Daily Pilot Athlete of the Month: Liz Huipe, Speedy Eagle
Tony Altobelli
For Estancia High girls cross country standout Liz Huipe, she is
still working hard and going through numerous pairs of running shoes
because of peer pressure.
Following her running stint at TeWinkle Junior High, Huipe was about
to quit running when she was coaxed into trying out for Estancia by a
friend of hers.
“I was all set to stop running and move on to something else,” Huipe
said. “My friend, Maria, told me I should try out for the freshman team
with her and I said I would. She’s now at another school, but we’re both
still running.”
And running she is. The senior holds the girls cross country record
for Estancia when she posted a fifth-place time of 17:57 last year at the
Pacific Coast League Finals, the first Eagles’ girl to run under 18
minutes.
From there, Huipe qualified for the CIF state cross country meet for
the second year in a row and finished ninth.
“With Liz, the quality is there,” Coach Charlie Appell said. “We
haven’t run a ton of races this year just yet, so quantity isn’t there.
But she’s a great runner and I expect her to be among the top runners in
the PCL.”
That says a lot considering the competition in the PCL. With Corona
del Mar and University always among the top teams in the CIF Southern
Section, Huipe is quietly keeping up with the pack.
“I see her qualifying for CIF again and doing real well there,” Appell
said.
At the Huntington Beach Invitational last week, Huipe took first place
in the six-team Division II race with a 20:12.
That win followed her first-place mark in the Eagles’ dual meet with
Northwood (19:10).
“The race against Northwood was much better for me than the
invitational,” the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week said. “Some of the
course in Huntington Beach was run on thick, wet grass and it slowed me
down. I felt better against Northwood.”
The key to Huipe’s success on the track is finding the right time to
make her move.
“My goal at the beginning is to make as little work as possible at the
end by keeping up early,” Huipe said. “I’ll just try to keep up with the
pack in the first mile or so. I’ll let other people take the lead before
I try to turn it on with about a mile to go.”
A track and field standout, Huipe was third in the PCL in the
1,600-meter run and fourth in the 3,200.
“I just try to go out there and do the best I can,” Huipe said. “It
doesn’t matter what race it is, I try to go out and try to win. When I’m
running, I’m pretty competitive.”
Huipe uses a goal-oriented approach for her success. “Coach Appell
taught me that if I have a goal, that I should shoot for it,” she said.
“I try not to worry about who I’m running against. I just go for my
goals.”
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