Boston Herald

North Reading girls, Amesbury boys track wins

- By Joe Reardon reardon@journalist.com

North Reading’s girls watched calmly as Weston and Pentucket battled atop the standings on the track and infield of Friday’s Div. 5 Coaches Relays.

The Hornets had a pair of early eighth-place finishes, but were quiet in the running events. Their time to make a move was just around the corner.

North Reading cut loose in a big way with a sweep in the field events and hopscotche­d over the field to capture the team title with 46 points.

Giuliana Ligor came up huge with meetbest marks of 17-10-3/4 and 5-1/4 in the long and high jumps, respective­ly. Hayden MacLellan and Georgia Roberts were part of the long jump crew, and in the high jump, Callie MacLellan and Abigail Lilley garnered gold medals. The lineup of Lilley, Jacquelyn Genzler and Sabrina Mini dominated the shot put circle.

Ligor, the most versatile athlete on the North Reading squad, was confident the Hornets would make a big push as the meet wore on.

“We’ve lost some strong athletes, but we have a lot of depth,” said the junior. “My jumping has improved a lot and we knew we could do some damage as a team.”

On the boys side, Amesbury and Weston battled for the entire meet, but the Red Hawks clinched the team title by taking second in the 4×400 to hit 47 points. Winner Ayer Shirley (3:29.49) and Amesbury (3:30.58) both broke the meet record.

Weston held on for a solid second-place finish with 42 points.

The Red Hawks broke three meet records. The 4×50 on the boys side was a burner as the top three teams bettered the meet record. The Amesbury lineup of Max Sanchez, Tristan Johnson, Joe Puleo and Mike Sanchez captured the gold medal in 22.42. Triton was a step back (22.47) followed by Weston (22.52).

Mike Sanchez, who ran the anchor leg, said his teammates set him up well for the finish.

“Joe (Puleo) took the lead for us,” he said. “I just had to finish what my teammates did. I was here my sophomore year when Randolph won and I knew we had a good chance to win and break the record.”

The Sanchez brothers and Johnson were part of another record-breaking performanc­e as they teamed up with Anthony Aguilar Lopez to erase the previous mark in the 4×200 with a 1:32.85.

The boys sprint medley featured a showdown between Weston and Norwell, with the Wildcats edging out the Clippers in a meet record of 3:39.20. Norwell finished in 3:41.40 and Littleton took third with its 3:43.06.

Nicolas Barbieri was fighting a stomach bug, but with Noah Lago, Darrell Johnson and Ben Tavares, ran well enough to keep Weston at the front. The record didn’t come as a surprise to the Wildcat captain.

“We had a pretty good idea,” Barbieri said. “I wanted to get the team hyped. We joke around and really like each other. We’re a very close team. I knew as long as I ran 52 (for 400 meters) we’d be OK. I wasn’t feeling good coming into the race.”

Hull’s Chris Resnick had the best effort in the high jump with a 5-11-1/2 leap, while Kieran Miller of North Reading led all jumpers on the runway with his 19-11-3/4.

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