compete in the state championship.”

The Cardinals will take on No. 1 Loyola and other top 10 teams who run in the Elite Division on Saturday morning. Nick Rowe, A.J. Evelletta, Kenny Motsay, Ian Tarltle and Steve Hava are the Cardinals’ top five.

“You might beat the competition, but the course can kick your butt,” Fowler said. “It should be a lot of fun.”

And a lot of people will be glad to see Calvert Hall there enjoying itself.

-- Jeff Seidel

Posted by baltimoresun.com at 12:44 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Cross country
        

September 15, 2009

Perry Hall to dedicate track to Martin

When Jerry Martin coached track at Perry Hall, he would arrive every morning to work his pole vaulters at 5:45, teach all day and then put the rest of the team through its paces for two hours every afternoon. He did that for 31 years.

jerry_martin.jpg

Those who ran for him admired not just his knowledge of the sport, but his dedication to the youngsters who made up his often highly successful teams.

The Gators won 38 Baltimore County track championships during Martin’s 31 years as coach, but his overall contribution to the Perry Hall community went much further than trophies. Recognizing that, school officials will dedicate the school's track to Martin, who passed away suddenly in June at 66, Thursday at halftime of the Gators’ 7 p.m. football game against Tuscarora.

“He was a very tough coach,” said David Marks, who ran cross country for Martin from 1988-90. “He was very strict, really pushed his team to the limits but on a personal level one of the fairest people I’ve ever met. He was a very demanding coach, but I think he gave all of us a sense of discipline that was really needed at that point in our lives.”

Martin began his coaching career at Dundalk High in 1968 and moved to Perry Hall in 1974. In addition to the track titles, his Gators won 12 straight county cross country championships between 1986 and 1997. His teams won a remarkable 83 percent of their dual meets in cross country, indoor and outdoor track.

jerry-martin1.jpg

“He knew every event like the back of his hand. He worked harder than anybody. He was just a consummate professional. He was the best coach I’d ever been around at any level -- a great motivator, his knowledge of the sport, his dedication to the sport,” said Brad Kressman, a Perry Hall physical education teacher and a former assistant to Martin who was one of the driving forces behind the track dedication.

Gators’ track teams often numbered more than 100 runners, said Kressman, making for quite a juggling act for Martin at practice.

“It was something to see,” said Kressman. “He would be in the middle and it was like a three-ring circus. There were so many kids and everybody was doing something different. If you didn’t see it, you wouldn’t believe it. He worked so hard.”

jerry-martin2.jpg

Marks remembers grueling workouts. His cross country team would run two miles to Gunpowder State Park as a warm up, then run hills at the park before running back to school to finish the workout.

Over Labor Day weekend, Marks and about 35 other former Gators and some of their spouses gathered at Perry Hall to run part of the cross country loop in Martin’s honor. Marks said the event, organized through Facebook, might become a more formal run in the future. He added that a Facebook page has been set up in Martin’s honor.

“It’s amazing the impact he had on the community at large,” said Marks, who is president of the Perry Hall Improvement Association. “Parents and grandparents of children who went to that school remember him. He was probably one of the most memorable teachers and coaches we’ve ever had at Perry Hall. His death was very sudden and it just had an impact on a lot of people.”

Photos of Jerry Martin by Kenneth K. Lam / Baltimore Sun / Nov. 16, 1995, and John Roemer IV / May 2, 2009

Posted by Katherine Dunn at 12:54 PM | | Comments (6)
Categories: Cross country, Track and field
        
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