State of domination
Joseph Boo
WALNUT - Saturday morning’s CIF cross country finals at Mt. San
Antonio College was less a race and more of a coronation for Corona del
Mar’s girls cross country team.
Not only did the Sea Kings win the Division IV race, it annihilated the
field and archrival Nordhoff to win their second straight CIF
championship on a rain-slicked course that produced unusually fast times
for the conditions.
“It feels great,” CdM junior Katie Quinlan said about the title. “We were
looking forward to this all year.”
CdM, No. 1 in Division IV, placed five runners in the top eight in team
scoring, ran the second fastest team time of the day, ran one of the
fastest times in course history, and its score of 24 was 38 points better
than traditional powerhouse Nordhoff.
“I actually wanted a 40-point victory,” CdM Coach Bill Sumner said. “We
wanted to send a message. Not to Nordhoff, but to ourselves. I wanted
them to know that they’re really talented and they better use it.”
Liz Morse led the talent show contestants with a second place finish.
With first place runner’s team Christina Jimenez of Granite Hills not
entered, Morse captured the top spot in scoring.
Nordhoff won the second spot, but that was pretty much it. Jenny Cummins,
Diana Hossfeld and Quinlan came in after fourth place finisher Liz Huipe
of Estancia. Katherine Morse was eighth in team scoring to wrap up the
title for CdM.
Nordhoff’s pack still finished in the top 20, and the race was close for
the first half. But CdM promptly blew the race open after the second
hill.
CdM also goes to Fresno on Saturday to look for its first state
championship. Last year, the Sea Kings finished second to Nordhoff by one
point at the Woodward Park course.
“There better not be a letdown,” Sumner said. “We know what happened last
year. Kids forget quickly, but the adults will remind them.”
After winning her heat last week in the preliminaries, Newport Harbor’s
Amber Steen won the Division II individual championship by 0.65 seconds.
Trailing for nearly the entire race, Steen surpassed Agoura’s Laura
Jakosky in the last 50 meters and barely held on at the finish line.
“For the first couple of miles, I stay back, pretty mellow,” Steen said.
“I don’t like to take the lead at the start.”
“(Jakosky’s) a great downhill runner. I felt I was going faster, but I
wasn’t gaining any ground. I thought this could be our last race, so I
went all out.”
Newport Harbor will have another race, advancing to the state finals
after a one-year absence by the skin of its teeth. The Sailors tied
Barstow for the fourth and final spot. Because Newport Harbor’s No. 6
runner, Carrie Foss, finished ahead of Barstow’s No. 6, Newport Harbor
won the tiebreaker.
The close win avenges last year’s near miss, where the Sailors missed the
state meet by one spot.
“Sonya (Mechkor) and Amber (Steen) would’ve probably gone to state as
individuals,” Foss said. “To go as a team, it’s very good.”
“Obviously, you can’t get any closer,” Newport Harbor Coach Eric Tweit
said.
Tweit felt this was one of his team’s best performance.
“Sonya Mechkor decided she wanted to run a 19:00 flat, and she ran an
18:59.99. And Ashley Steen. She’s not one of our normal scorers, but she
was fifth today. She made a 30 second improvement from last time. She
really stepped up. All of them did. They all deserve a pat on the back.”
“I’m very happy we qualified for state. Last year, we missed by one spot,
and it would have been heartbreaking to miss close again,” said Tweit.
Huipe will also advance to the state meet for the second consecutive
year.
“This is definitely one of her best races she ran all year,” Estancia
Coach Charlie Appell said. “She gutted this one out.”
“Liz ran 50 seconds faster than her personal record on the course.”
Huipe, who finished 29th at state last year, hopes for an improved
showing.
“I want to get in the top 20,” she said. “Last year, I was 29th, but I
think I can make the top 20.”
Appell thinks Huipe can do even better though.
“She should be in the top 10,” he said.
Estancia, as a team, finished sixth in Division IV, winning a tiebreaker
over Laguna Beach because Carmen McNeil beat the Artists’ sixth runner.
“Our middle girls did an excellent job,” Appell said. “They all ran a
minute faster than their p.r.”
CIF FINALS
(at Mt. San Antonio College)
Corona del Mar
2. Liz Morse, 18:30; 5. Jenny Cummins, 18:54; 6. Diana Hossfeld, 18:55;
7. Katie Quinlan, 18:59; 9. Katherine Morse; 15. Jill Quye, 19:26; 22.
Season Meservey, 19:39.
Estancia
4. Liz Huipe, 18:48; 46. Maria Arroyo, 20:45; 49. 20:55; 54. Stephanie
Melendez, 21:02; 73. Katelyn Aronson, 21:58; 84. Carmen McNeil, 22:31;
93. Anna Perez, 23:39.
Newport Harbor
1. Amber Steen, 17:51; 12. Sonya Mechkor, 18:59; 49. Lynn Rinek, 20:07;
52. Natalie St. Andre, 20:09; 56. Ashley Steen, 20:20; 69. Carrie Foss,
20:57; 82. Erin Friedman, 21:22.
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