Cross Country: Estancia boys finish together; girls start late
Steve Virgen
IRVINE - As a matter of pride and of teamwork, the Estancia High
boys cross country team attempted to finish together. Within the last 100
yards, Eagles runners Humberto Rojas and Mike Casillas held hands as they
reached the finish line.
A time official shouted for them to let go -- purposely finishing at
the same time is illegal and leads to disqualification.
Casillas did not want to damage the team’s lead so he slowed up and
Rojas finished the race just ahead of him as Estancia runners took the
top five spots and defeated University, 15-43, in a dual meet Thursday at
Mason Park.
“I’ll just let him (Rojas) have the win for today,” Casillas said
playfully. “We wanted to finish together for pride.”
Rojas and Casillas ran stride for stride during the last two miles.
Officially, they finished at the same time, 16:48, just four seconds
ahead of teammate Luis Segoviano. Estancia sophomores Abel Flores and
Gerardo Orozco finished fourth and fifth, respectively, at 17:00. Flores
and Orozco also held hands briefly before hearing the official shout the
admonition again. Sophomore Aaron Van Geem grabbed the eighth spot at
17:08.
The Eagles won the race despite the mentality that they “took it
easy,” as Rojas would have you believe.
“I have to save it for Saturday,” Rojas said of preserving his
strength and speed for Saturday’s Yucaipa Invitational.
Meanwhile, the Estancia girls cross country team did not fare as well
in the race. The Eagles were not ready from the beginning. As they took
their marks, the whistle sounded and Estancia flinched and watched
University bolt to a lead.
Regardless, Liz Huipe caught the front pack and made her move in the
second mile taking over first place. It was then that Huipe and
University’s Connie Chow took turns holding the top spot, until finally,
Huipe’s burst in the last 100 yards earned her medalist title. Huipe
finished less than a second better than Chow at 18:45.
“I didn’t hear the whistle. I just decided to go when I saw everyone
run,” Huipe said. “It (the start) hurt my race a little bit because I
tried hard to catch up to them.”
Chow and two other University runners took spots 2-3-4. And Estancia’s
Diana Rosete finished fifth at a personal-best, 19:31.
“That’s my best so far,” said Rosete, a sophomore in just her second
varsity race. “Hopefully, I will improve.”
Eagles Coach Charlie Appell said that the girls team was without one
of its top runners, Stephanie Melendez, because she was ill.
Estancia had already lost Marilyn Reich and Ludi Valdez to knee
injuries last week.
Appell said the team’s bad start at Mason Park only made things worse.
“There was a slow attention span for them or there was no attention,”
he said.
Estancia’s Lindsay Freeman finished 13th with a 22:17 and Jessica
Butler came in just behind at 22:18.
Pacific Coast League boys
Estancia 15, University 43
1. Rojas (E), 16:48; 2. Casillas (E), 16:48; 3. Segoviano (E), 16:52;
4. Flores (E), 17:00; 5. Orozco (E), 17:00; 6. Gatchel (U), 17:06; 7.
Haier (U), 17:08; 8. Van Geem (E), 17:08; 9. Kibler (U), 17:39; 10.
Arayama (U), 18:07.
Pacific Coast League girls
University 22, Estancia 39
1. Huipe (E), 18:45; 2. Chow (U), 18:46; 3. Manafian (U), 19:00; 4.
Moser (U), 19:24; 5. Rosete (E), 19:31; 6. Rattray (U), 19:50; 7. Colome (U), 19:59; 8. Nguyen (U), 20:02; 9. Coffee (U), 21:46; Huard (U), 21:53.
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