Annie St. Geme
Steve Virgen
She finished 13th out of 189 runners in Division III at the CIF State
cross country championships, but that wasn’t good enough.
She recorded a personal best, coming across the finish line at
18:40, but somehow that still didn’t do it for the Corona del Mar
High sophomore.
Greatness is sometimes measured by intolerance, never being
totally content with your last performance. Annie St. Geme has it.
She also has a few more things going her way.
“She has the potential for greatness,” CdM Coach Bill Sumner said.
“Any great athlete in any arena, usually walks away not totally
satisfied. They usually walk away always hungry for more. Every game
is an unfinished piece of art; there is still a place where you can
touch it up.”
St. Geme’s masterpiece is certainly a work in progress. She began
the season with the same type of trouble she dealt with last year.
Hip pain plagued St. Geme’s freshman cross country season and the
ache and tightness returned earlier this fall. She was relegated to
training with the junior varsity runners, as she methodically worked
her way back to full strength.
Once there, St. Geme never looked back. She recorded personal-best
times in seven consecutive weeks to close out the season. She won the
Pacific Coast League individual title and maintained her momentum
toward the state meet.
“I was hoping to get at least in the top 10 this year,” said St.
Geme, the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week. “I look back at that race
and I think in that last mile I could have done better. If I could do
it again, I would get in the top 10. I look at the girls in the top
10 and I think: Why am I not there?”
St. Geme doesn’t want to ask herself that question again. She has
started to train for the track and field season and in the back of
her mind she has goals already in place for next year’s cross country
season.
“I would like to be in the top three next year [at the state
meet],” St. Geme said. “I know it’s going to be hard, and there is
going to be a lot of work, but I’m willing to do that.”
To that end, St. Geme has adjusted her priorities. Last year, she
played soccer between the cross country and track and field seasons.
She grew up with soccer, but this year she will not play.
“I was on the junior varsity team last year,” she said. “I was
going to play varsity this year, but I wanted to focus on running. I
made that my final decision. No turning back now.”
To become great, there are sacrifices to be made. There also
standards and traits to be attained at CdM, where Sumner is helping
finish the St. Geme piece of art.
“You have to have passion,” Sumner said of what it takes to be a
great or special runner. “Perseverance. Talent. You have to do a lot
of hard work. We have this saying, ‘the harder you try the luckier
you get.’ ”
St. Geme credits Sumner for her rise in cross country and track
and field. She finished second in the CIF Southern Section Division
III finals in the 1,600 meters last year, and she wants to improve on
that performance, too.
St. Geme is also grateful for her mother, Ceci, who was the 1982
NCAA champion in the 3,000 meters at Stanford.
“I never even thought I would like running as much as I do,” St.
Geme said. “My mom has helped me. She never forced me to run, even
though she has ran all her life. Her running did have an effect on
me, but not in a forceful way.”
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