Newport-Mesa quartet advances
Steve Virgen
The athletes of the Newport-Mesa District went 4 for 4 at the CIF
Southern Section Masters Meet Friday night at Cerritos College. Costa
Mesa High senior Sharon Day, who won the high jump (5 feet, 10
inches), and Estancia senior Humberto Rojas, who broke his own school
record and finished third in the 1,600 meters (4:12.73), as well as
Corona del Mar freshman Anne St. Geme, fifth in the 1,600, and
Estancia senior Zack Novak, fifth in the high jump, advanced to the
CIF State preliminaries June 6 at Cerritos College.
Rojas, St. Geme and Novak produced interesting story lines, while
Day went about her business and flirted with the national high school
record.
Rojas celebrated his 19th birthday with a rather brilliant race in
the 1,600. He maintained the ninth position out of nine runners
throughout the first 800 meters, but then made his move. He passed
four runners before the final 400 and moved to the front of the pack
early in the last lap. That’s when he started his kick.
He was in first place for about 150 meters, then shifted to second
and eventually third, where he finished.
“That was a fun race,” Rojas said with a smile afterward. “I came
in wanting to have fun and I did. It’s my birthday, so I should have
fun.”
Estancia distance coach Charlie Appell also celebrated his
birthday. The 56-year-old coach was excited, yet concerned with
Rojas’ race. In addition, Appell, like Rojas, was impressed with the
nine runners in the 1,600. Eight of them met qualifying standards and
advanced to the CIF State prelims.
“I thought it was a little premature for him to start [the final
400 meters] so quickly,” Appell said. “But that was to his advantage
because it caught the other runners off guard. My question is, how
much gas did he lose? He says he still feels strong, so we’ll see
what happens.”
Rojas’ previous best was 4:14.28, set last week in winning the CIF
Southern Section Division III title.
In the girls 1,600, St. Geme, pronounced “gem,” as in the jewel,
passed two runners in the final 200 meters to grab the fifth and
final qualifying spot. She was in eighth throughout most of the final
lap, but she found extra incentive to pick up speed.
“After the third lap, I felt really tired,” St. Geme said. “I
didn’t think I was going to [qualify]. I know you’re not supposed to
think like that. But, on that last curve, my entire family was there.
I could hear my mom [Ceci] and my dad [Ed] and that motivated me.”
St. Geme finished in 5:00.44. Her personal record is 5:00.10,
which she posted last weekend. Though her times were nearly
identical, CdM Coach Bill Sumner thought St. Geme ran a different
race.
“She got real nervous on lap three,” Sumner said. “But she woke
up. She realized what we talked about during the drive [to Cerritos
College]. All she had to do was finish in the top five. But this race
was different from all the others she has seen. It was harder.”
St. Geme seemed to be inspired by being the only freshman in the
race. She said she thrives on the challenge of meeting expectations.
“I set my standards high,” St. Geme said. “I’ve just been doing my
best and I’m going to keep doing my best. But I’m still getting used
to [the 1,600].”
Novak, the Estancia senior who won the Southern Section Division
III title in the high jump last week, has also been gathering more
experience in his event. He said he learns something new every week.
Novak learned more about consistency Friday.
He finished fifth to grab the final qualifying spot, clearing 6-3
on his first attempt. Two other jumpers also cleared 6-3, but they
missed on their first attempt. Novak nearly cleared 6-5 on his final
attempt, but he will have to wait until next week to try to better
his personal record of 6-6.
In the girls high jump, Day, a four-time Southern Section division
champion, won the Masters Meet title by clearing 5-10 on her first
attempt. Then, she didn’t waste any time and asked that the bar be
raised to 6-3, which would have tied the national record. She seemed
to come closer to clearing the bar with each try, as her third
attempt prompted the more audible gasps from the crowd.
Day started jumping at 5-7 and hit the bar on her first attempt,
but she cleared it on her second try. After clearing 5-10, she waited
for advice from her coach and father, Eugene.
“I just looked up at my dad and he said to go for the 6-3,” said
Day, who owns the nation’s best mark at 6-2 this season.
Day, the defending state champion, said she will focus on reaching
the state finals Friday, then concentrate on the national record
Saturday.
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